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Ed-Psych Course (TEFL & ICT MA
Program)




          Unit 9: Freud and The Neo-Freudians
                (Erikson, Adler and Jung)


    Prepared by:    Meriem Ait Hemmou
                    Asma Askaoui
                   Amal Hafidi
                   Soumia Bouddage
                   Omar Taky Eddine
Outline
• SIGMUND FREUD:
   I- PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY
   II- Psycho-sexual Stages of Personality
  Development
• Alfred Adler:Theory of individual psychology
• Erikson: Psychosocial Theory
• Carl Jung: Theory of Personality
PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY




By SIGMUND
   FREUD
Founder Sigmund Freud
• MAY 6, 1856 – SIGMUND FREUD WAS BORN
  IN FREYBERG TOWN, CRECH REPUBLIC

• 1881 – HE GRADUATED FROM MEDICAL
  FACULTY, UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA

• He was an Austrian psychologist, he also
  worked as a medical researcher
Founder Sigmund Freud
• 1896 – SIGMUND FREUD WAS OFFICIALLY
  RECOGNIZED

• 1900 – HE RELEASED ‘INTERPRETATION OF DREAMS’

• He was an early user of cocaine and recommended its
  use as a cure for morphine addiction.

• SEPTEMBER 23, 1939 –FREUD PASSED AWAY IN
  HAMPSTEAD HOUSE
Overview of psychoanalysis
               theory

•Psychoanalysis is both an approach to therapy
and a theory of personality

•Emphasizes unconscious motivation;
the main cause of behavior lies in unconscious
mind
• Freud was developing radically different ideas, he
  believed that mental life is like an iceberg: only small part
  is exposed to view. He called the area of mind that lies
  outside of personal awareness the unconscious

• He believed that all thoughts, emotions and actions are
  determined. In other words nothing is an accident, if we
  probe deeply we will find the causes of every thought or
  action.

• Freud sees human nature as deterministic; ife is about
  gaining pleasure and avoiding pain
The structure of of the human
          psyche or mind
 A.   levels of mental life:

                         1. Unconscious

• It includes all impulses, desires that are beyond
  awareness. But it affects our expression, feelings
  and actions

• It is not directly observed, it is hidden below the
  conscious. One studies unconsious by looking at the
  slips of the tong, dreams, wishes….
• 2. Subconscious

• The middle portion of the mind beneath the
  conscious layer.
• It stores all types of information which can be easily
  brought to the level of consciousness whenever
  required.
3. Conscious

• It is viewed as the smallest portion of the mind.

• It includes the ideas, thoughts and images that we
  are aware of at any moment of our mental life.

• It is the surface level, meaning the level we are
  aware of in a thinking state.
Structure of the human psych or mind
B. Structure of personality:


           1.ID
           2. EGO
           3. SUPEREGO
•1. ID
• It is the first portion of the personality to develop.

• It is present at birth and has the qualities of a spoiled child.

• ID is selfish and follows no rules, considers only the
  satisfaction of its own needs and drives.

• The ID is not rational and does not care how its wants are
  abtained.
• 2. EGO
• The rational level of the personality.
• It is the opposite of the « ID » which focuses on
  morality and justice.
• Ego works against the ID and tries to conltrol the
  ID’s impulses.
• Ego is the balance between ID and Super-Ego
• Super-Ego
• It makes decisions if things are right or wrong.
• It has the ability to reward through feelings of
  satisfaction and self love and punish by providing
  feelings of guilt and shame.
• It is idealistic in nature, and perfection is its goal
  rather than pleasure seeking or destruction.
Example:
                      EGO
• I want to                      • I am on a
  eat           • Eats a small     super diet!
  chocolate!      bar of
                  chocolate
       ID                        SUPEREGO
Psycho-sexual Stages of
         Personality Development
• Psychoanalytic theory contends that a child’s
  early childhood relationships, particularly those
  with his or her caregivers, are important
  influences of personality development.
• Freud claimed that as children develop, they go
  through a universal series of stages. Each stage of
  development has psychological conflicts to be
  addressed by the id, ego, and superego, and each
  stage focuses on a different zone of the body.
• Each stage is characterized by different demands
  and different ways of achieving that gratification.
• If children do not receive an appropriate
  amount of gratification by receiving either too
  little or too much they may become fixated in
  a particular stage. They continue to have the
  same demand for gratification that they had
  at that stage throughout the rest of their lives.
• It can also result in a variety of behaviors and
  personality traits.
Age          Name          Pleasure source                             Conflict

                                                                Weaning away from mother's
  0-2       Oral      Mouth: sucking, biting, swallowing
                                                                breast




  2-4       Anal      Anus: defecating or retaining faeces      Toilet training




  4-5       Phallic   Genitals                                  Oedipus (boys), Electra (girls)




                      Sexual urges sublimated into sports and
6-puberty   Latency   hobbies. Same-sex friends also help
                      avoid sexual feelings.




