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Den inre och yttre självkänslans betydelse för tendensen att bruka self-handicappingOttosson, Olivia January 2008 (has links)
Självkänsla är något vi ständigt bär med oss och den inverkar på vårt agerande samt våra val i livet. Johnson (2003) delar in självkänslan i två delar den inre och yttre, vilka kan kombineras till fyra personligheter. Forskning har visat att självkänslan samvarierar med tendensen till att bruka self-handicapping. Self-handicapping innebär att människan skapar hinder för sig själv påhittade eller verkliga. Etthundrasju studenter fyllde i en enkät bestående av 58 påståenden, vilken mätte inre, yttre självkänsla samt self-handicapping. Deltagarna delades sedermera in i de fyra personligheterna, vilka ställdes mot dess uppmätta tendens till att bruka self-handicapping. Resultatet visade att låg inre och/eller hög yttre självkänsla ökar benägenheten till att använda self-handicapping. Avslutningsvis diskuteras och jämförs resultatets utfall.
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Statistics of the Self: Shaping the Self Through Quantified Self-TrackingRowse, Lauren M 01 January 2015 (has links)
Self-tracking practices are growing in popularity worldwide. From heart-rate monitoring to mood tracking, many believe that wearable technologies are making their users more mindful in exclusively positive ways. However, I will argue that consistent and deliberate self-tracking (with or without portable devices) necessitates a particular understanding of the self with consequences that have yet to be fully explored. Through an analysis of forum posts on a popular self-tracking discussion and informational site, QuantifiedSelf.com, I will claim that self-trackers approach the creation of self-knowledge in a manner that is particular to today’s society. I will discuss how the ubiquitous conflation of numerical identities with objective reasoning feeds into a mindset that supports quantification of the self, and how the views of self exhibited by these self-trackers can be considered a version of creating a “scientific self.” The notion of the scientific self supports both an individual and societal shift in the practice of “being”—a shift that carries with it many possible repercussions that have yet to be widely analyzed. This analysis, I will argue, is key to limiting the destructive potential of understanding people in terms of data, while simultaneously enabling new conceptualizations of self to be practiced in modern society.
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UTILIZING THE BEHAVIOR-ATTITUDE RELATIONSHIP TO ENHANCE SELF-ESTEEM (SELF-PERCEPTION, SELF-REWARD, SELF-FOCUS, SELF-AWARENESS).Burling, John, 1956- January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Clients' perceptions of therapists and willingness to disclose : the effects of therapist self-disclosure and experienceSuzanne, Jane January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Investment in self: development of the construct03 November 2008 (has links)
M.A. / The quest for a healthy mind and body has received increasing attention in recent years and the focus it seems, is not only on attaining optimal physical and psychological health, but also the maintenance and enhancement thereof. In light of this, the aim of this study was to understand the contributing factors in reaching optimal physical and psychological health or what is referred to in this study as an Optimal State of Being. To this end, the Investment in Self construct was developed to explain the aspirations towards optimal physical and psychological health. In view of this, the criteria thought to be a part of an Optimal State of Being are outlined in this study and one of the main tenants of this study is that Investment in Self will play a role in reaching an Optimal State of Being. Since there is no comprehensive construct that conceptualises the essence of Investment in Self, there is consequently no objective method of measuring it. This study, in addition to developing the Investment in Self construct, developed an instrument to measure Investment in Self called the Investment in Self Questionnaire. The Investment in Self construct was correlated with Sense of Coherence, Satisfaction with Life and Optimism using the self-constructed Investment in Self Questionnaire, Sense of Coherence – Short Form, Satisfaction with Life Scale and Life Orientation Test respectively, in order to establish its relationship to optimal well-being. The questionnaires were administered to 256 volunteer participants from the general population and the results of the study showed that Investment in Self is significantly related to psychological well-being.
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Self-ideal, Self-discrepancy and Sociometric Choice StatusSwann, Susan Elizabeth 08 1900 (has links)
This study hypothesized a relationship between self-acceptance and acceptance by others. The hypothesis was that patients chosen frequently by other persons on a friendship criterion would have lower self-ideal, self-discrepancy scores than patients chosen infrequently by other persons on a friendship criterion. The study also hypothesized that depressed patients would have higher discrepancy scores than either the psychopathic or situational stress groups.
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Relationship of Self-Actualization to Mental HealthVance, Edith Myrle Blackmon, 1927- 01 1900 (has links)
The problem was to ascertain the relationship of a measure of self-actualization to a measure of mental health.
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How Much Do Self-Disclosers Reveal to Professional Groups?Lankford, Charles P. 12 1900 (has links)
Previous studies of help-givers have stressed subjects' perceptions using nine generic problem areas and a list of 100 descriptive adjectives. The present study attempted to specify major personality variables entering into subjects' perceptions of adviser, high school counselor, college counselor, counseling psychologist, clinical psychologist, and psychiatrist. The personality variables of self-disclosure and risk were studied, as well as a comparison using the 100 descriptive adjectives. The results from 217 female undergraduate college students indicated that subjects revealed risky information to help-givers in the same manner that they tended to self-disclose. Findings also revealed that subjects tended to differentiate among help-givers in reference to the extent that they were willing to reveal risky information. Favorable findings with reference to validity for the Norton risk scale are discussed, as are discrepancies between descriptions of help-givers in the current study as opposed to descriptions of the same help-givers in previous studies.
