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Sigmund Freud. Identity. Learning Target. Explain Freud’s theory of the mind and how it contributes to anxiety. Theory of the Mind. Levels of consciousness. Conscious Thoughts and feelings we are aware of Preconscious Thoughts and memories we are not currently thinking about
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Sigmund Freud Identity
Learning Target • Explain Freud’s theory of the mind and how it contributes to anxiety.
Theory of the Mind Levels of consciousness Conscious Thoughts and feelings we are aware of Preconscious Thoughts and memories we are not currently thinking about But are easily retrieved Unconscious Unacceptable thoughts, wishes, feelings and memories Things we can’t access Become exposed in dreams, hypnosis, free association, and Freudian slips Bodies of mind • Id • Present at birth • Found in the unconscious mind • Founded in basic sexual and aggression drives • Operates on the pleasure principle • Ego • Mediator • Operates on the reality principle: good and reason • Superego • Ideals and standards we learn from growing up in society • What we should do • Too strong=guilt, Too weak=impulsive
Defense Mechanisms • Conflict between the id and superego causes anxiety • Ego utilizes unconscious defense mechanisms to relieve tension • Seven Defense Mechanisms • Repression • Regression • Denial • Reaction • Projection • Rationalization • Displacement
Learning Target • Explain the seven Freudian defense mechanisms and be able to identify the characteristics of each in order to apply them to individuals and scenarios.
Repression (intermediate) • What is it: Unconscious burying of unpleasant information into the unconscious to protect the ego • Goal of psychoanalysis is to bring repressed info to the surface • Characteristics of repressors: • Fewer personal memories • High level of arousal to emotional situations • Simple and non-specific memories • Engage in impulsive/immature behavior
Regression (immature) • What is it: Retreating to a more comfortable stage • Characteristics: • Immature • Childish • Examples?
Denial • What is it: • Refusing to admit that something unpleasant is happening • Refusing to recognize the unpleasant emotions associated with the event • Examples??
Reaction Formation • What is it: Expressing the opposite (and usually exaggerated) feeling of the anxiety producing emotion • Characteristics • Gullible • Strong desire to be loved or liked • High moral standards • Examples??
Rationalization • What is it: Justifying anxiety producing behavior • Similar to Intellectualization • What is it: removing the emotion from the situation. • KISS: thinking about something in a cold and critical way • Characteristics • Rational • Obsessive • Examples??
Displacement (intermediate) • What is it: Attacking an item that comes to symbolize the cause of anxiety • KISS: acting out on something or moving the feelings to a safer target • Characteristics • Aggressive • Examples
Projection (Immature) • What is it: Putting your feelings on others • KISS: Thinking someone has your feelings • Examples??
Mature Defense Mechanisms: coping strategies • Humor • Sublimation: channeling impulses into socially acceptable behavior • Suppression: consciously trying to stop thinking about something • Altruism: civil service that brings personal satisfaction
Useful Source http://psychology.about.com/od/theoriesofpersonality/ss/defensemech.htm
Exit Ticket • Based on your information of defense mechanisms, write a two paragraph reflection on your personal defense mechanism assessment. Paragraph One: What results would you expect before you took the assessment. Do you think you had high anxiety: why/why not. What mechanisms do you think you would use to handle anxiety: why? Paragraph Two: Explain the results you obtained: why do you think you scored the way you did—can you rationalize it? Are there any points of confusion or things you disagree with? Why did the results turn out or not turn out as you expected.
Do Now • Answer the following two questions in your notebook: • -What is repression and why do we use it? • -When over the course of an individual’s life does the ego, superego, and id emerge?
Learning Target • Describe the oral, anal, phallic, latency, and genital stage of psychosexual development and identify individuals “stuck” in each stage.