                      Physical sexual changes reawaken
puberty               repressed needs.
            Genital                                             Social rules
onward                Direct sexual feelings towards others
                      lead to sexual gratification.
Oral Stage (Birth to 18 months).
• Children Gain pleasure through sucking and
  eating; the child ultimately develops a sense
  of comfort through oral stimulation
• During the oral stage, the child is focused on
  oral pleasures (sucking, feeding and oral
  discovery of the world).
• It is believed that if an infant receives too
  much or too little oral stimulation, they may
  develop a fixation or a personality trait that is
  fixated on oral gratification.
• The theory states that these people may
  develop personality traits such as becoming
  extremely gullible or naive, always following
  others and never taking the lead.
• They may also fight these urges and develop
  pessimism and aggression toward others.
Anal Stage (18 months to three years)
• The focus shifts from the oral cavity to the anal
  region with the realization that going to the
  bathroom is a pleasurable event.
• Freud believed that the unconscious mind was
  going through a conflict during this time.
  The “id” of our unconscious represents the part of
  our being that finds pleasure in expelling the
  body’s waste material, while the “ego” and
  “superego” signify culture’s pressure to resist
  succumbing to bodily function.
• If parents are too harsh or critical during toilet
  training, then a child may grow up to be anally
  expulsive or anally retentive.
• “Anally expulsive” – limited levels of self-
  control, defiance, hostility, disorganization.
• “Anally retentive” – Rigid, obsessively
  organized, and overly subservient to authority
  with focus on perfection, and cleanliness.
The phallic stage (3 and 5years)
• This stage is characterized by a focus on
  sexual and aggressive feelings that pertain to
  the functioning of the sexual organs.
• Freud believes that, during this phase, the
  young boy falls in love with his mother (the
  Oedipus complex) and dreads his father, while
  the young girl falls in love with her father (the
  Electra complex).
• This conflict is resolved through identification.
• Freud also believed that fixation in this stage
  sometimes resulted in gender identity problems
  due to the child’s inability to identify properly
  with a rival parent .

• Fixation at the phallic stage develops a phallic
  character, who is reckless, resolute, self-assured,
  and excessively vain and proud.
Latency (5 or 6 to puberty)

• Freud thought that The drives that have been
  responsible for gratification in the previous
  stages appear relatively inactive .
• Much of the child's energies are redirected
  into developing new skills and acquiring new
  knowledge and play, becomes largely confined
  to other children of the same gender.
Genital Stage (puberty-adulthood)
• This stage begins at puberty and develops
  with physiological changes brought on
  through hormones. The prior stages of
  development result in a focus on the genitals
  as a source for pleasure and teens develop
  and explore attractions to the opposite
  gender.
Contribution to Education
• Freud’s system of psychoanalysis has made
  many contibutions to education :
It has given a good method for the study of
  human behaviour.
Freud’s system ushered in an era of child-
  centred education.
It highlighted the ill effects of unnecessary
  restrictions and it has given an impetus to the
  movement of early childhood education.
It helped in understanding the exceptional
 children ,planning their education and taking
 all possible precautionary measures for
 preventing the problems they might face in
 the future.

Freud’s concept of the unconscious has helped
 in understanding the cause of maladaptive
 behaviour .
It has provided a good therapy for treatment
 of mental illness and abnormal behaviour.
It has highlighted the importance of good
 education and a healthy environment in the
 early years by emphasising the role of
 childhood experiences .
His emphasis on the role of sex in one’s life
 has brought out the necessity of providing
 proper sex education to children .
Freud’s system of psychoanalysis has called for
 provision of proper extracurricular activities
 and suitable hobbies in school programmes.
Alfred Adler
Adler was one of Freud’s original followers and
 a member of the Psychological Wednesday
 Society.
As such,the beliefs and values underlying
 Adler’s theories share the same core
 principles   as     Freud’s    psychodynamic
 perspective.
While Freud and Adler worked very closely
 together for a period of time,Adler began to
 challenge Freud’s ideas with his own views
 about the role of individual experience.

              Their working relationship
  eventually diddolved and their theories
  moved in opposing directions.
• During the acrimonious breakup between the
  two men, Freud accused Adler of having
  paranoid delusions and of using terrorist
  tactics. He told one of his friends Freud said
  that the revolt by Adler was that of “an
  abnormal individual driven mad by
  ambition”(quoted in Gay, 1988, p. 223).
• In fact,several other differences made the
  relationship between Freud and Adler quite
  tenuous.
First, Freud reduced all motivation to sex and
 aggression, whereas Adler saw people as
 being motivated mostly by social influences
 and by their striving for superiority or success.
Second, Freud assumed that people have little
 or no choice in shaping their personality,
 whereas Adler believed that people are largely
 responsible for who they are.
 Third, Freud’s assumption that present behavior
  is caused by past experiences was directly
  opposed to Adler’s notion that present behavior
  is shaped by people’s view of the future.
 Fourth, in contrast to Freud, who placed very
  heavy emphasis on unconscious components of
  behavior, Adler believed that psychologically
  healthy people are usually aware of what they
  are doing and why they are doing it.
when theoretical and personal differences
 between Adler and Freud emerged, Adler left
 the Freud circle and established an opposing
 theory, which became known as individual
 psychology.
 Holism: The Adlerian views man as a unit, a self-conscious whole that functions as
  an open system , not as a collection of drives and instincts.

