Monday, February 17, 2020

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs


By Khan
Key word; Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, Needs vs. Wants, Maslow's and Alderfer's Hierarchies, Self-actualization:

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Abraham Maslow (1954) presented his theory hierarchy of human needs based on two factors: first deficiency needs and second growth needs.  In deficiency needs, one must lower the need before moving to the next higher level.  When these needs of an individual satisfied, if in future at some point a deficiency is detected, the individual will remove the deficiency easily.  The first four levels of attribution are:
Physiological: hunger, thirst, and comforts etc.
Security: need of Safety and Security (out of danger)
Belongingness: Love and Belongingness, affiliation with others, acceptance by others
Esteem: Get approval and recognition from others for his achievement, and competency
Self-actualization:
It is the most important need. It means self-awareness, to know one’s own skills and weaknesses. The individual focus on fulfilling his dreams on his own potential and he no longer worry about what others think. At this stage, the individual is concerned with his own personal growth.
According to Maslow, an individual is ready to act upon the growth needs if the deficiency needs are met. 

 Needs vs. Wants
What is need? And what is difference between needs and wants? Needs are those things which necessary for one’s life while wants are those for which people desire to have it but it is not necessary for life. For examples water, food, shelter, breathing, care, health and basic clothing, etc. are the basic needs for survival of life. 
The examples of wants include television, fashion clothing, computers, Internet, movies, vacations, makeup, outing, mobile, new cars, etc. these are the things that bring comfort in life and it will improve the standard of life, but these things are not necessary for survival of life.
Psychologists believe that needs impact the personality of an individual, for example without food, water, shelter, and basic clothing, it would drastically impact the personality of an individual; he would suffer from low self-esteem, and he may not survive. On the other hand if all these basic things are being met, he will feel more comfortable in life, which wills make him more secure and confident in life.
But, What if all the wants were achieved, as is often happened, people get over-confident or arrogant, acts like superior to others, and children, act like spoiled brats in this case. So the completion of wants may also affect their personality badly.

Maslow considers needs and wants the stages of development of personality; he think, that people gradually goes through these stages of need and development. Starting from the bottom, when one need is met at first level, he goes on to the next need, as a result it bring improvement in personality but, if something threaten the needs, such as not having food or safety, etc., then an individual go back down the hierarchy. If the needs are not fulfill, it will have a bad impact on the personality development. If all the needs are fulfill, the individual will progress and continue to grow having a good personality. Maslow believed that an individual do not advance to the next level of needs until the needs of each level have first been met. For example, if someone is at the safety level, then he cannot advance to love and belonging level until the safety and security needs have been met.

Maslow admitted that not all personalities develop as he proposed in hierarchy.  While some of personality dimensions might be due to motivational needs, for example introversion and extroversion.  Considering the introversion/extraversion dimension of personality, which suggests there may be two side of each level that differentiate how people relate to each set of needs. Some personalities might relate more to one dimension than the other. 
A Reorganization of Maslow's and Alderfer's Hierarchies  
Maslow's work on Hierarchy of Needs lead to additional attempts to develop a grand theory of motivation, a theory that would added all the factors influencing motivation into one model of motivation.  The example provided by Leonard, Beauvais, and Scholl (1999).  They proposed five additional factors for the sources of motivation:
1.    Instrumental Motivation (rewards and punishment)
2.     Intrinsic Process Motivation (enjoyment and fun)
3.    Goal Internalization (self-determined values and goals)
4.    Internal Self Concept-based Motivation (matching behavior with internally-developed ideal self)
5.    External Self Concept-based Motivation (matching behavior with externally-developed ideal self) 
Individuals are influenced by all these five factors; the effect of change could be different by degrees in different individual and specific situations. 
Factors one and five are both very motivational. The main difference between the two factors are that the individuals who are instrumentally motivated, they are influenced more by immediate actions or change in the environment (e.g. operant conditioning) whereas self-concept motivated individuals are  influenced more by their constructions of external demands and ideals.
Factors number two, three, and four are more internally-oriented.  In the intrinsic process, the specific tasks are interesting, funny and provide more immediate internal reinforcement for motivation. The person with a goal internalization is more task oriented (e.g., humanistic theory) in this theory the person with an internal self-concept orientation is more influenced by the individual constructions of an ideal self.

Resources
AACAP and David Pruitt. Your Child: Emotional, Behavioral, and Cognitive Development from Infancy through Pre-Adolescence. New York: Harper Collins, 1998.
AACAP and David Pruitt. Your Adolescent: Emotional, Behavioral, and Cognitive Development from Early Adolescence through the Teen Years. New York: Harper Collins, 1999.
Allen, Bem P. Personality Theories: Development, Growth, and Diversity. Harlow, UK: Allyn & Bacon, 2002.
Berger, Elizabeth. Raising Children With Character: Parents, Trust, and the Development of Personal Integrity. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1999.
Erikson, Erik. Childhood and Society. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1993.
Erikson, Erik. The Erik Erikson Reader. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2000.
Goleman, Daniel. Working With Emotional Intelligence. New York: Bantam, 1998.
Rogers, Carl. On Becoming a Person. Boston: Mariner Books, 1995.
Shaffer, David R. Social and Personality Development. Independence, KT: Wadsworth Publishing, 1999.
"Social, Emotional, and Personality Development." Handbook of Child Psychology , edited by William Damon and Nancy Eisenberg. 5th ed. New York: Wiley, 2000.

