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Social Emotional Development Personality & Erikson Overview Card Q: When I show you the next slide, see if you can explain the relationship between income.

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Presentation on theme: "Social Emotional Development Personality & Erikson Overview Card Q: When I show you the next slide, see if you can explain the relationship between income."— Presentation transcript:

1 Social Emotional Development Personality & Erikson Overview Card Q: When I show you the next slide, see if you can explain the relationship between income and social behaviors…and then tell me why... Topics: Personality 3 Erikson stages—introduction Quiz 3—last 30 minutes of class—I need a reminder... Readings: Understanding the Personality Big 5 Measuring the Big 5 (video)

2 Relationship of income and positive social behavior of students 25%50%100% Poor _ _ Nonpoor Positive Social Behavior Income level, % of national median income - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -------------- -1 -.5 0.5 1 What is the relationship between income and social behaviors? Why is this relationship likely? What should teachers do as a result?

3 Announcements Final assignment on Blackboard –We will work on analysis of data in class next time. –Due Nov 19 th —post on Blackboard –Follow assignment directions for typing, font size, inclusion of headings, etc. –Example of good work posted on Blackboard Bonus activity on adolescent development up through Nov 14 th One more homework: Understanding Families in Poverty (due Nov 26 th )

4 Ell ACTIVITY Step out in the hall if you have not completed the activity yet Common mistake: # 3—consider culture shock, family disruption, economic worries. Partial credit: # 7 & 8—must be specific Group answer: Stage 4: Intermediate Language Proficiency—must include specific and appropriate ideas (see your group paper at end of class)

5 You HAVE TO KNOW: pp Erik Erikson’s stages from preschool age through adolescence (linked to today’s online schedule as well) You HAVE TO KNOW— Lawrence Kohlberg’s stages of moral development (later in the unit)

6 PERSONALITY: THE BIG 5 Point 1: Personality is 50% inherited Point 2: We inherit varying amounts of 5 consistent “ingredients” Point 3: Personality is also shaped by experience In some ways, the apple does not fall far from the tree...

7 The 5 genetic components of personality (linked to online schedule for today—get it from there) All people have parts of the following: 1.Neuroticism (The degree to which people are temperamental) 2.Extroversion (The degree to which people are outgoing) 3.Openness to experience (ranging from conservative to imaginative) 4.Agreeableness (ranging from good-natured to being irritable) 5.Conscientiousness (how organized and hardworking people are)

8 ERIK ERIKSON (1902-1994) Stages of Psychosocial Development (in text, also linked to online schedule) Important related concepts: Autonomy (early childhood) Self esteem/competence (middle childhood) Identity (adolescence)

9 Erikson’s Psychosocial Stages 8 stages (we will focus on 3—and you need to know these) Roughly linked to age periods Key developmental task for each stage—you have to know what these are for the 3 stages we cover Task success determines social/emotional growth Success at next stage depends on previous stage success Early experiences in life very important See powerpoints on schedule; Global text, 49-53 THIS WILL BE ON THE PRAXIS II

10 Erikson implications Expect some common needs for students of similar ages Help students handle the social/emotional challenges they face at their age.

11 Early Childhood (Preschoolers): Initiative vs Guilt I want to do that myself! Hey! Can I try that? Important challenge: a sense of independence

12 Social-emotional development, Preschoolers (3-5 years) Erikson’s stage for ~4-5 year-olds: Initiative vs Guilt Self-image develops, based on opportunities for independence Increased emotional vocabulary Peer interactions increase in number and quality Implication: Provide opportunities to do things independently

13 Implication: Provide opportunities to do things independently— Allow students this age to try things for themselves, even if they don’t do it perfectly.

14 Middle Childhood (Elementary grades): It’s All About Achievement Call on me! I’m good at this!!! Industry vs Inferiority I hope she doesn’t call on me—I stink at math. Important challenge: a sense of competence and self-esteem (Is self-esteem easier to achieve for males or females at this age?)

15 Social-emotional Development, Middle Childhood Developing “best” friends Perspective-taking and empathy A good time to learn social skills (Ron Clark) Achievement is the data source for self-esteem

16 Self Esteem I did it! I must be smart. I must be better at math than I thought. Repeat after me: The best way to increase self-esteem is to increase achievement. (Not the other way around.)