 Field Theory: The premise is that an individual can only be studied by his
  movements, actions and relationships within his social field. In the context of Mind
  Development, this is essentially the examination of tasks of work, and the
  individual's feelings of belonging to the group.

 Teleology :("power to will" or the belief that individuals are guided not only by
  mechanical forces but that they also move toward certain goals of self-realization).
  While Adler's name is linked most often with the term 'inferiority-complex,'
  towards the end of his career he became more concerned with observing the
  individual's struggle for significance or competence (later discussed by others as
  self-realization, or self-actualization, etc.). He believed that, standing before the
  unknown, each person strives to become more perfect, and in health is motivated
  by one dynamic force - the upward striving for completion - and all else is
  subordinated to this one master motive. Behavior is understood as goal-directed
  movement, though the person may not be fully aware of this motivation.
 The Creative Self: The concept of the creative self places the responsibility
  for the individual's personality into his own hands. The Adlerian
  practitioner sees the individual as responsible for himself, he attempts to
  show the person that he cannot blame others or uncontrollable forces for
  his current condition.

 Life-Style: An individual's striving towards significance and belonging can
  be observed as a pattern. This pattern manifests early in life and can be
  observed as a theme throughout his lifetime. This permeates all aspects of
  perception and action. If one understands an individual's lifestyle, his
  behavior makes sense.

 Private intelligence: is the reasoning invented by an individual to
  stimulate and justify a self-serving style of life. By contrast, common sense
  represents society's cumulative, consensual reasoning that recognizes the
  wisdom of mutual benefit.
 We also rate Adlerian theory high on its ability to guide
  action. The theory serves the psychotherapist, the
  teacher, and the parent with guidelines for the solution
  to practical problems in a variety of settings. Adlerian
  practitioners gather information through reports on
  birth order, dreams, early recollections, childhood
  difficulties,and physical deficiencies. They then use this
  information to understand a person’s style of life and
  to apply those specific techniques that will both
  increase that person’s individual responsibility and
  broaden his or her freedom of choice.
Psychosocial Theory: Erikson
Biography
•   Born in Germany, June 15, 1902.
•   Influences: Sigmund Freud and Anna
    Freud (daughter of Sigmund Freud).
•   Professor in Harvard, Yale, University of
    California at Berkley, clinic in
    Massachusetts.
•   Changed his name from Erik Homberger
    to Erik Erickson.
•    Wrote Childhood and Society.
•    Retired in 1970.
•    he passed away in US, 1994 .
Child psychoanalyst
Erik Erikson focused his research on the
effects…


     Society

                          Individual
                        psychological
                        development

     Culture
• He accepted many of Freud's theories:
  – i.e. the id, ego, and superego & the theory of
    infantile sexuality.

• He Rejected Freud's attempt to describe
  personality solely on:
  – The basis of sexuality, in contrary, felt that
    personality continued to develop beyond five
    years of age.
• Erikson suggests that every individual psychological
  development goes on through eight stages from birth to old
  age.
• each stage poses a particular kind of challenge. If the
  individual handles this challenge well with the help of other
  significant people in their lives, then he can move smoothly
  onto the next stage and so on. Otherwise, these challenges
  will continue to reappear throughout a person’s life making it
  more and more difficult to proceed through next stages.
Stages of psychosocial development
Basic Trust versus Basic Mistrust

(infancy)
the challenge here is whether the child can learn
   to trust others, who take care of him or her,
   and thereby him or herself or whether, as a
   result of experiences, a sense of basic mistrust
   becomes internalized, which makes him or her
   withdraw.
 e.g. infant / mother / feeding and being
   comforted, sleeping, etc.
Autonomy versus Shame and Doubt
(early childhood)
the challenge is whether the child can establish
  autonomy and thereby he or she becomes
  self- competent, and develop self-control,
  with the help of others, or whether shame
  and doubt will be established.
e.g. toddler / parents / bodily functions, toilet
  training, muscular control, walking, etc.
Initiative versus Guilt

(play age)
the challenge here is whether the child, with the
  family encouragement of his formulating a plan
  of action and carry it through, can establish the
  habit of taking the initiative and then improve a
  sense of self direction, otherwise he or she
  generates feelings of guilt and then establishes
  sense of inhibition as a result of punishment.
e.g. preschool / family / exploration, discovery,
  adventure, play.
Industry versus Inferiority

(school age)
the challenge in this stage is whether the child,
  interacting with his educational environment, will
  establish a sense of industry as basic educational
  skills and learning competence are developed or
  a sense of inferiority if learning experiences are
  beset with failure.
e.g. child / school, teachers, friends, neighbourhood
  / achievement and accomplishment.
Identity versus Role Confusion