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Disruption, Conversation, & Ethics: A Study on the Limits of Self-LegislationFitzpatrick, Melissa Andrea January 2019 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Richard M. Kearney / This dissertation exposes the significance of ‘self-disruption’ in ethical development (the process of understanding how to flourish), especially as incited through conversation. By ‘self-disruption’, I mean the experience of being torn away from self-concern (which is a self-reflective enterprise) by something other. ‘Self-concern’ here refers to one’s attachment to one’s projects and plans—including the future self that one seeks to produce (qua preservation of its current identity). This study engages the history of ethical thinking, but it is not antiquarian. To make my case, I primarily rely on Emmanuel Levinas’s ethical metaphysics and critically interpret and draw from insights within 1) Kant’s account of the moral self, 2) Aristotle’s account of the virtuous soul, and 3) the teleological account of the self that we find in contemporary virtue ethics. My claim is that what is latent in each of these accounts is the pivotal role of having one’s attention arrested by ‘the other’, and that fostering this phenomenon belongs to the work of moral philosophy understood as moral cultivation. This research homes in on key discussions within Anglo-American ethics, particularly those that stem from the reevaluation of the nature and task of moral philosophy in the 20th-century. I am skeptical as to whether the resulting Aristotelian virtue ethics is as radical as its advocates claim, and I challenge its reliance on narrative coherence. I do not seek to deny the narrative dimensions of self-understanding, but I do want to underscore the ethical importance of welcoming their disruption. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2019. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Philosophy.
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An examination of some effects of pupil self-instruction methods compared with the effects of teacher-led classes in elementary science on fifth grade pupilsGleason, Walter Patterson January 1965 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston University / PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / The purpose of this study is to determine some of the effects of self-directed learning in elementary science on the growth of fifth grade pupils. It was attempted to measure pupil growth in four areas:
A. Fact absorption
B. General Science Knowledge
C. Liking for science
D. Learning to generalize
Printed materials instructed pupils in the use of simple apparatus to collect data and solve elementary science problems. The approach was inductive and required making generalizations on observed phenomena.
A need exists for facilitating the use of activity science in classes where the teacher is unfamiliar with the content and process of science. Teachers who are unfamiliar with science do not deal adequately with the tactics and strategy of science investigation. Materials directed to the student which lead him through the experience of actual investigation might help to overaome some of the reluctance to engage in science activities evidenced by teachers untrained in science.
If it can be shown that students are able to learn as much factual material by self-instruction as through the average textbook oriented study, then schools might be able to carry on a science activity program using the processes of science investigation without extensive teacher retraining programs and without loss of subject matter learning.
Four self-directed science studies were tried on 128 students of six classes selected at random from schools of a mixed factory-suburban town. One hundred thirty-two students in seven classes were used as a control group. The study was conducted over a period of six months.
Experimental and control groups were equated as to I.Q. ratings and scores on a standardized reading test. Teachers were equated on the basis of a town wide supervisors' survey.
It was decided to investigate the comparative performance of the experimental and control groups using four different measuring instruments.
1. Growth in specific subject matter knowledge as measured on a prepared fact
test.
2. Growth in general science knowledge as measured on a standardized science
test.
3. Changes in possible liking for science as measured on a standardized attitude
survey.
4. Growth in ability to generalize as measured on an organizational ability
test.
The four different tests were administered before and after the study and the change in performance was compared across groups for statistical differences. experimental and control groups were also compared in upper and lower I.Q. halves and by sex.
The results of the experiment were as follows:
1. Fact absorption
There was no significant difference between the experimental and control
groups in gain of factual knowledge, nor was there difference when groups
were compared according to sex and I.Q.
2. General Science Knowledge
The upper I.Q. pupils of the control group enlarged their general science
knowledge significantly more than did the experimental group. Between the two
main groups there was no significant difference in gain of general science
knowledge.
3. Liking for Science.
After self-study activities the upper I.Q. groups expressed a liking for
science significantly greater than the corresponding control group. The girls
of the experimental groups gained in choices for science more than did the
girls of the control group. There was no significant difference in the scores
of the total groups.
4. Learning to Generalize.
There were no significant differences in gains in organizational abilities
between the experimental and control groups and none between the sex groups
and I.Q. groups.
SUMMARY:
Although the present study showed no advantage for self-study activity science over traditional science studies,there is indication that the students learn the factual content as well when learning by themselves as when taught by a teacher. If longer exposure to science self-study activities is needed to show results in behavior of the students, there is much to gain and little to lose by allowing the student to pursue his science studies on his own. / 2031-01-01
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