490 likes | 735 Views
Understanding Individuals Within Environments. Chapter 5. Activity?. Write down 2 classes you’ve taken that are very different. What skills did you need in order to be successful in that class? How did the different environments help you learn? Not help you learn?.
E N D
Activity? • Write down 2 classes you’ve taken that are very different. • What skills did you need in order to be successful in that class? • How did the different environments help you learn? Not help you learn?
6 Models of Ecological Environment (1) Behavior Setting Analysis (Roger Barker) (2) Activity Settings (O’Donnel, et al.) (3) Ecological Metaphor (James Kelly) (4) Social Climate Perspective (Rudolph Moos) (5) Social Regularities (Edward Seidman) (6) Environmntal Psychology
3 Models of Ecological Environment (1) Behavior Setting Analysis (Roger Barker) • Discrete places (2) Ecological Metaphor (James Kelly) • Field Biology as Metaphor (3) Social Climate Perspective (Rudolph Moos) • Personality of the Environment
Model 1: Behavior Setting Theory (Roger Barker) • Fundamental Question: “How do we understand stream of behavior that characterizes our everyday life?” • Eco-behavioral science independent of individuals • Discovery of rules that are minimally variable by context
One Boy’s Day: The Evolution of a Theory • Behavior setting as central concept • Behavior-environment synomorphy
When in church, we behave….
Circuits • Circuits: mechanisms that guide adaptive behavior in settings, connect people to settings • 4 types of circuits • Program circuits • Goal circuits • Deviation-countering circuits • Vetoing circuits
Uses of Behavior Setting Analysis • Providing portraits of what aspects of communities are important locally • # churches • # schools • # athletic facilities • Diagnosing community needs • What is missing? • Needed programs/organizations
Staffing Theory # people Available behavior settings • Under-populated settings – Greater claims on people • Fewer people per setting • Over-populated settings – Less claim on people
Size Matters: Big School/Small School • Study of 20 high schools in Kansas that differed in student population (range: 150-1800 students) • Begins with behavior setting survey • Classes • Extracurricular activities • Sports # of behavior settings # of students
Smaller Schools • more involved in school activities • worked longer hours at school-related activities • worked at greater diversity of tasks • became more generalists than specialists
Findings • Smaller schools: fewer students per behavior (i.e., more claim on students) • Student Council • Soccer Team • Choir • Band
Smaller Schools • Felt less marginal to ongoing life of school • More a part of the school/investment in it • More roles of responsibility • Assessed value of others more in task-related than socio-emotional characteristics • Lower standards for admission into behavior settings
Larger Schools • Higher specialized skill development • More diversity of opportunities in classes & extracurricular activities • More ability to hide when you want to
Findings • Larger schools: more students per behavior (i.e., less claim on students) • Student Council • Soccer Team • Choir • Band
3 Models of Ecological Environment (1) Behavior Setting Analysis (Roger Barker) • Discrete places (2) Ecological Metaphor (James Kelly) • Field Biology as Metaphor (3) Social Climate Perspective (Rudolph Moos) • Personality of the Environment
Ecological Metaphor (James Kelly) • 4 principles from field biology • Adaptation • Cycling of resources • Interdependence • Succession
Ecological Metaphor: (1) Adaptation • Every community has both opportunities for development & demands for survival • Expectations / Demands • Formal vs. Informal • Opportunities • What are the adaptive requirements of UML as a college environment?
Adaptation & Coping • The Adaptation Question: “How do I have to behave to survive/thrive here?” • Behavior • Treat others • The Coping Question: “What skills, qualities, & coping styles does the community support & tolerate, & what does it not?” • Interpersonal • Academic
Where do these adaptive requirements occur at UML? • Social Settings • Classrooms • Organizations • Studying Abroad • Athletics • Social Norms • Peers • Faculty • Policies • Tuition • Requirements
Ecological Metaphor: (2) Cycling of Resources • Focus: Search for positive aspects of community • How resources that nurture growth of development of community are distributed, managed, & conserved • Question: “What resources are available in this community for making it a better place?” • Think: What have been resources in your life generally? At UML?