(adolescence)
here the challenge is whether the adolescent, as a
  member of adolescents group, will construct
  identity as promoting a high level of self-
  acceptance and self-controlling of his or her
  destiny or whether role confusing is going to be
  established and as result fanaticism and
  repudiation will be enhanced.
e.g. adolescent/peers; groups/resolving identity and
  direction, becoming a grown-up.
Intimacy versus Isolation

(young adulthood)
the challenge here is whether a person can
  establish sense of intimacy, within love, work and
  friendship contexts, thereby he or she develop a
  feelings of love and affiliation. Otherwise, this
  person is going to generate isolation .
e.g. young adult / lovers, friends, work connections
  / intimate relationships, work and social life.
Generativity versus Stagnation

(adulthood)
in this stage the challenge is whether the person will be
   able to maintain a sense of generativity within the
   community to continue to see oneself as a person who
   is capable of generating new interests and insights and
   who continues to have something to offer to others,
   otherwise, he / she will create a sense of stagnation
   and then generating feelings of overextension and
   rejectivity.
e.g. mid-adult / children, community / 'giving back',
   helping, contributing.
Ego Identity versus Despair

(later adulthood).
the late adulthood stage of life as defined by a
   conflict between ego integrity and despair.
   Adults at this stage, usually over age 65, feel
   content if they look back at their lives and feel
   they've been productive and happy. If not, they
   may feel despair, or like they've been wasting
   their time.
e.g. late adult / society, life / meaning ; goal,
   achievement.
The life stages are interdependent, unresolved
conflicts at one stage influence identity
development at later stages.
Carl Jung
• Carl Gustav Jung (1875 – 1961) was a
  Swiss psychiatrist, an influential
  thinker and the founder of analytical
  psychology (also known as Jungian
  psychology).
• Two processes that are important in
  learning
   – how we take in information
   – what we do with the information
     once it is in our brains
• He called the first PERCEPTION and
  the second JUDGEMENT
Learning Styles Based on Jung's Theory
            of Personality
       Jungian learning styles describe four main
       dimensions:

       (1) Extroverted/Introverted.

       (2) Sensation/Intuition.


       (3) Thinking/Feeling.
Extraverted Learning Style
Extraverted learners enjoy generating energy and ideas
from other people. They prefer socializing and working
                      in groups.

   Characteristics of Extraverted Learners:
  • Enjoys working with others in groups
  • Often gathers ideas from outside sources
  • Willing to lead, participate and offer
    opinions
  • Jumps right in without guidance from
    others
Introverted Learning Style
 • While introverted learners are still sociable, they
   prefer to solve problems on their own.

Characteristics of Introvert Learners:
Prefers to work alone
Enjoys quiet, solitary work
Often generates ideas from internal
sources
Prefers to listen, watch and reflect
Likes to observe others before
attempting a new skill
• Both attitudes - extraversion and introversion - are
  present in every person, in different degrees. No-one
  is pure extravert or pure introvert, and more recent
  studies (notably Eysenck) indicate that a big majority
  of people are actually a reasonably well-balanced
  mixture of the two types, albeit with a preference for
  one or the other.
• In addition to the two attitudes of extraversion and
  introversion, Jung also developed a framework of
  'four functional types'.
Sensing Learning Style
• Jung's 'Sensation' function translates signals from the senses into factual
  data. There is no judgement of right or wrong, good or bad, implications,
  causes, directions, context, possibilities, themes, or related concepts.
  Sensation sees what is, as what it is. 'Sensation' is the opposite to
  'Intuition'.

• Characteristics of Sensate
  Learners:
• Focuses on the present
• Practical and reasonable
• Utilizes experience and common
  sense to solve problems
• Keenly observe the surrounding
  world
Intuitive Learning Style
• Intuitive learners tend to focus more on the world of
  possibility. They enjoy considering ideas, possibilities, and
  potential outcomes. These learners like abstract
  thinking, daydreaming, and imagining the future.
• Characteristics of Intuitive Learners
• Prefers to work in short sessions, rather
  than finishing a task all at once
• Enjoys new challenges, experiences and
  situations
• More likely to look at the big picture
  rather than the details
• Like theories and abstract ideas
• Jung said that Intuition and Sensation are
  'Irrational' since they are concerned with
  perception and do not evaluate. According to
  Jung the Intuition and Sensation functions are
  'Irrational' because they simply gather
  information and perceive the nature of
  something - they do not reason or decide or
  judge.
Thinking Learning Style
• Individuals with a thinking learning style tend to focus more
  on the structure and function of information and objects… It
  is objective to the extent that evaluation is based on personal
  intelligence and comprehension

