Self- conscious



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tarix14.05.2018
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Self- conscious

  • Self- conscious

  • Bad sense of self-image

  • Don’t fit in

  • Gangs and other criminal activity

  • Hate yourself AND others

  • Quiet

  • Inferiority-complex

  • No hope for success

  • Fight back!




Erik Erikson’s Theory of Social Development

  • Erik Erikson’s Theory of Social Development

  • **Focuses on experiences and social interactions

  • in developing our sense of self, of who we are.

  • Essential Question for Today:

  • Which of Erikson’s eight stages seems most important? Why?



Please, please, PLEASE do NOT lose any of the pieces from your envelope (8 cut outs)

  • Please, please, PLEASE do NOT lose any of the pieces from your envelope (8 cut outs)

  • Using your unfinished Erikson model, place your 8 cut out pieces in the order you believe that you went through the crisis.**

  • Listen to the song and make any corrections necessary to your order.



Which of Erikson’s eight stages seems most important? Why?

  • Which of Erikson’s eight stages seems most important? Why?







How did Erik Erickson view social development from prenatal development to death?

  • How did Erik Erickson view social development from prenatal development to death?

  • Which stage of Erikson’s social development model is most important for teachers to understand? Why?



Stage 1: Trust VS Mistrust (age 0-1) sensorimotor- only trust mom

  • Stage 1: Trust VS Mistrust (age 0-1) sensorimotor- only trust mom

  • Main question- Is my environment trustworthy or not?

    • In the first year of life, infants depend on others for food, warmth, and affection, and therefore must be able to blindly trust the parents (or caregivers) for providing those. 


If an infant is well cared for= they will develop faith in the future.

  • If an infant is well cared for= they will develop faith in the future.

  • If an infant is NOT well cared for= look at the world with fear and suspicion

  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEHW8oTj0BA



Stage 2: Autonomy VS Doubt (ages 2-3) Beginning preoperational

  • Stage 2: Autonomy VS Doubt (ages 2-3) Beginning preoperational

  • Main question- Do I need help from others or not?

  • Toddlers learn to walk, talk, use toilets, and do things for themselves. Their self-control and self-confidence begin to develop at this stage. 

    •  


If the child receives praise and reassurance for their attempts= the child will develop the confidence needed to cope with future situations that require choice, control, and independence. 

    • If the child receives praise and reassurance for their attempts= the child will develop the confidence needed to cope with future situations that require choice, control, and independence. 
    • If the child receives too much criticism for their attempts or parents are overprotective=she may begin to feel ashamed of her behavior, or have too much doubt of his/her abilities.
    • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ru74VlqC8MU


Stage 3: Initiative VS Guilt (3 - 6 years). preoperational

  • Stage 3: Initiative VS Guilt (3 - 6 years). preoperational

  • Main question- Am I good or am I bad?

  • Children have newfound power at this stage as they have developed motor skills and become more engaged in social interaction with people. They now must learn to achieve a balance between eagerness for more adventure and more responsibility, and learning to control impulses and childish fantasies. 



If parents are encouraging, but consistent in discipline= children will learn to accept that certain things are not allowed, but at the same time will not feel shame when using their imagination and engaging in make-believe role plays. 

    • If parents are encouraging, but consistent in discipline= children will learn to accept that certain things are not allowed, but at the same time will not feel shame when using their imagination and engaging in make-believe role plays. 
    • If the child is constantly discouraged or punished= child will feel shamed/guilty, take the easy way out, depend on adults for instruction.


Stage 4: Competence VS Inferiority (6 - 12 years). concrete

  • Stage 4: Competence VS Inferiority (6 - 12 years). concrete

  • Main question-Am I good at something or am I worthless?

  • School is the important event at this stage. Children learn to make things, use tools, and acquire the skills to be a worker and a potential provider. And they do all these while making the transition from the world of home into the world of peers. 