17 Adolescence: Identity vs Role Confusion How do you like me today? Aren’t I just TOTALLY cool? Challenge: Understanding who one is, and how one fits into society. (includes vocation, sexual preference, religion, interests, lifestyle, etc.)

18 Everyone is watching me. I am invincible

19 Identity Development MarciaCross Diffusion (not thinking about it yet) Foreclosure (accepting what told) Moratorium (exploring) Identify achievement (makes independent choices) Pre-encounter—accept majority views about race. Encounter—encounter racism in some way. Immersion—seek positive information about own race. Internalization—see own race and self as positive. Internalization—lives connected to own race, but sees as part of majority culture Do not take notes—this is on p. 91-92 of text.

20 Identity and Underrepresented Group Status: 2 ideas People form their identity by life experiences, feedback they receive from others about themselves and members of their group, etc.) 1.People from underrepresented groups often get different “information” about themselves than do people from mainstream backgrounds 2.People from underrepresented groups are more attuned to the ways they are “different” from others than are mainstream group members. Example: “color blindness.”

21 Important to develop healthy identity: Parental support (authoritative parents)Parental support (authoritative parents) –Give children increased freedom and responsibilities –Continue parental monitoring, but looser Sense of industry (feelings of competence and self-efficacy)Sense of industry (feelings of competence and self-efficacy) Self-reflective future-oriented outlook on their livesSelf-reflective future-oriented outlook on their lives NOTE: Identity achievement is often not fully accomplished until later college years

22 Analysis of Learning Data

23 Example 2: Pretest SkillMeasured ByBefore TeachingAfter Teaching Recognizing all letters in his name I printed Simon’s name and asked him to name all the letters (first and last name) Student’s name is Simon Cook Recognized only S, and C Could correctly label all 7 letters, Forming all letters in his name correctly (printing) I asked Simon to look at my example and copy each letter below (printed, legibility) Could make S correctly, all other 6 letters were not legible Could make S, C, o, i. and m. (n and k still not legible) Writing entire first and last name, printed, legibly I removed all examples of his name and asked Simon to print his first and last name on the lined (wide-spaced) paper I provided. (I gave Simon a wide, easy-grip pencil to make sure he could handle it with ease.) Simon could write only first 3 letters of first name, none in last name. Simon could print all letters of both names, but some letters were not very legible –he had a lot of trouble with N and K, but they were formed better than when he tried to copy them earlier.) Note to Dr. Marchel: I repeated the same measures before and after.

24 In your families: What questions should be asked to better understand how well the teaching worked? (Each family come up with 2 questions.)

25 Analysis: Answering the right questions What other questions should be asked if several students were taught instead of just one?

26 Example 2: Pretest StudentTotal On Task Behaviors Total Off Task Behaviors S142 S206 S334 S444 S532 S645 A 2 nd teacher wanted to try to teach her students ways to help them concentrate better when reading independently. She gave her students a reading task and observed them for 6 minutes by recording whether they were reading or doing some other thing (off-task) at each 1-minute period she observed. After collecting this data, she taught them the attention strategies, and repeated the observation. What patterns do you see in the pretest?

27 Example 2: Post-test StudentTotal On Task Behaviors before and after teaching Total Off Task Behaviors before and after teaching S14/42/2 S20/36/3 S33/43/2 S44/52/1 S53/23/4 S64/52/1 After teaching them the strategies, the teacher again gave her students a reading task and observed them for 6 minutes by recording whether they were reading or doing some other thing (off-task) at each 1- minute period she observed. The chart shows both the pre- teaching score and the post-score (second score presented) What patterns do you see now? Did students learn? Use the analysis questions and explain.

28 Analysis guidelines Every skill taught measured Measure both before and after to see any changes Compare before and after for every student taught Look for both strengths in learning and no change or decreases in learning Hypothesize why you got the changes you did

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30 Discussion Triad Person one—the power of the “pick” and facilitates the discussion. Person two—summarizes main ideas and reports to the class. Person three—develops related question to ask large group—also write on piece of paper. (Hand this in to me once you have formulated the question.)

31 Discussion Triad Do you believe teachers should be responsible for teaching social skills to students? Why or why not? What do you think is the best way to improve student positive emotional feelings toward school? What do you think is the biggest school- based social-emotional issue in schools today? Why do you think that?


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