 Characteristics of Thinking Learners:
• Interested in logic and patterns
• Dislike basing decisions on emotions
• Bases decisions on reason and logic
Feeling Learning Style
People with a feeling style manage information based on the
initial emotions and feelings it generates. It is a 'rational' process
of forming personal subjective opinion about whether
something is good or bad, right or wrong, acceptable or
unacceptable, etc.
• Characteristics of Feeling
  Learners:
• Interested in people and their
  feelings
• Base decisions on immediate
  feelings
• Generates excitement and
  enthusiasm in group settings
Jung said that Thinking and Feeling are 'Rational'
  because both of these functions evaluate
  experience. In Jung's theory the Thinking and
  Feeling functions are 'Rational‘ because
  they reason and decide and judge.
• The Rational and Irrational descriptions that
  Jung attached to the four functions might not
  appear       particularly     significant   at
  first, especially given that Jung's use of the
  words is rather different to the modern
  meanings.
• modern words that describe Jung's meaning
  of Rational      and Irrational,
            respectively Judging ('rational'
  Thinking and Feeling)
  and Perceiving ('irrational' Sensation and
  Intuition)
• Myers and Briggs added another dimension to
  Jung's typological model by identifying that
  people also have a preference for using either
  the judging function (thinking or feeling) or
  their perceiving function (sensing or intuition)
  when relating to the outside world
  (extraversion).
•Thank you

