Psychology: Personality Theories: Freud, Jung, Rogers
Comparing psychodynamic, analytic, and humanistic views of personality
Psychology: Personality Theories: Freud, Jung, Rogers
Comparing psychodynamic, analytic, and humanistic views of personality
Psychology - Grade 9-12
- 1
Define personality as psychologists use the term, then explain why psychologists create personality theories.
Focus on patterns that stay fairly consistent across time and situations.
Personality is a person's relatively stable pattern of thoughts, feelings, motives, and behaviors. Psychologists create personality theories to explain how personality develops, why people differ, and how personality influences behavior. - 2
Freud described the mind as having conscious, preconscious, and unconscious levels. Explain each level in your own words.
The conscious level contains thoughts and feelings a person is aware of right now. The preconscious contains information that is not currently in awareness but can be brought to mind. The unconscious contains wishes, fears, conflicts, and memories that are outside awareness but may still influence behavior. - 3
In Freud's theory, compare the id, ego, and superego. Include the goal of each part of personality.
Think of the id as desire, the ego as reality, and the superego as morality.
The id seeks immediate pleasure and follows basic drives. The ego tries to make realistic decisions that balance the id, the superego, and the outside world. The superego represents moral standards, rules, and ideals learned from society and caregivers. - 4
A student wants to cheat on a test, feels guilty about the idea, and then decides to study instead. Explain this situation using Freud's id, ego, and superego.
Identify the impulse, the moral response, and the realistic decision.
The id is shown in the student's desire to cheat to get an easy reward. The superego is shown in the guilt and awareness that cheating is wrong. The ego is shown in the realistic decision to study instead of cheating. - 5
Explain what Freud meant by defense mechanisms, then give one example of a defense mechanism in everyday life.
Defense mechanisms are unconscious strategies the ego uses to reduce anxiety and protect a person from uncomfortable thoughts or feelings. For example, a person using denial may refuse to accept that they did poorly on an exam and insist the grade must be a mistake. - 6
Match each defense mechanism to the best example: repression, projection, rationalization. A person forgets an upsetting memory. A person blames others for feelings they have themselves. A person makes an excuse for a poor choice.
Repression pushes away, projection puts feelings onto someone else, and rationalization explains away.
Repression matches forgetting an upsetting memory. Projection matches blaming others for feelings the person has themselves. Rationalization matches making an excuse for a poor choice. - 7
Jung agreed with Freud that the unconscious is important, but he expanded the idea. Explain the difference between the personal unconscious and the collective unconscious.
Personal means individual experience. Collective means shared human patterns.
The personal unconscious contains an individual's forgotten experiences, memories, and conflicts. The collective unconscious is Jung's idea of a shared layer of the unconscious that contains inherited patterns, symbols, and themes common across humanity. - 8
Define archetype in Jung's theory and explain one archetype using an example from a story, movie, myth, or culture.
An archetype is a universal symbolic pattern or character type that appears in dreams, myths, stories, and cultures. For example, the hero archetype appears in stories where a character faces danger, grows through challenges, and works toward an important goal. - 9
Jung used the terms persona and shadow. Explain both terms and describe how they might appear in a teenager's life.
The persona is what a person shows publicly, while the shadow is what a person may avoid admitting.
The persona is the social mask a person presents to others, such as acting confident at school even when nervous. The shadow includes parts of the self that a person may reject or hide, such as jealousy, anger, or insecurity. - 10
Rogers believed that people have an actual self and an ideal self. Explain these terms and describe what congruence means.
Congruence means the two self-images fit together well.
The actual self is how a person sees themselves now. The ideal self is the person they would like to become. Congruence means the actual self and ideal self are closely aligned, which Rogers believed supports psychological well-being. - 11
Explain unconditional positive regard in Rogers's humanistic theory. Include why it matters for personality development.
Unconditional positive regard means accepting and valuing a person without requiring them to meet certain conditions to be worthy. Rogers believed it helps people develop a healthier self-concept because they feel safe, accepted, and able to grow. - 12
A parent says, 'I love you only when you get perfect grades.' Explain how Rogers might describe the effect of this message on self-concept.
Look for whether love and acceptance are given freely or only after meeting a condition.
Rogers might say the message creates conditions of worth because the child feels valued only when meeting a condition. This can lead the child to shape their self-concept around approval instead of developing a more authentic and secure sense of self. - 13
Compare Freud, Jung, and Rogers by completing this explanation: Freud emphasized blank, Jung emphasized blank, and Rogers emphasized blank.
Freud emphasized unconscious conflicts, childhood experiences, and the roles of the id, ego, and superego. Jung emphasized the personal unconscious, collective unconscious, archetypes, and the search for wholeness. Rogers emphasized self-concept, personal growth, free will, and unconditional positive regard. - 14
Choose one theory from Freud, Jung, or Rogers and use it to explain why a person might feel anxious before giving a class presentation.
A strong answer names the theory and correctly applies at least one key concept from it.
One possible answer is that Rogers's theory would explain the anxiety as a result of a gap between the person's actual self and ideal self. If the student sees themselves as nervous but believes they must appear perfect, the lack of congruence may increase anxiety. - 15
Evaluate one strength and one limitation of studying personality through Freud, Jung, or Rogers. Use a specific theory in your answer.
One strength of Rogers's theory is that it focuses on growth, self-understanding, and supportive relationships, which can be useful in counseling. One limitation is that ideas like self-actualization and congruence can be difficult to measure scientifically.