George Kelly Personal Construct Theory. I. Biography: 1905-1967 George Kelly was born in a farming community near Wichita, Kansas. He graduated with a.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Personal Construct Theory
Advertisements

Section 2.2 You Are What You Eat Mind as Body 1 Empiricism Empiricism claims that the only source of knowledge about the external world is sense experience.
Kelly; Personal Construct Theory Samantha Davenport History of Psychology 4/23/13.
Personality Psychology
1 PART II COGNITIONS & THE SELF 2 3 Inner, private, subjective Outer, public, objective StableVariable 1. Traits & Temperament e.g. extraversion, neuroticism.
Personal Construct Theory
PERSONALITY PSY234 Lecture 8: Application & Evaluation Dr Simon Boag
Personal Construct Theory and Concepts GEORGE KELLY By: Meagan Lilley.
Discovering Psychology
Postmodern Theory. Modernism The belief that all knowledge can be reduced to knowable segments or truths by using the scientific method.
Piaget’s Psychological Development. Piaget ( ) Swiss Psychologist, worked for several decades on understanding children’s cognitive development.
Postmodern Theory. Modernism The belief that all knowledge can be reduced to knowable segments or truths by using the scientific method.
Developing Ideas for Research and Evaluating Theories of Behavior
Personality, 9e Jerry M. Burger
Assessing Personality
Chapter 1: History and Approaches. Stone Age humans carving holes through the skull to release evil spirits.
Discussion 1: Theory.
Introduction to Behavior Analysis & The Reinforcer CH 1.
MOTIVATION  The Psychological Feature that arouse an organism to act.  The reason for the action.  Motivation is not just encouragement. It is derived.
Trait and Social-Cognitive Perspectives on Personality
importance of self and fulfillment of potential Personality = how you feel about yourself, how you are meeting your “goals”
Wolfgang Kohler The Foundations of Gesaltism. Introduction to Kohler Kohler was born in Estonia, and earned his Ph.D from the University of Berlin in.
Module 1: Discovering Psychology Mr. Kennedy 213.
Foundations Of Individual Behavior Chapter 2. Aim of this chapter To explain the relationship between ability and job performance Contrast three components.
Kelly’s Theory of Personal Constructs - Cognitive Constructive alternativism = we can change or replace the way that we interpret events Constructive alternativism.
AP Psychology THE PSYCHODYNAMIC PERSPECTIVE: NEOFREUDIANS.
The Psychology of the Person Chapter 2 Research Naomi Wagner, Ph.D Lecture Outlines Based on Burger, 8 th edition.
1 Copyright © 2014 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole.
Chapter 2 Developmental Psychology A description of the general approach to behavior by developmental psychologists.
Personality Psychology 12 Ms. Rebecca. Do Now:  In your journal:  Describe your personality with at least 4 descriptive words.
© McGraw-Hill Theories of Personality Rotter & Mischel Chapter 17 © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
George Kelly Construct Theory Early Cognitive Personality Theorist Phenomonological –Subjective experience Clinician –Emphasis on interpretation not content.
Attribution Theory. Attribution On your sheet, highlight the reasons you gave in two different colours – Reasons that were due to the personality of the.
Social Psychology Study through experimentation of how we think about, influence, and relate to other people.
What is Perception? Comes from the Latin word Percepio meaning receiving and collecting. How one takes possession of things and apprehends them within.
Myers’ EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Ed) Chapter 1 Thinking Critically with Psychological Science.
Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Developing and Evaluating Theories of Behavior.
WHAT IS THE NATURE OF SCIENCE?. SCIENTIFIC WORLD VIEW 1.The Universe Is Understandable. 2.The Universe Is a Vast Single System In Which the Basic Rules.
Unit 1 Lesson 3 Scientific Investigations Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Experimental Method. METHODS IN PSYCHOLOGY 1.Experimental Method 2.Observation Method 3.Clinical Method.
Biology and YouSection 2 Section 2: Scientific Methods Preview Bellringer Key Ideas Beginning a Scientific Investigation Scientific Experiments Scientific.
Trait Theories of Personality: Kasschau, Richard A. (2008). Understanding Psychology. New York, New York: McGraw Hill.
Thinking like a Scientist
SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY CONTEMPORARY LEADERSHIP BY: LIZ LEVIN HTM491 MARCH 29 TH, 2013.
Chapter 15 The Cognitive Approach: Theory and Application.
KELLY'S THEORY OF PERSONAL CONSTRUCTS
What Is Socialization? Socialization is the process by which a society transmits its cultural values to its members, and the way in which individuals.
PSY 432: Personality Chapter 1: What is Personality?
The Learning Theories Behaviorism- belief that the proper subject matter of psychology is objectively observable behavior and nothing else. Social Learning.
Set up the first psychology laboratory in an apartment near Leipzig, Germany. Wilhelm Wundt.
The Humanistic Approach Psychology: Chapter 14, Section 4.
Piaget’s Theory He was a child prodigy who published his first article in a research journal at the age of 11. Jean Piaget ( ) was one of the 20th.
Repertory Grids and Factor Analysis Social Psychology Practical 4.
Biology and YouSection 2 Section 2: Scientific Methods Preview Bellringer Key Ideas Beginning a Scientific Investigation Scientific Experiments Scientific.
Measuring Self-Schema Commonly use S data How do you see yourself ? –Rate Am the life of the party. Feel comfortable around people. Start conversations.
© McGraw-Hill Theories of Personality Kelly Chapter 18 © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
WHAT IS THE NATURE OF SCIENCE?
Chapter 15 The Cognitive Approach: Theory and Application
Organizational Behavior (MGT-502)
Chapter 15 The Cognitive Approach: Theory and Application
Your homework question Due next Thursday
Chapter 15 The Cognitive Approach: Theory and Application
George Kelly
Learning Perspective.
PERSONAL CONSTRUCT THEORY
Goals of Psychology!.
Discovering Psychology
Theories of Personality Power Point Presentation by Christopher T
Chapter 15 The Cognitive Approach: Theory and Application
Jones and Davis’s Correspondent Inference Theory
Presentation transcript:

George Kelly Personal Construct Theory

I. Biography: George Kelly was born in a farming community near Wichita, Kansas. He graduated with a degree in physics and mathematics from Park College in Missouri in Kelly didn’t care for psychology. He was incredulous of Freud’s theory & unimpressed with learning theory as well.

Biography contd. Kelly attended a learning class in college & was bored stiff. This is what he said of his experience: “The most I could make of it was the S was what you had to have in order to account for the R, and the R was put there so the S would have something to account for,” he wrote.

Biography contd. Kelly went to the University of Edinburgh to study education in While there he developed a growing interest in psychology. In 1931 he received his Ph.D. from the University of Iowa. For 10 years he worked at Fort Hays Kansas State College, setting up clinics for dustbowl victims in the 1930s. After WWII (He served in the Navy), Kelly spent a year at the University of Maryland & the next 20 years at Ohio State University.

George Kelly’s Personal Construct Theory Kelly rejected the need for motivational concepts to explain human behavior. He argued we are not pushed into action by environmental or unconscious forces. Kelly saw us as our own personal scientists. People like scientists, generate & test hypotheses about the way the world works. Because no 2 people see the world the same, no 2 people behave the same or have the same personality.

Creating templates Imagine you generate a hypothesis about what one of your instructors is like, based on observations. Whenever you see this instructor you collect more information & compare it to your hypothesis. If it’s verified (the instructor asks the way you predict) you continue using it, otherwise you discard it. Kelly described this process as template matching. We place the templates over the events we encounter. If they match, we retain the templates; if not, we modify them for a better prediction next time.

