INTRODUCTION This piece of work shall be exploring the impact of our knowledge in college to the statutory expectation from us as social care professionals in our various field of practice. COMPETENCY OF A SOCIAL CARE PRACTITIONER Social care according to Share and Lalor is a unique profession that requires variety of skills in the delivery of care and service. This standard skill varies from the aims of the service to the specific needs of the service users. Competencies in skills such as
Premium Sociology Skill Communication
drug use‚ depression and anxiety; particularly social anxiety with members of the opposite sex. To begin understanding the development and needs of John I will explore the generally accepted lifespan through which each individual progress. This is an ongoing process from birth until death and consists of five stages according to age: infancy‚ childhood‚ adolescence‚ adulthood and older adulthood. At each stage five strands of development occur: social‚ physical‚ emotional‚ cognitive and cultural
Premium Maslow's hierarchy of needs Psychology
late twenties or early thirties and throughout the movie has a constantly haggard appearance because of his insomnia and fighting. Brad Pitt’s character is a carefree nonconformist and the manifestation of Edward Norton’s fantasies about freedom from social conformity. He is the one who starts Fight Club and is responsible for the escalation from a relatively benign fight club to nationwide terrorist movement. Both of these characters are Tyler Durden‚ but this is not revealed until near the end of the
Premium Fight Club Chuck Palahniuk Brad Pitt
People become a member of a social group because of their very nature‚ that is‚ not to feel lonely‚ to feel secure‚ and to satisfy some needs such as social and self-esteem needs. Being part of a group has both positive and negative outcomes for an individual. Positive outcomes can be listed as enjoying group work‚ gaining new perspectives and making friends‚ and being more creative. On the other hand‚ there are some negative outcomes such as disagreements between the members of the group and losing
Premium Single person Social groups
Comparing the Major Theoretical Perspectives in Social Psychology Motivational Theory Perspective • Focuses on the individual’s own needs or motives. • What makes people go‚ what provides the energy or reasons for their actions • Real-life Example: Anna Marie motivated to have good grades‚ to study hard‚ help others and gain a status at ITT Technical Institute’s National Technical Honor Society. Learning Theory Perspective • A person’s current behavior is determined
Premium Psychology Sociology Human behavior
Chapter 16: Social Psychology Social Thinking 1.Social psychology studies what 3 aspects of our social world? 1. How we think about our social world (social thinking) 2. How other people influence our behavior (social influence) 3. How we relate toward other people (social relations) Attribution: The Causes of Behavior 2.Distingush between personal (internal) attributions and situational (external) attributions. Personal internal attributions infer that people’s characteristics
Premium Psychology Sociology Cognition
Psychology for Social Care Practice (DH3M34) Assessment 2 Case Study (LO.2 and LO.3) In this assessment I am going to be writing a case study on Rose. Rose is the youngest of five children‚ she has one sister and three brothers. Rose has been diagnosed with a rare chromosome deletion on her 22nd chromosome‚ it is called 22q13 deletion syndrome also known as Phelan Mcdermid syndrome after the doctors Katy Phelan and Heather Mcdermid who first discovered this syndrome whilst studying chromosome
Premium Maslow's hierarchy of needs Abraham Maslow Psychology
1. Introduction 1. We are social animals. 2. We are moved to love and to hate‚ drastically. 3. We almost always care what others think or what others do or say. 4. Social psychology is the study of how we think about‚ influence‚ and relate to others. 2. Attributing behavior to persons or to situations 1. Fritz Heider came up with the attribution theory which says people measure others’ behavior by either their internal disposition or the external situation that they’re in. 1. In other words
Premium Milgram experiment Social psychology Stanford prison experiment
appropriate theory and research‚ critically discuss those principles‚ representations‚ and processes that underpin social cognition and social knowledge about ourselves and others. In so doing‚ consider those factors that influence the accuracy of our perceptions. How do we make sense of others and ourselves? Are the judgments we make within a social context formed on the basis of our social knowledge alone? How accurate are our perceptions of the people that occupy our daily lives both those familiar
Premium Psychology Cognition
each person influences and is influenced by each other person (Shaw‚ 1981). Turner (1987) goes further to say that “a psychological group is one that is psychologically significant for the members‚ to which they relate themselves subjectively for social comparison and the acquisitions of norms and values…that they privately accept membership in and which influence their attitudes and behaviour”. Clark & Pataki reserve the term “group” for aggregates containing three or more members because dyads
Premium Social psychology Psychology Group development