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)