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Freud and neo freudians

  • 1. Ed-Psych Course (TEFL & ICT MA Program) Unit 9: Freud and The Neo-Freudians (Erikson, Adler and Jung) Prepared by: Meriem Ait Hemmou Asma Askaoui Amal Hafidi Soumia Bouddage Omar Taky Eddine
  • 2. Outline • SIGMUND FREUD: I- PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY II- Psycho-sexual Stages of Personality Development • Alfred Adler:Theory of individual psychology • Erikson: Psychosocial Theory • Carl Jung: Theory of Personality
  • 4. Founder Sigmund Freud • MAY 6, 1856 – SIGMUND FREUD WAS BORN IN FREYBERG TOWN, CRECH REPUBLIC • 1881 – HE GRADUATED FROM MEDICAL FACULTY, UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA • He was an Austrian psychologist, he also worked as a medical researcher
  • 5. Founder Sigmund Freud • 1896 – SIGMUND FREUD WAS OFFICIALLY RECOGNIZED • 1900 – HE RELEASED ‘INTERPRETATION OF DREAMS’ • He was an early user of cocaine and recommended its use as a cure for morphine addiction. • SEPTEMBER 23, 1939 –FREUD PASSED AWAY IN HAMPSTEAD HOUSE
  • 6. Overview of psychoanalysis theory •Psychoanalysis is both an approach to therapy and a theory of personality •Emphasizes unconscious motivation; the main cause of behavior lies in unconscious mind
  • 7. • Freud was developing radically different ideas, he believed that mental life is like an iceberg: only small part is exposed to view. He called the area of mind that lies outside of personal awareness the unconscious • He believed that all thoughts, emotions and actions are determined. In other words nothing is an accident, if we probe deeply we will find the causes of every thought or action. • Freud sees human nature as deterministic; ife is about gaining pleasure and avoiding pain
  • 8. The structure of of the human psyche or mind  A. levels of mental life: 1. Unconscious • It includes all impulses, desires that are beyond awareness. But it affects our expression, feelings and actions • It is not directly observed, it is hidden below the conscious. One studies unconsious by looking at the slips of the tong, dreams, wishes….
  • 9. • 2. Subconscious • The middle portion of the mind beneath the conscious layer. • It stores all types of information which can be easily brought to the level of consciousness whenever required.
  • 10. 3. Conscious • It is viewed as the smallest portion of the mind. • It includes the ideas, thoughts and images that we are aware of at any moment of our mental life. • It is the surface level, meaning the level we are aware of in a thinking state.
  • 11. Structure of the human psych or mind B. Structure of personality: 1.ID 2. EGO 3. SUPEREGO
  • 12. •1. ID • It is the first portion of the personality to develop. • It is present at birth and has the qualities of a spoiled child. • ID is selfish and follows no rules, considers only the satisfaction of its own needs and drives. • The ID is not rational and does not care how its wants are abtained.
  • 13. • 2. EGO • The rational level of the personality. • It is the opposite of the « ID » which focuses on morality and justice. • Ego works against the ID and tries to conltrol the ID’s impulses. • Ego is the balance between ID and Super-Ego
  • 14. • Super-Ego • It makes decisions if things are right or wrong. • It has the ability to reward through feelings of satisfaction and self love and punish by providing feelings of guilt and shame. • It is idealistic in nature, and perfection is its goal rather than pleasure seeking or destruction.
  • 15. Example: EGO • I want to • I am on a eat • Eats a small super diet! chocolate! bar of chocolate ID SUPEREGO
  • 16. Psycho-sexual Stages of Personality Development • Psychoanalytic theory contends that a child’s early childhood relationships, particularly those with his or her caregivers, are important influences of personality development. • Freud claimed that as children develop, they go through a universal series of stages. Each stage of development has psychological conflicts to be addressed by the id, ego, and superego, and each stage focuses on a different zone of the body. • Each stage is characterized by different demands and different ways of achieving that gratification.
  • 17. • If children do not receive an appropriate amount of gratification by receiving either too little or too much they may become fixated in a particular stage. They continue to have the same demand for gratification that they had at that stage throughout the rest of their lives. • It can also result in a variety of behaviors and personality traits.
  • 18. Age Name Pleasure source Conflict Weaning away from mother's 0-2 Oral Mouth: sucking, biting, swallowing breast 2-4 Anal Anus: defecating or retaining faeces Toilet training 4-5 Phallic Genitals Oedipus (boys), Electra (girls) Sexual urges sublimated into sports and 6-puberty Latency hobbies. Same-sex friends also help avoid sexual feelings. Physical sexual changes reawaken puberty repressed needs. Genital Social rules onward Direct sexual feelings towards others lead to sexual gratification.
  • 19. Oral Stage (Birth to 18 months). • Children Gain pleasure through sucking and eating; the child ultimately develops a sense of comfort through oral stimulation • During the oral stage, the child is focused on oral pleasures (sucking, feeding and oral discovery of the world). • It is believed that if an infant receives too much or too little oral stimulation, they may develop a fixation or a personality trait that is fixated on oral gratification.
  • 20. • The theory states that these people may develop personality traits such as becoming extremely gullible or naive, always following others and never taking the lead. • They may also fight these urges and develop pessimism and aggression toward others.
  • 21. Anal Stage (18 months to three years) • The focus shifts from the oral cavity to the anal region with the realization that going to the bathroom is a pleasurable event. • Freud believed that the unconscious mind was going through a conflict during this time. The “id” of our unconscious represents the part of our being that finds pleasure in expelling the body’s waste material, while the “ego” and “superego” signify culture’s pressure to resist succumbing to bodily function.
  • 22. • If parents are too harsh or critical during toilet training, then a child may grow up to be anally expulsive or anally retentive. • “Anally expulsive” – limited levels of self- control, defiance, hostility, disorganization. • “Anally retentive” – Rigid, obsessively organized, and overly subservient to authority with focus on perfection, and cleanliness.
  • 23. The phallic stage (3 and 5years) • This stage is characterized by a focus on sexual and aggressive feelings that pertain to the functioning of the sexual organs. • Freud believes that, during this phase, the young boy falls in love with his mother (the Oedipus complex) and dreads his father, while the young girl falls in love with her father (the Electra complex).
  • 24. • This conflict is resolved through identification. • Freud also believed that fixation in this stage sometimes resulted in gender identity problems due to the child’s inability to identify properly with a rival parent . • Fixation at the phallic stage develops a phallic character, who is reckless, resolute, self-assured, and excessively vain and proud.
  • 25. Latency (5 or 6 to puberty) • Freud thought that The drives that have been responsible for gratification in the previous stages appear relatively inactive . • Much of the child's energies are redirected into developing new skills and acquiring new knowledge and play, becomes largely confined to other children of the same gender.
