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approaches june mocks

Sigmund Freud psychodynamic

propose that early childhood experiences can reside in our unconscious mind and greatly influence our adult lives

unconscious biological drivers and desires influence our conscious mind and our behaviour

The structure of personality Psychodynamic

id
Ego

Superego

The role of the unconscious Psychodynamic

Drives motivates and is the force behind our behaviour and personality

Protect the conscious mind from fear and anxiety, Act as a defence mechanism


Contains our biological instincts and drives

id psychodynamic

Entirely conscious
Focuses on the self

Governed by the pleasure principle

Consists of primal urges, Seeks nothing but pleasure and instant gratification

Formed from birth-18 months

ego psychodynamic

Conscious
Governed by the reality principle

Aims to reduce the conflict between two opposing forces

Arises in response To interactions with the world and control by others

Formed at around 2 years old

Superego Psychodynamic

unconscious, but can influence conscious thoughts
Governed by the morality principle

Acts as the conscience, (inner voice) Moral guide

Internal parent

Formed around 4/5 Years old

defence mechanisms

Provide compromise solutions to deal with unsolvable conflict

repression

Denial

Displacement

repression

When a traumatically distressing memories is forced out of the conscious awareness and into the unconscious mind

Continues to influence behaviour without the individual being consciously aware of it

denial

A refusal to accept the truth or reality of a situation acting as though nothing distressing happened

displacement

feelings towards a target individual cannot be expressed directly and therefore a transferred onto someone else

psychosexual stages of development

At each stage, there is a conflict that needs to be resolved
If a child fails to resolve the conflict, they may develop a fixation that resides in their unconscious mind, Affecting an adult personality


Oral anal phallic Latent genital

oral

age 0-2
Conflict- pleasure and satisfaction mainly because of feeding/weaning

Breasts being the focus of desire

Conflict to be resolved, relates to weaning


fixation- Sucking thumb, biting nails

anal

Age 2-3
Conflict- directed towards bladder and bowels

Focus of pleasure comes from controlling bladder and bowel movement

Conflict to be resolved, relates to toilet training


Fixation-

anal retentive: obsessive perfectionist

anal explusive: messy and thoughtless

phallic

Age 3-5
Conflict- Directed towards genitals

Oedipus complex- Boys must overcome their unconscious sexual desire for their mother

electra complex- same ^ (girls)


Fixation- Boys look for a mother figure and girls look for a father figure

latent

age 5-puberty
conflict- Libido energy is calm, dormant and not active

Individual can focus on world around them informed friendships


Fixation- If conflict is unresolved, it can lead to immaturity

genital

age puberty+ into adult life
Conflict- The formation of adult relationships and sexual interest in the opposite sex

Fixation- Might struggle to form heterosexual relationships

psychodynamic strengths

Real world application- It's practical application into therapy, Much of what was behind many forms of mental illnesses which traumatic experience from the past that I've been repressed into their unconscious mind
Psychodynamic approaches made significant contribution to our understanding of human behaviour towards psychotherapy


Foundation for future Theories- the focus freud placed On our early childhood experiences and relationships can influence and shape who we become and how we act in the future

psychodynamic limitations

case studies- Case study research is limited and its ability to make universal laws about human behaviour, Findings from research of very difficult to generalise to other people

Cultural bias- All of Freud's patients came from the Viennese middle class, Evidence to suggest that it is only suitable for cultures where discussion of personal problems is encouraged

behaviourist approach

One of the most influential approaches in modern psychology
Behaviour shaped through learning and experience

classical conditioning

pavlovs dog
Behaviour through association

when two stimuli are repeatedly paired together, they become associated with one another


generalisation- Conditioned stimulus (bell) Could be generalised to other sounds


Discrimination- Sound becomes too different that no salvation occurs


Extinction- Gradual weakening of a conditioned response


Spontaneous recovery- Sudden display of behaviour that was thought to be extinct

operant conditioning

positive reinforcement- When a behaviour is followed by a desirable consequence (reward) And he's more likely to be repeated

Negative reinforcement- When a behaviour is followed by the removal of an adverse consequence and is more likely to be repeated, Avoid something unpleasant


Punishment- Consequence that decreases the likelihood of a particular behaviour being repeated

skinner

Positive- Animal pressed lever, Rewarded with food

Negative- rat pressed lever to avoid electric shock

behaviourist strengths

Highly scientific research methodology- Highly controlled laboratory settings, Possible extraneous variables are removed, Cause an affect relationship relationships can be established

influential- Encouraged research that focused on more objective dimensions of behaviour, Lead to increasingly valid and reliable understanding of human behaviour

behaviourist limitations

Use of animals- Unethical as there is less concern about protection from harm for non-human subjects
Findings from animal experiments are not generalisable to human behaviour

maslows hierarchy of needs (1943)

self-actualisation- acceptance, inner potential
self-esteem- confidence, achievement

love+belonging- friendships + family

safety+security- havinf a home, good healrh

psychological needs- food, water

self-actualisation

the innate desire to achieve of fulfil ones full potential
it is where people experience purpose and meaning in life

someone who is self-actualised does not focus on themselves or on how other people percieve them

self-transcendence

the need to connect to something beyond and higher than ourselves

the self-concept

carl rogers
self-image - how your see yourself right now

ideal self- who you want to be or feel you should be

self-esteen- how much you like and accept who you are

congruence

when there is an overalp agreement between an individuals self-image and ideal self

self actualisation is most likely to be acheieved when there is congruence between them

developing congruence

1. the need for unconditional positive regard from other people

2. the need for self-worth

incongruence

where the self-image and ideal self do not overlap, dont match and arent in agreement

unhappiness is the outcome of a psychological gap between ideal self and self-image

influence of counselling psychology

to reduce incongruence, it requires deep reflection on how you see yourself as well as your own motivations

1. increase the persons feelings of self-worth

2. reduce the level of incongruence between the self-image and ideal self

3. help the person become a more fully functioning person

humanistic strengths

depth of insight- qualitative research methods- case studies, open-ended questionnaires, structured interviews
give a more valid insight into the richness of human behaviour than typical laboratory-based experiments


real world application- maslows hierarchy of needs helped inform businesses with their understanding of the needs of their employees to make them be more successful and effective

humanistic limitations

culturally bias- concepts of self-actualisation and self-esteem are a product of western society and cant be applied to all cultures

unscientific- many of the ideas and concepts are subjective and difficult to test, self-actualisation and congruence are rather vague and difficult to define which makes it untestable in any scientific way

social learning theory definition

behaviour is learned from experience observation and imitation of others

recognises the importance of mediational and cognitive processes, through modelling and having a role model

role model + modelling

the person someone identifies with

the process of imitating

identification

involves assoiciating with the qualities, characteristics and views of role models

vicarious reinforcement

reinforcement which is not directly experienced by us but occurs through observing someone else being reinforced or punished for a behaviour

4 mediational processes

1. attention- observed behaviours
2. retention- remembered

3. motor reproduction- ability to perform

4. motivation- will to perform


if behaviour is rewarded, imitation us more likely

bobo doll experiement

bandura (1961)
investigate whether aggression can be learned

matched pairs design

72 children


aggressive model- child played while asult hit doll (24)

non-aggressive model- child played while adult didnt hit doll (24)

control group- child didnt see model (24)

bobo doll results+conclusions

childeen demonstrated same aggressive acts as adults
boys identified with males

girls physical- males

girls verbal- females


aggressive behaviour can be learned through observation and imitation of a role model

slt strengths

highly scientific research methodology- high controlled labroatory setting, high control of extraneous variables, enables cause and effect relationship to be established

more than 1 observer- reliability can be checked with inter-observer reliability, level of agreeableness in banduras study was +0.89 -> strong positive correlation, results are meaningful

slt limitations

methodological issues- method critisised, use of experimental laboratory method- articificial and contrived, possibility of deman characteristics, lowers internal validity

nature vs nurture- nurture-view focused, fails to consider the inportance of biological factors in human behaviour

how behaviour is lesrned through observation of role models

p & h difference

The humanistic approach assumes people have a free choice over their behaviour And are capable of change, Whereas the psychodynamic approach assumes that behaviour is determined by unconscious factors and early childhood experiences

psychodynamic is mostly Nature, Behaviour is the product of innate drives but shaped by early childhood experience. Humanistic is mostly nurture, Behaviour is shaped by the environment as human strive to achieve self actualisation

p & h similarities

both are much less scientific than other approaches, Psychodynamic relies on subjective interpretation, Humanistic rejects scientific methods and is unable to provide empirical evidence

Rogers believed that counselling can be used to help client solve their problems, Overcome conditions of work and enable their potential for self actualisation, Whereas Freud believed that psychoanalysis can lead to improve improvements in clients through psychotherapy

b & slt differences

in operant conditioning processes are direct whereas in social learning they are vicarious and indirect and a can occur through observation and imitation

Operant conditioning assumes that all behaviour is environmentally determined by external influences that we are unable to control (Environmental determinism), Social learning assumes that as well as being influenced by our environment cognitive factors can mediate learning and that we exert some influence upon it through the behaviour as we choose to perform (Reciprocal determinism)

b & slt similarities

both assume that all aspects of behaviour can be investigated scientifically and use laboratory experiments taking into account mediational processes

both assume that human development is a consequence of nurture both suggest that behaviour is a result of learnt associations and reinforcement

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