Erik Erikson's Stages of personality Development


By Khan
Key words; Multiple Theories in Psychology, Role of Heredity in personality development , Role of Environment in personality development,  Role of Situations in personality development , Erik Erikson's Stages of personality Development

Erik Erikson's Stages of personality Development

Definition personality
Personality refers to individual differences in characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling and behaving. The study of personality focuses on two broad areas: One is understanding individual differences in particular personality characteristics, such as sociability or irritability. The other is understanding how the various parts of a person come together as a whole (APA).
Description
Personality is combination of behaviors and attitudes that make a person a distinctive and unique person from others, and a behavior, attitudes of a person Personality is recognizable soon after the birth. A person personality has composed of several components: environment, behavior and character.
Multiple Theories in Psychology
There are multiple theories that exist on the personality development in psychology. But the three main theories that influence personality development are heredity, environment, and situation.
Role of Heredity in personality development
 Heredity refers to the influences on a personality that person born with it. It is in the genes of a person and no one can bring much change to these traits. They could be included in the temperament, which determine how a person reacts to situations. In child it may affect how well they get along with others children. Genetics also determines someone looks.
Role of Environment in personality development
 Environment is the most influential and nurturing aspect of a person life. It is the type of environment which determined most of the personality traits. Environment of a person include home, school, playgrounds, community, work, or other places that he spend his time. Environmental factors also include languages, religion, etc.
Role of Situations in personality development
The experiences that an individual person faces in his life. The various experiences that person confront will leave imprints on his personality and helps him in the development of his personality.  The "situations" includes everything from happiness, sorrow, divorce, and trauma fits into the categories shaping one's personality.
People are the "product of their environment." means that their personality has been greatly influenced by the environment in which they live, born with particular traits and situation they.

Erik Erikson's Stages of personality
Erik Erikson's Stages of personality Development
Erik Erikson a popular psychologist in the field psychology, His stages of personality development focused on the theory of social development of individual. Erik Erikson was greatly influenced by the theory of Sigmund Freud. But Erikson's stages of development did not stop at the age of. He believed that the development of personality of person continued till the death.  The work he contributed to the stages of development of personality is considered great contribution into the field of psychology, his work included:
Infancy stage
This is the stage of trust versus mistrust of a child. The outcome of this stage is hope, in this stage the child learns to trust or mistrust his caregivers and caretakers.
18 months to 3 years stage
 This is the stage of autonomy versus shame stage; the virtues gained through this stage are self-control and courage. This is the stage in which the child learns to talk, eat, walk, and gain some motor control, e.g. learning toilet training. This is a very vulnerable stage for child personality. If parents or caretakers are harsh during this stage, it may lead a child toward low self-esteem.
3 to 5 years stage
 This is the stage of development of initiative versus guilt stage in a child, in which the child copies the adults around them. In this stage they also take the initiative to play games on their own. In this stage Children learn to do things on their own e.g. get dressed by their self. If the children feel guilty about doing these things in this stage, eventually they will have difficulties at later stages.
6 to 12 years stage
 This is the stage of industry versus inferiority stage, and the virtues they gained through this stage are method and competence. Children in this stage compare their self with those around them and they may feel inferior if they do not measure their worth.
12 to 18 years stage
This is the stage of Identity versus role confusion and the outcome of this stage is, the virtues being devotion and fidelity. At this stage, the children learn to establish peer relationships which are the most important for the proper development of personality and at this stage teens question themselves. At this stage they are trying to know about their self and what will be their plans in future, this is the stage of experiencing the role of confusion, their parents are imposing their own dreams while they have different version of dream or life for themselves than their parent’s ones.
18 to 35 years stage
 It is the stage of development intimacy and solidarity, the outcome of this stage is intimacy and solidarity versus isolation. The basic strengths of this stage are love and affiliation. It is the stage where a person seeks out a satisfying relationship with others and starts his own family. If a person or someone is not successful in this stage, he may turn to isolation zone.
35 to 55 years stage
At this stage the people often feel that they have a "mid-life crisis." in life. It is the generatively versus self-absorption or stagnation stage of personality development. This is the stage where most of the people look at their fast and try to sum up what they have and what could they do have. This is the stage to feel they have accomplished enough.
55 or so until death stage
The basic strength of this stage is wisdom, and the major outcome of this stage is integrity versus despair. At this stage, most of the people when they look back upon their lives and experiences, they are pleased of themselves; they feel integrity, while those people who do not feel integrity, they feel despair.
To sum up, there are many stages of personality development that are believed to go and help into personality development of people. A person with knowledge may even be able to identify some new experiences in the stages of personality development.
Resources
AACAP and David Pruitt. Your Child: Emotional, Behavioral, and Cognitive Development from Infancy through Pre-Adolescence. New York: Harper Collins, 1998.
Allen, Bem P. Personality Theories: Development, Growth, and Diversity. Harlow, UK: Allyn & Bacon, 2002.
Erikson, Erik. Childhood and Society. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1993.
Erikson, Erik. The Erik Erikson Reader. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2000.
Shaffer, David R. Social and Personality Development. Independence, KT: Wadsworth Publishing, 1999.
"Social, Emotional, and Personality Development." Handbook of Child Psychology , edited by William Damon and Nancy Eisenberg. 5th ed. New York: Wiley, 2000.
   

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