If the child receives praise for their work and have success= confident in abilities to cope with life(industry), feels successful.

    • If the child receives praise for their work and have success= confident in abilities to cope with life(industry), feels successful.
    • If the child receives too much criticism of their work or too much failure= lead to long-term feelings of inferiority


Stage 5: Identity vs. Role Confusion (Teenagers). Formal. YOU

  • Stage 5: Identity vs. Role Confusion (Teenagers). Formal. YOU

  • Main question- Who am I and where am I going?

  • This is the time when we ask the question "Who am I?" To successfully answer this question, Erikson suggests, the adolescent must integrate the healthy resolution of all earlier conflicts. Did we develop the basic sense of trust? Do we have a strong sense of independence, competence, and feel in control of our lives? Adolescents who have successfully dealt with earlier conflicts are ready for the "Identity Crisis", which is considered by Erikson as the single most significant conflict a person must face. 



If the child fails in this stage= they will feel confused on who they are, and who they’re “suppose” to be.

    • If the child fails in this stage= they will feel confused on who they are, and who they’re “suppose” to be.
    • If the child succeeds in this stage= they will feel confident in their own personality, love who they are now and what they will be in the future.


Stage 6: Intimacy vs. Isolation (Early Adulthood) ME 

  • Stage 6: Intimacy vs. Isolation (Early Adulthood) ME 

  • “Main question- Shall I share my life with another or live alone?

  • In this stage, the most important events are love relationships. No matter how successful you are with your work, said Erikson, you are not developmentally complete until you are capable of intimacy. An individual who has not developed a sense of identity usually will fear a committed relationship and may retreat into isolation.



A person who is secure in their identity=can have an intimate partnership and compromise for another.

  • A person who is secure in their identity=can have an intimate partnership and compromise for another.

  • A person who is not secure in their identify= feel isolated and unable to depend on anyone in the world, might be in long-term relationship but avoids true closeness



Stage 7: Generativity vs. Self-Absorption (Middle adulthood 40-60)

  • Stage 7: Generativity vs. Self-Absorption (Middle adulthood 40-60)

  • Main question- Will I make life better for the next generation?

  • By "generativity" Erikson refers to the adult's ability to look outside oneself and care for others, through parenting, for instance. Erikson suggested that adults need children as much as children need adults, and that this stage reflects the need to create a living legend.



Positive outcome: People can solve this crisis by having and nurturing children, or helping the next generation in other ways.

  • Positive outcome: People can solve this crisis by having and nurturing children, or helping the next generation in other ways.

  • Negative outcome: If this crisis is not successfully resolved, the person will remain self-centered and experience stagnation later in life.   



Stage 8: Integrity vs. Despair (Late Adulthood 65-death)

  • Stage 8: Integrity vs. Despair (Late Adulthood 65-death)

  • Main question- Have I lived a full life?

  • Old age is a time for reflecting upon one's own life and its role in the big scheme of things, and seeing it filled with pleasure and satisfaction or disappointments and failures. 



Positive outcome: If the adult has achieved a sense of fulfillment about life and a sense of unity within himself and with others, he will accept death with a sense of integrity. Just as the healthy child will not fear life, said Erikson, the healthy adult will not fear death. 

  • Positive outcome: If the adult has achieved a sense of fulfillment about life and a sense of unity within himself and with others, he will accept death with a sense of integrity. Just as the healthy child will not fear life, said Erikson, the healthy adult will not fear death. 

  • Negative outcome: If not, the individual will despair and fear death



Erikson’s Social Development review.

  • Erikson’s Social Development review.

  • Question:

  • “Which stage/crisis do you believe is most important for teachers to understand?”



Strengths:

  • Strengths:

    • Explains how our personality stays the same over time and how/why it changes
  • Criticisms:



With a partner read each skit and identify which stage of Erickson’s theory the child is at.

  • With a partner read each skit and identify which stage of Erickson’s theory the child is at.



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