Personal Constructs: Are cognitive structures we use to interpret & predict events. No 2 people use identical personal constructs, & no 2 people organize their constructs in an identical manner.

Personal constructs According to Kelly, personal constructs are bipolar. --That is, we classify relevant objects in an either/or fashion with each construct. E.g., friendly-unfriendly, tall-short, intelligent-stupid, masculine-feminine, etc. After applying the original black-and-white construct we can use other bipolar constructs to determine the extent of blackness or whiteness. E.g., If you think a person is intelligent, you may then apply the construct, “academically intelligent or commonsense intelligent.” --provides a clearer picture!

How can personal constructs be used to explain personality differences? Kelly argued that differences in our behavior largely result from differences in the way people “construe the world.” Suppose two people meet a new individual named Adam. Person 1: uses friendly-unfriendly, fun loving- stuffy, and outgoing-shy constructs in forming his template for Adam’s behavior.

Person 2: uses refined-gross, sensitive- insensitive, & intelligent-stupid constructs. After both individuals interact with Adam they walk away with different impressions of Adam. Person 1 believes that Adam is a friendly, fun- loving & outgoing person, whereas Person 2 thinks that Adam is gross, insensitive, & stupid. The same situation is interpreted differently.

The Fundamental postulate & corollaries Kelly began with one basic postulate upon which his entire theory was based, followed by eleven corollaries that elaborate on the theory. The Fundamental Postulate: A person’s processes are psychologically channelized by the ways in which he anticipates events. Kelly argued that we are tied to our past experiences only in the sense that they have helped to develop our constructs & expectancies for the future.

What drives us according to Kelly? “Anticipation is both the push & pull of the psychology of personal constructs.”(1955, p. 49). “It is the future that tantalizes man, not the past.”

How do we go about anticipating events? Kelly explains in his Construction Corollary that we anticipate events by “construing their replications.” Without expectancies we would be overwhelmed with information which would leave us confused & unable to predict anything. Therefore, we utilize past experiences to help us organize & anticipate future events.

Past experience—guides our predictions We use past experience to determine what is important to attend to & what we can ignore. If you knew if a person was quiet or talkative (talkative-quiet construct), you could predict their behavior in a given situation more accurately.

Why do two people who experience the same event, have different interpretations of that event? 1. Each person may have a different set of constructs they use to evaluate a given event. 2. Two people may use similar constructs on one pole, but not on the other. E.g., You might use an outgoing-reserved construct, whereas you might use an outgoing-melancholy construct. Thus, what you see as reserved, I may see as melancholy.

Kelly’s Organizational corollary: We differ in the way we organize our constructs. Some constructs are more important than others in interpreting our worlds. Kelly calls these superordinate personal constructs & compares them to be less important subordinate constructs.

A subordinate construct may be subsumed within one side of the superordinate construct, like this: Friendly-Unfriendly Outgoing-Quiet Here, people are judged as either friendly or unfriendly. If judged as friendly, they are then judged as either outgoing or quiet.

You might, however organize your constructs this way: Friendly-Unfriendly Outgoing-Quiet Here, whether you judge people as friendly or unfriendly, you can further judge them as either outgoing or quiet.

Psychological Problems: Kelly thought that people have psychological problems because their construct systems are faulty, not because of the residue of past traumatic experiences. Past experiences with an unloving parent or a tragic incident may help explain why people construe the world the way they do, but they are not the cause of the problems. All disorders—result from faulty construct systems.

What is the route of all madness? Anxiety!!!!! Kelly argued that anxiety diminishes our capacity to predict future events. When we are anxious we fail to encode stimuli important in making predictions, leaving us feeling confused & disoriented.

Why do our constructs sometimes fail us when we are trying to predict future events? Sometimes we develop impermeable constructs. An impermeable construct does not easily allow new elements into its existing range of convenience. This drastically limits your ability to anticipate events, which would make your world feel less predictable & more out of your control. Keep in mind construct systems may be incomplete.