Freud’s Stages of Personality Development • Personality is set by age seven! • Problems in adults come from poorly resolved conflicts during childhood • Who else discussed conflict during childhood as a foundation for later issues??? • In each stage the id focuses on a different part of the body
Oral Stage • Age: 1-18 months • Focus • Pleasure Center: mouth • Behaviors: Sucking, biting, chewing • Conflict • Weaning • Failure: Oral Fixation • Gum chewing, fingernail biting, smoking • Emotional Dependence
Anal Stage • Age: 18-36 months • Focus • Pleasure Center: bowel and bladder function • Behaviors: Controlling bowel and bladder function • Conflict: Potty Training • Failure: anal fixation • Dominating • Requires things neat and perfect; too much control (inverse is not enough control, messy)
Phallic Stage • Age: 3-6 years • Focus • Pleasure Center: Genitals • Behaviors: coping with incestuous feelings • Conflict: Oedipus Conflict • Love for their mothers and hatred, fear, or jealousy of the father • Fear punishment from the father • Views father as competition • Other psychoanalytic psychologists propose an Electra Complex • Fixation: obsession with phallic objects and emotional power
Latency Stage • Age: 6-Puberty • Focus • Dormant sexual feelings • Conflict: Repress feelings towards rival parent; identification process • Children now view the same sex parent as a role modelgender identity • What defense mechanism does this remind you of?
Genital Stage • Age: Puberty on • Focus: maturation of sexual interests • Mature sexual relationships
Exit Ticket • Answer the following questions on a sheet of white lined paper: turn it in to leave • -List each stage and the corresponding age in the correct order. • -Describe three individuals: one is “stuck” at the oral stage, one the anal stage, and one the latency stage. • HOMEWORK-DUE TOMORROW 11/13 • Finish your defense mechanisms paragraphs.
Do Now • Take out your defense mechanisms prompt. Put your name on it and have it ready to pass forward when asked. • Answer the following questions in your notebook • -What Freudian stage of development would a potty training three year old be in? • -If this child did not successfully resolve the conflicts of this stage, what behaviors would they exhibit later in life? • -What are several techniques of psychoanalysis (hint use your biography and movie notes)
Learning Target • Explain the principles of Freud’s theory of dream analysis • Apply this theory to a dream scenario in the psychoanalytical stage of development
Why Do We Dream Wish fulfillment Gratification of unconscious desires and needs Manifest Content: Surface story Latent Content: Disguised psychological meaning http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9A4p-_agR_c
Exit Ticket • Answer the following question in your notebook • -How did Freud apply his theory of dream analysis to hysterical patients • -What do you believe to be true about the theory of dreams, what do you believe to be false. Why?
Freud’s Interpretation of Dreams: Learning Target • Give one reason why we dream. • Explain Freud’s theory of dream analysis and apply this theory to dreams.
Some Freudian Techniques • Condensation: Different ideas come together, so one symbol has multiple meanings
Some Freudian Techniques • Displacement: Replacing a disturbing or unacceptable desire/image/idea with something acceptable
Some Freudian Techniques • Representation: Process where thoughts are converted into visual images
Some Freudian Techniques • Symbolization: Neutral objects represent something unacceptable or unappealing (Freud most often believed symbols stood in for aspects of sexual life or people connected to it)
Some Freudian Techniques • Rationalization: Reorganization of dreams into a logical order
Socratic Seminar • Dialogue versus debate • Listens to understand versus listen to find flaws • Open-minded versus searching for an answer • If you can’t hear let us know • Ask questions • R.e.s.p.e.c.t. • No hands, but avoid talking over each other • Add to your notes! • Inner circle=speak and write, out circle=write
Rank Order the Words (1-4)Which word best fits with Freud and his Interpretation of Dreams • Wisdom • Love • Soul • Experience • Truth
Socratic Seminar-Do Now • Using your exit ticket responses, discuss with the classmate behind you what you felt was true and what was false.
Reflection • Answer the following questions on a sheet of white lined paper • How did you feel about the Socratic Seminar? Like it, didn’t like it? What was good, what was bad? Why • How is your opinion of Freud different? • What value can we take from Freud’s teachings?
Dream Prompt • Using the dream journal you have been working on: • -Describe the manifest content of one of your dreams • -Describe the latent content of one of your dreams based on Freudian principles (symbols, hopes/wishes, and unfulfilled life events) • -Do you buy it; why or why not • (Response should be formed in three, five+ sentence paragraphs) If you have to consult any sources for the latent content cite these sources!
Neo-Freudians Learning Target • List and describe the Neo-Freudians Alfred Adler, Carl Jung, and Karen Horney • Compare and contrast Freud and these three Neo-Freudians. • Describe the impact of Freud on modern psychology.
Learning Target • Explain the contribution of the contemporary psychoanalytical psychologists Alfred Adler, Carl Jung, and Karen Horney • Evaluate the truth and value of psychoanalytic psychology