  • 26. Genital Stage (puberty-adulthood) • This stage begins at puberty and develops with physiological changes brought on through hormones. The prior stages of development result in a focus on the genitals as a source for pleasure and teens develop and explore attractions to the opposite gender.
  • 27. Contribution to Education • Freud’s system of psychoanalysis has made many contibutions to education : It has given a good method for the study of human behaviour. Freud’s system ushered in an era of child- centred education. It highlighted the ill effects of unnecessary restrictions and it has given an impetus to the movement of early childhood education.
  • 28. It helped in understanding the exceptional children ,planning their education and taking all possible precautionary measures for preventing the problems they might face in the future. Freud’s concept of the unconscious has helped in understanding the cause of maladaptive behaviour .
  • 29. It has provided a good therapy for treatment of mental illness and abnormal behaviour. It has highlighted the importance of good education and a healthy environment in the early years by emphasising the role of childhood experiences .
  • 30. His emphasis on the role of sex in one’s life has brought out the necessity of providing proper sex education to children . Freud’s system of psychoanalysis has called for provision of proper extracurricular activities and suitable hobbies in school programmes.
  • 32. Adler was one of Freud’s original followers and a member of the Psychological Wednesday Society. As such,the beliefs and values underlying Adler’s theories share the same core principles as Freud’s psychodynamic perspective.
  • 33. While Freud and Adler worked very closely together for a period of time,Adler began to challenge Freud’s ideas with his own views about the role of individual experience. Their working relationship eventually diddolved and their theories moved in opposing directions.
  • 34. • During the acrimonious breakup between the two men, Freud accused Adler of having paranoid delusions and of using terrorist tactics. He told one of his friends Freud said that the revolt by Adler was that of “an abnormal individual driven mad by ambition”(quoted in Gay, 1988, p. 223).
  • 35. • In fact,several other differences made the relationship between Freud and Adler quite tenuous.
  • 36. First, Freud reduced all motivation to sex and aggression, whereas Adler saw people as being motivated mostly by social influences and by their striving for superiority or success. Second, Freud assumed that people have little or no choice in shaping their personality, whereas Adler believed that people are largely responsible for who they are.
  • 37.  Third, Freud’s assumption that present behavior is caused by past experiences was directly opposed to Adler’s notion that present behavior is shaped by people’s view of the future.  Fourth, in contrast to Freud, who placed very heavy emphasis on unconscious components of behavior, Adler believed that psychologically healthy people are usually aware of what they are doing and why they are doing it.
  • 38. when theoretical and personal differences between Adler and Freud emerged, Adler left the Freud circle and established an opposing theory, which became known as individual psychology.
  • 39.  Holism: The Adlerian views man as a unit, a self-conscious whole that functions as an open system , not as a collection of drives and instincts.  Field Theory: The premise is that an individual can only be studied by his movements, actions and relationships within his social field. In the context of Mind Development, this is essentially the examination of tasks of work, and the individual's feelings of belonging to the group.  Teleology :("power to will" or the belief that individuals are guided not only by mechanical forces but that they also move toward certain goals of self-realization). While Adler's name is linked most often with the term 'inferiority-complex,' towards the end of his career he became more concerned with observing the individual's struggle for significance or competence (later discussed by others as self-realization, or self-actualization, etc.). He believed that, standing before the unknown, each person strives to become more perfect, and in health is motivated by one dynamic force - the upward striving for completion - and all else is subordinated to this one master motive. Behavior is understood as goal-directed movement, though the person may not be fully aware of this motivation.
  • 40.  The Creative Self: The concept of the creative self places the responsibility for the individual's personality into his own hands. The Adlerian practitioner sees the individual as responsible for himself, he attempts to show the person that he cannot blame others or uncontrollable forces for his current condition.  Life-Style: An individual's striving towards significance and belonging can be observed as a pattern. This pattern manifests early in life and can be observed as a theme throughout his lifetime. This permeates all aspects of perception and action. If one understands an individual's lifestyle, his behavior makes sense.  Private intelligence: is the reasoning invented by an individual to stimulate and justify a self-serving style of life. By contrast, common sense represents society's cumulative, consensual reasoning that recognizes the wisdom of mutual benefit.
  • 41.  We also rate Adlerian theory high on its ability to guide action. The theory serves the psychotherapist, the teacher, and the parent with guidelines for the solution to practical problems in a variety of settings. Adlerian practitioners gather information through reports on birth order, dreams, early recollections, childhood difficulties,and physical deficiencies. They then use this information to understand a person’s style of life and to apply those specific techniques that will both increase that person’s individual responsibility and broaden his or her freedom of choice.
  • 43. Biography • Born in Germany, June 15, 1902. • Influences: Sigmund Freud and Anna Freud (daughter of Sigmund Freud). • Professor in Harvard, Yale, University of California at Berkley, clinic in Massachusetts. • Changed his name from Erik Homberger to Erik Erickson. • Wrote Childhood and Society. • Retired in 1970. • he passed away in US, 1994 .
  • 44. Child psychoanalyst Erik Erikson focused his research on the effects… Society Individual psychological development Culture
  • 45. • He accepted many of Freud's theories: – i.e. the id, ego, and superego & the theory of infantile sexuality. • He Rejected Freud's attempt to describe personality solely on: – The basis of sexuality, in contrary, felt that personality continued to develop beyond five years of age.
  • 46. • Erikson suggests that every individual psychological development goes on through eight stages from birth to old age. • each stage poses a particular kind of challenge. If the individual handles this challenge well with the help of other significant people in their lives, then he can move smoothly onto the next stage and so on. Otherwise, these challenges will continue to reappear throughout a person’s life making it more and more difficult to proceed through next stages.
  • 47. Stages of psychosocial development
  • 48. Basic Trust versus Basic Mistrust (infancy) the challenge here is whether the child can learn to trust others, who take care of him or her, and thereby him or herself or whether, as a result of experiences, a sense of basic mistrust becomes internalized, which makes him or her withdraw. e.g. infant / mother / feeding and being comforted, sleeping, etc.
  • 49. Autonomy versus Shame and Doubt (early childhood) the challenge is whether the child can establish autonomy and thereby he or she becomes self- competent, and develop self-control, with the help of others, or whether shame and doubt will be established. e.g. toddler / parents / bodily functions, toilet training, muscular control, walking, etc.