Types of Resources • Formal: Role responsibilities • Informal: Non-role related qualities of people within setting, Not required • Manifest: On the surface, easy to recognize • Latent: Not expressed in the ongoing daily environment
4 Main Types of Resources • People • Settings • Events • Technology
Ecological Model: (3) Interdependence • Parts of a community are related • Research Question: “How are people, agencies, & institutions linked to each other in the community?” • Setting off chains of events in individual lives • If only I hadn’t…… • (you fill it in)
Ecological Metaphor: (4) Succession • Communities change over time in response to internal & external forces • Community Question: “How did that community come to be the way it currently is & what are its hopes for the future?”
Ecological Metaphor: (4) Succession Principle • Focus on • History • Hopes • Trajectory • Provides an empathy for current issues even if you hate what you see
Southwick Hall Lowell Techology Institute 1903 Coburn Hall Lowell State College 1899
Ecological Metaphor: (4) Succession • Goals & values of helping agent must be generally consistent with setting • Other goals may be pursued, but conflict should be expected. • Sustainability should be a goal
Ecological Model: Summary • Adaptation: What are the adaptive requirements? • Cycling of Resources: What are the available resources? • Interdependence: How are its different parts connected? • Succession: How did it come to be as it is and what are its hopes for the future?
3 Models of Ecological Environment (1) Behavior Setting Analysis (Roger Barker) • Discrete places (2) Ecological Metaphor (James Kelly) • Field Biology as Metaphor (3) Social Climate Perspective (Rudolph Moos) • Personality of the Environment
Model 3: Social Climate Approach (Rudolph Moos) • Focus: high impact environments • Question: Can environment be described in terms of perceptions of people in it? • 3 Environmental Domains • Relationships • Quality • Authority Structure • Rules & regulations • Personal Development/Goal orientation • Reasons for being in the setting
Where Does Social Climate Come From? • School & context factors • Physical/architectural features • Organizational factors • Teacher characteristics • Aggregate students characteristics
A Model of Determinants of Classroom Climate Organizational Factors School and Classroom Context Physical and Architectural Features Aggregate Student Characteristics Classroom Climate Teacher Characteristics
4 Ways of Defining Neighborhoods • Site (geographical location) • census tracts • Perception • of neighboring practices, of crime level, of housing • Social network • interpersonal connections • Culture • historical/cultural quest
Neighborhood Risk & Protective Processes • Risk processes correlated with problematic individual outcomes (personal distress/behavior problems) • Low income neighborhoods • Risky physical environments • Exposure to violence • Protective processes are strengths or resources correlated with positive outcomes (offset or buffer risk processes) • Sense of community among residents • Good school
What Difference Does the Neighborhood Make? • Chicago neighborhoods & violent behaviors (Sampson, Raudenbush, & Earls) • What affected the ability of communities to prevent violence? • Premise – social & organizational characteristics of communities explain variation in crime rates
Hypothesis • Ability of neighborhoods to maintain social control in the community related to level of violent behavior • Social Control • Ability of a group to regulate its members, to realize collective goals (group control) • Collective efficacy • Social cohesion combined with a willingness to intervene for the common good • Reflected in • Monitoring children’s play • Intervening to prevent street corner society • Confronting public nuisances
343 Chicago Neighborhoods • Over 8,000 African-American, Latino, & White people interviewed • 3 Types of Neighborhoods • “Concentrated Disadvantage” • below poverty line • on public assistance • female-headed families • unemployed • Immigrant concentration (Latino/foreign born) • Residential stability
3 Measures of Violence in Community • Perceived community violence • Personal victimization • Incidents of homicide
Results • Collective Efficacy – • Positively related to residential stability • Negatively related to concentrated disadvantage and immigrant/foreign-born
Results • Neighborhoods high on collective efficacy • Less perceived violence • Less personal victimization • Fewer homicides
Problem Assessment Assignment • UML Resources • Hawk Talk (http://www.uml.edu/admissions/hawktalk/) • Press Releases • http://www.uml.edu/Media/PressReleases/default.asp • UML Factbook • http://www.uml.edu/it/ir/factbooks.html • US News & World Report • http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/national-universities-rankings/