Reviewer in Personal Development
Reviewer in Personal Development
Unit I. self-development
It talks about the summary of one’s childhood and an overview of an adult to be.
Adolescents are more open to other people’s faith perspectives.. This is not because they are moving away from
their faith but because they have a realization that other people’s faiths might inform and deepen their own.
PHYSICAL
- Beginning to be very self-conscious, sensitive and worried about their own body changes
PSYCHOSOCIAL
COGNITIVE
- mental capacities
- Begin to think abstractly, reason logically, think hypothetical possibilities, and impossibilities about life
- “Impulsive Decisions”
Puberty – a stage when physiological changes occur in the body that signifies sexual maturity
Primary sex characteristics –parts of human anatomy that are directly responsible procreation or human
reproduction
Secondary sex characteristics –features of the body that develops during puberty
Identity vs. Role confusion –it is based on Erik Erickson’s) wherein adolescents decide what to believe and what to
accept between the many options of values in life including career options, choosing of friends and even the search
for identity
Module 3: Developmental Stages (middle and late adolescence)
CONFORM –both acting and believing in accordance to the standards, attitudes, practices of society
“Mature individuals are people who learn from their experience and deal with frustration effectively”.
The function of family especially parents in molding the adolescent to be a better member of society is very
important.
The adolescence gradually proceeds in the transition phase from dependency to independence.
Parental rejection
Abuse
Socio-economic status
Early deprivation
Difficulties in communication
Parental affection
Adolescents who receive unconditional love from parents become a better person and self-determined.
A lot of adjustment problems in school are caused by the adolescent’s conception that they are being scrutinized
and evaluated by others
Stress - actions or behavior that are considered to be threatening or challenging to the physiological, emotional or
cognitive aspects of a person.
Physiological indicators - bodily changes that are exhibited by a person in response to tension brought
by stress. can be manifested through emotion, mood or affect (e.g. fear, anxiousness)
FRONTAL LOBE
functions: higher mental processes, decision making, recognition and formulation of speech and
voluntary motor movements
TEMPORAL LOBE
OCCIPITAL LOBE
location: rear bottom of each hemisphere
PARIETAL LOBE
Neurotransmitters chemicals that carry messages across the synapse or cell body of a receiving neuron
GABA (GAMMA AMINO BUTYRIC ACID) - involved in sleep and inhibits movement
PITUITARY GLAND
master gland
- secretes melatonin, a hormone that regulates the sleep–wake cycle, in response to changes in light
too much insulin produces hypoglycemia whereas too little causes diabetes
controls the stress reaction through the adrenal medulla’s secretion of epinephrine and norepinephrine
adrenal cortex secretes over 30 different corticoids (hormones) controlling salt intake, stress and sexual
development
MENTAL HEALTH - It is a state of wellbeing in which the individual realises his or her own
abilities, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively and fruitfully, and is
able to make a contribution to his/her community.
WELL-BEING
Symptoms: losing interest in pleasurable activities, feeling of restlessness, poor appetite, excessive
eating, insomnia and hypersomnia
• Sudden change of mood - person’s usual mood or behavior is not present anymore
• Poor performance - a person cannot maximize his or her potential due to his or her problem
• GENETICS
• ENVIRONMENT
• SOCIAL
reduces anxiety, assist the individual to adopt and cope with whatever situation he found himself in
RATIONALIZATION
inventing of excuses or reasons for behavior that is inadequate, unacceptable or damaging to personal
integrity and status
• SOUR-GRAPING
Implies that what one sincerely wanted is not worth trying after all.
• SWEET-LEMONING/SUGAR COATING
creating a bogus “brighter side” . The person takes frustration as a form of blessing in disguise or make the activity pleasant even if it is not.
“A girl who is not permitted by her parents to attend a party may find instead that staying at home is more favorable and safe.”
WHY DO WE RATIONALIZE?
PROJECTION
unconscious aggression reaction wherein there is a transfer of inadequacies towards an outside object or another
person, individual shifts his or her perception of painful or undesirable situation
DISPLACEMENT
individual shifts a response or reaction from its original object to less dangerous or threatening object
REPRESSION
EGOCENTRISM
unconscious pretension to superior qualities and traits
REACTION FORMATION
urges that are not acceptable to the consciousness are repressed and opposite attitudes or modes of behavior are
repressed
REGRESSION
escape reaction in which an individual falls back on thoughts, feelings, or behavior which works successfully during
the earlier phase of life
IDENTIFICATION
FRUSTRATION
The current positive emotional status of the adolescent can be damaged when they fail to achieve their freedom
because of parental prohibitions.
adolescents may have a wrong judgment in using their time to things that they perceive enjoyable but
unproductive
individuals who spends their time to things that are unproductive, like going out with friends rather than studying,
can lead to a negative mental health.
3. Sexual/Romantic Relationship
adolescents may experience HEART BREAKS that trigger emotional break down and prolonged loneliness
4. Peer adjustment
some individual fails to develop interpersonal skills that is helpful in social interaction and might trigger the feeling
of isolation which may lead to frustration
5. Career choice
wrong career choice might trigger confusion to the individual and question the circumstances that are happening
to him or her which leads to maladjustments and frustration, and affects the well-being of the adolescents
MODULE 8: Emotional Intelligence
unpleasant emotions destroy bodily functions and are hazardous to mental health
EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
• Infant – concerned mostly with things that can satisfy his/her physiological needs.
• Few months after birth, emotional responses become differentiated into love, fear, and anger.
• Tantrums are normal up to the ages 4/5 and are used by the child to get what he or she wants.
• Adolescents – emotions are intense and unstable due to glandular changes and excessive parental restraints.
EMOTIONAL MATURITY
• Controlling emotion refers to modifying emotional expression by directing manifestations into useful acts.
EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE
• motivated
• sensitive to others’ feelings
KINDS OF EMOTIONS
POSITIVE EMOTIONS - show positive affect and brought by good and acceptable experiences
Joy and Happiness - a pleasant feeling that follows when a triumphant event happened
Excitement - a positive feeling when a person anticipates something positive is going to happen
NEGATIVE EMOTIONS show negative affect and brought about by unwanted life experiences
Fear - one of the most troublesome and prominent emotions; accompanied with bodily sensations