  • 50. Initiative versus Guilt (play age) the challenge here is whether the child, with the family encouragement of his formulating a plan of action and carry it through, can establish the habit of taking the initiative and then improve a sense of self direction, otherwise he or she generates feelings of guilt and then establishes sense of inhibition as a result of punishment. e.g. preschool / family / exploration, discovery, adventure, play.
  • 51. Industry versus Inferiority (school age) the challenge in this stage is whether the child, interacting with his educational environment, will establish a sense of industry as basic educational skills and learning competence are developed or a sense of inferiority if learning experiences are beset with failure. e.g. child / school, teachers, friends, neighbourhood / achievement and accomplishment.
  • 52. Identity versus Role Confusion (adolescence) here the challenge is whether the adolescent, as a member of adolescents group, will construct identity as promoting a high level of self- acceptance and self-controlling of his or her destiny or whether role confusing is going to be established and as result fanaticism and repudiation will be enhanced. e.g. adolescent/peers; groups/resolving identity and direction, becoming a grown-up.
  • 53. Intimacy versus Isolation (young adulthood) the challenge here is whether a person can establish sense of intimacy, within love, work and friendship contexts, thereby he or she develop a feelings of love and affiliation. Otherwise, this person is going to generate isolation . e.g. young adult / lovers, friends, work connections / intimate relationships, work and social life.
  • 54. Generativity versus Stagnation (adulthood) in this stage the challenge is whether the person will be able to maintain a sense of generativity within the community to continue to see oneself as a person who is capable of generating new interests and insights and who continues to have something to offer to others, otherwise, he / she will create a sense of stagnation and then generating feelings of overextension and rejectivity. e.g. mid-adult / children, community / 'giving back', helping, contributing.
  • 55. Ego Identity versus Despair (later adulthood). the late adulthood stage of life as defined by a conflict between ego integrity and despair. Adults at this stage, usually over age 65, feel content if they look back at their lives and feel they've been productive and happy. If not, they may feel despair, or like they've been wasting their time. e.g. late adult / society, life / meaning ; goal, achievement.
  • 56. The life stages are interdependent, unresolved conflicts at one stage influence identity development at later stages.
  • 57. Carl Jung • Carl Gustav Jung (1875 – 1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist, an influential thinker and the founder of analytical psychology (also known as Jungian psychology). • Two processes that are important in learning – how we take in information – what we do with the information once it is in our brains • He called the first PERCEPTION and the second JUDGEMENT
  • 58. Learning Styles Based on Jung's Theory of Personality Jungian learning styles describe four main dimensions: (1) Extroverted/Introverted. (2) Sensation/Intuition. (3) Thinking/Feeling.
  • 59. Extraverted Learning Style Extraverted learners enjoy generating energy and ideas from other people. They prefer socializing and working in groups.  Characteristics of Extraverted Learners: • Enjoys working with others in groups • Often gathers ideas from outside sources • Willing to lead, participate and offer opinions • Jumps right in without guidance from others
  • 60. Introverted Learning Style • While introverted learners are still sociable, they prefer to solve problems on their own. Characteristics of Introvert Learners: Prefers to work alone Enjoys quiet, solitary work Often generates ideas from internal sources Prefers to listen, watch and reflect Likes to observe others before attempting a new skill
  • 61. • Both attitudes - extraversion and introversion - are present in every person, in different degrees. No-one is pure extravert or pure introvert, and more recent studies (notably Eysenck) indicate that a big majority of people are actually a reasonably well-balanced mixture of the two types, albeit with a preference for one or the other. • In addition to the two attitudes of extraversion and introversion, Jung also developed a framework of 'four functional types'.
  • 62. Sensing Learning Style • Jung's 'Sensation' function translates signals from the senses into factual data. There is no judgement of right or wrong, good or bad, implications, causes, directions, context, possibilities, themes, or related concepts. Sensation sees what is, as what it is. 'Sensation' is the opposite to 'Intuition'. • Characteristics of Sensate Learners: • Focuses on the present • Practical and reasonable • Utilizes experience and common sense to solve problems • Keenly observe the surrounding world
  • 63. Intuitive Learning Style • Intuitive learners tend to focus more on the world of possibility. They enjoy considering ideas, possibilities, and potential outcomes. These learners like abstract thinking, daydreaming, and imagining the future. • Characteristics of Intuitive Learners • Prefers to work in short sessions, rather than finishing a task all at once • Enjoys new challenges, experiences and situations • More likely to look at the big picture rather than the details • Like theories and abstract ideas
  • 64. • Jung said that Intuition and Sensation are 'Irrational' since they are concerned with perception and do not evaluate. According to Jung the Intuition and Sensation functions are 'Irrational' because they simply gather information and perceive the nature of something - they do not reason or decide or judge.
  • 65. Thinking Learning Style • Individuals with a thinking learning style tend to focus more on the structure and function of information and objects… It is objective to the extent that evaluation is based on personal intelligence and comprehension  Characteristics of Thinking Learners: • Interested in logic and patterns • Dislike basing decisions on emotions • Bases decisions on reason and logic
  • 66. Feeling Learning Style People with a feeling style manage information based on the initial emotions and feelings it generates. It is a 'rational' process of forming personal subjective opinion about whether something is good or bad, right or wrong, acceptable or unacceptable, etc. • Characteristics of Feeling Learners: • Interested in people and their feelings • Base decisions on immediate feelings • Generates excitement and enthusiasm in group settings
  • 67. Jung said that Thinking and Feeling are 'Rational' because both of these functions evaluate experience. In Jung's theory the Thinking and Feeling functions are 'Rational‘ because they reason and decide and judge.
  • 68. • The Rational and Irrational descriptions that Jung attached to the four functions might not appear particularly significant at first, especially given that Jung's use of the words is rather different to the modern meanings. • modern words that describe Jung's meaning of Rational and Irrational, respectively Judging ('rational' Thinking and Feeling) and Perceiving ('irrational' Sensation and Intuition)
  • 69. • Myers and Briggs added another dimension to Jung's typological model by identifying that people also have a preference for using either the judging function (thinking or feeling) or their perceiving function (sensing or intuition) when relating to the outside world (extraversion).