the self

    Cards (21)

    • the self
      refers to individuals own perception & understanding of themselves in relation of their social environment.
    • self concept - Baumeister (1999)

      "The individual's belief about himself or herself, including the person's attributes and who and what the self is".
    • self-concept helps organise thinking and guides social behaviour. the self has several departments.
    • departments of self
    • departments of self
      • comparisons you make
      • social identities you form
      • roles you play
      • culture
      • successes and failures
      • how other people judge you
    • self schemas
      • ingredients in self concept
    • self schemas
      constructs which help us to store and retrieve information about ourselves (Markus and Wurf, 1987)
    • Your self schemas strongly affect how you perceive, evaluate, remember other people and yourself (Kihlstrom and Cantor, 1984
    • self schemas
      • contain knowledge about the self
      • obtained by past generalisations
      • stored in cognitive generalisations
      • help us organise self related info
    • self schemas as motivators and self-regulators

      •Markus and Nurius (1986): “possible selves” (a self you would like to be in the future)
    • positive possible self = positive behaviours
      negative possible self = negative behaviours
      self fulfilling prophecy
    • Chi-Hung Ng (2005) behavioural implications of self-schemas

      positive self schema for maths: more engaged, determined, better outcomes
      negative self schema for maths: less engaged, fearful of tasks, anxious, low achievement
    • self reference effect
      • the tendency to process information related to oneself efficiently and quickly
      • people w/ depression focus on self-referent negative attributes more than other people (Swallow and Kuiper, 1987)
    • Social Comparison Theory (Festinger, 1954)

      SCT proposes that there is a primitive drive within individuals to compare themselves with others in order to evaluate their own opinions and abilities.
    • self esteem
      • your overall positive or negative self evaluation or sense of self worth
    • Bottom Up Crocker and Wolfe (2001)
      A person who has a sense of self esteem which is dependent on doing well in school and looking attractive will feel high self-esteem when made to feel clever or beautiful.
    • Top down Brown and Dutton (1994)
      People who value themselves in a general way (those with high self esteem), are more likely to value their looks, abilities, skills.
    • self efficacy
      “Self Efficacy is the belief in one's capabilities to organize and execute the sources of action required to manage prospective situations."From Social Foundations of Thought and Action: A Social Cognitive Theory, 1986.
    • Locus of Control
      “A person’s belief about who or what is responsible for what happens”
    • Learned Helplessness

      •“The hopelessness and resignation learned when a human or an animal perceives no control over repeated bad events”
      •Linked to depressive feelings
    • •Oaten and Cheng (2006): Students who engaged in daily self-control behaviours (daily exercise, study times, time management) became more capable of self-control in other settings too (exams, job interviews etc)
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