week 10 Flashcards

1
Q

define: self-concept

A
  • child’s cognitive representation of the self
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2
Q

question: i-self vs me-self?

A
  • i-self = ability to think about ourselves
    ⤷ indep. of others
    ⤷ emerges at 3 mths
  • me-self = sum total of what a person knows about themselves, can include other’s opinion
    ⤷ emerges at 15 mths
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3
Q

question: when does an infant recognize their own image in a mirror?

A
  • 18 - 24 mths (mostly)
  • cultural differences influence
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4
Q

explain: self-concept in preschool age

A
  • description of self anchored tangible activities, preferences, competencies, physical characteristics
    ⤷ ex. i can count to 10”
  • cultural diff:
    ⤷ asian children more likely to describe relationships
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5
Q

explain: self-concept in late childhood and adolescence

A

MIDDLE-LATE CHILDHOOD
- introduction of emotions
- competencies relative to other

ADOLESCENCE
- more complex, abstract, integrated, self
- more realistic
- considers context

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6
Q

define: looking glass-self

A
  • learn to know ourselves by interacting w/ others and observing how they resp. to us
  • how we perceive others are thinking about us based on their reactions
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7
Q

define: generalized other

A
  • summary of the ways others have responded to us
  • extracting a general sense of others and what they think
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8
Q

define: adolescent egocentrism

A
  • adolescents think about their own thinking -> consider that other may also be thinking of them -> self absorption and self consciousness -> egocentric thinking
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9
Q

name + explain: features of adolescent self-concept

A
  • imaginary audience
    ⤷ believe that everyone is watching and judging all the time
    ⤷ self absorption
    ⤷ explains susceptibility to peer pressure + conformity
  • personal fable
    ⤷ belief that one’s thoughts, feelings, exp., are unique
    ⤷ results from new capacity to think -> misinterpreted as unique
  • illusion of invulnerability
    ⤷ belief that misfortune only happens to others
    ⤷ explains risk taking
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10
Q

explain: erikson’s identity crisis

A
  • adolescent’s response to the tension between need to explore what’s unique + wish to be someone respected by community
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11
Q

explain: james marcia’s concept of identity

A
  • exploration = finding out and examining alternatives
  • commitment = choosing a belief or course of action
  • yes exploration yes commitment = identity achievement
  • yes exploration no commitment = identity moratorium
  • no exploration no commitment = identity diffusion
  • no exploration yes commitment = identity foreclosure
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12
Q

explain: minority culture adolescents and social relationships

A
  • ppl from similar cultures show similar patterns of attitudes and beha.
  • achieving solid sense of ethnocultural identity = positive

identify with:
- yes majority yes minority = biculturalism
- yes majority no minority = assimilation
- no majority no minority = marginalization
- no majority yes minority = separation

**biculturalism usually has best dev. outcomes but for first nations, better outcomes from assoc. w/ minority

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13
Q

question: how are levels of self-esteem at preschool, elementary, and high school?

A
  • preschool = highert
  • elementary school = initial drop -> stabilizes
  • high school = drops w/ transition but stabilizes

**studied mostly in white children (likely diff. for minority children)

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14
Q

explain: cultural differences in self-esteem

A
  • african and hispanic adolescents take pride in belonging to cultural group
  • asian cultures value more modesty
    ⤷ still embracing culture
    ⤷ not necessarily low self-esteem
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15
Q

name + explain: sources of self-esteem

A
  • actual competence = children enjoy domains in which they do well
  • heredity = genetic predispositions to make indiv. “better” than others
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16
Q

name: types of praise + explain: mueller and dweck exp.

A
  • ability praise
  • effort praise
  • given a math test -> given praise (or control = none) -> given a harder test
  • ability praise group tries less questions
    ⤷ less resilience
    ⤷ starts to doubt abilities once things get hard
  • effort praise = consistent w/ difficult problems bc believe they’re hard workers
17
Q

name: things assoc. w/ low self-esteem

A
  • more difficulties w/ peers
  • more likely to get involved w/ bullying
    ⤷ either victim or bully
  • more likely to do poorly in school
  • more pscyhological disorders
18
Q

explain: depression

A
  • pervasive feelings of sadness, irritability, difficulting concentrating, poor sleep, low self-esteem
  • more in girls 12 - 19 yrs
  • mood disorders are separate from self-esteem
    ⤷ but longitudinal studies show indiv. w/ low self-esteem are more likely to dev. depression (not vv)
  • difficulty regulating emotions
    ⤷ tend to attribute failures to internal traits)
19
Q

define: narcissistic youth

A
  • grandiose view of themselves
  • prone to aggression and depression (when they realize their view is unrealistic)
  • treated by cog. beha. therapy
20
Q

name + explain: selman’s stages (5)

A
  1. undifferentiated
    - 3 - 6 yrs
    - confusion between own thoughts and others
  2. social-informational
    - 4 - 9 yrs
    - understand diff. people can have diff. knowledge
    - passes false-belief tasks
  3. self-reflective
    - 7 - 12 yrs
    - able to take others’ perspective
  4. third person
    - 10 - 15 yrs
    - ability to step outside of sit. and evaluate from a 3rd party POV
  5. societal
    - 14 - adulthood
    - recognize that even 3rd person POV can be influenced by other factors
    - knows the context
21
Q

question: what influences a child’s ability to take a perspective?

A
  • better language skills = more advanced at perspective-taking
22
Q

define: emotional intelligence

A
  • individual diff. in perception, processing, understanding, regulation, and ability to use emotional info
  • both cognitive abilities and personality traits
23
Q

question: can EI be trained (explain exp.)

A
  • nelis 2009
  • 4 2.5hr training sessions:
    1. understanding emo.
    2. identifying emo.
    3. expressing and using emo.
    4. managing emo.
  • found that benefits stayed intact up to 6 mths post-training
  • saw improvements in emo. identification and management
  • emotional understanding didn’t change
24
Q

explain: relationship between school/academic success and social emotional education?

A
  • higher academic success when schools have social emotional education programs
  • learn to work cooperatively + care about each other
  • school wide mentoring, guidance, team building