Module 3 Personality, Ability, Attitude and Values
Module 3 Personality, Ability, Attitude and Values
ORGANIZATION
MODULE 3: PERSONALITY, ABILITY, ATTITUDES
AND VALUES
Aside from the Big Five Personality traits, possibly the most well
known and most often used personality assessment is the Myers-
Briggs Type Indicator ( MBTI ). Unlike the Big Five, which appraises
traits, MBTI measures types. Assessments of the Big Five do not
categorize people as neurotic or extrovert which are all a matter of
degrees. MBTI on the other hand, classifies people as one of 16
type. In MBTI, people are grouped using four dimensions.
Through MBTI, 16 types of personalities could be created by combining
the four different scales below:
1. Extraversion (E) - Introversion (I): The extraversion-introversion
dichotomy is a way to describe how people respond and interact with
the world around them. All people exhibit extraversion and
introversion to some extent but most tend have a general liking for
one or the other.
2. Sensing (S) - Intuition (N): This scale engages in looking at how
people collect information from the world around them. All people
expend some time sensing and intuiting depending on the situation.
3. Thinking (T) - Feeling (F): This scale concentrates on how people
formulate decisions depending on the information that they
collected from their sensing or intuition functions. People who
desire thinking set a greater accent on facts and objective data.
Those who prefer feeling are more expected to consider people
and emotions.
4. Judging (J) - Perceiving (P): The final scale involves how people
deal with the outside world. Those who lean to judging favor
structure and from decisions. People who lean to perceiving are
more open, flexible and adaptable. These two tendencies interact
with the other scales. The judging-perceiving scale aids illustrate
whether a person is an extravert when taking in new information
(sensing and intuiting) or when he is making decisions.
OTHER PERSONALITY TRAITS IN THE
WORKPLACE
1. Proactive Personality - means a person's preference to fix what
is supposed as erroneous, change the status quo and apply
initiative to solve problems.
2. Machiavellianism - describes behavior directed towards
attaining power and controlling the behavior of other people.
3. Risk Propensity- is the degree of willingness of a person to take
chances and create risky decisions.
4. Creativity - involves the ability to break away from the habit-
bound way of thinking and generate novel and useful ideas.
ABILITY
▪ Ability is a person's talent to
perform a mental or physical
task. It includes both the natural
aptitudes and the learned
capabilities needed to
productively finish a task.
▪ Aptitudes are the natural talents
that aid employees in learning
specific task more speedily and
execute them better.
▪ Learned Capabilities are the
skills and knowledge that a
person currently has.
The following abilities have been discovered to help differentiate
between higher and lower performers in the workplace:
MENTAL ABILITY
1. the ability to recognize and regulate our own emotions (e.g. to hold
our temper in check)
2. the ability to recognize and influence others' emotions(e.g. the
ability to make them enthusiastic about our ideas)
3. self-motivation (the ability to motivate oneself to work long hours
and resist the temptation to give up)
4. the ability to form effective long-term relationship with others.
However, extensive research on EI suggests that a more appropriate
model of this kind of intelligence includes the following factors instead: