Personality Theories Psychodynamic theorists And Humanistic theories Table of Contents Freud Jung Adler Rogers Maslow Humanistic strengths and weakness Psychodynamic strengths and weakness Some similarities of both Web Resources Freud Biography Biography Sigmund Freud was born May 6‚ 1856‚ in a small town -- Freiberg -- in Moravia. His father was a wool merchant with a keen mind and a good sense of humor. His mother was a lively woman‚ her husband’s second wife and 20 years
Premium Psychology Sigmund Freud Carl Jung
EQUITY THEORY • This process theory focuses on workers’ perceptions of the fairness of their work outcomes and inputs. Specifically they strive to maintain ratios of their own rewards to contributions which are equal to others’ ratios . EQUITY EQUATIONS • Equity – Outcomes (self) Inputs (self) = Outcomes (other) Inputs (other) •Underpayment Inequity Outcomes (self) Inputs (self) • Overpayment Inequity Outcomes (self) Inputs (self) < Outcomes (other) Inputs (other) > Outcomes
Premium Motivation
CULTURAL IMPERIALISM Explanation of Theory: Cultural Imperialism Theory states that Western nations dominate the media around the world which in return has a powerful effect on Third World Cultures by Individual Interpretations: Western Civilization produces the majority of the media (film‚ news‚ comics‚ etc.) because they have the money to do so. The rest of the world purchases those productions because it is cheaper for them to do so rather than produce their own. Therefore‚ Third World countries
Premium Theory Diffusion of innovations Scientific method
Designing Activity Systems Research The greatest challenge facing an Activity-Theory-based approached to researching interconnected networks and activity systems is the tension between the necessarily holistic view of “better contextuality” suggested by Kuuti‚ and the need for an appropriate level of analytic abstraction and “generalizable” research results required for the research to have utility across disciplines (as cited in Nardi‚ 1996‚ p. 22; Nardi‚ 1996‚ p.70). This tension can
Premium Object Consciousness
Prescriptive Theory and Descriptive Theory 3 Economic Theory 4 Decision Usefulness Theory 5 Critical Accounting Theory and Critical Theory 6 System-Oriented Theories 7 Open System Theories 8 Behavioral Decision Theory 9 Legitimacy Theory 10 Political Economy Theory 11 Institutional Theory 12 Stakeholder Theory 13 Agency Theory 14 Normative Theory 15 Public Interest Theory 16 Capture Theory 17 Economic Interest Theory/Private Interest Theory 17 Positive
Premium Economics Decision theory
freudian theory of sigmundFreud’s psychoanalytic theory of personality implicated the structure of the mind‚ namely the id‚ ego‚ and superego‚ and how conflicts among these constituent parts are resolved in shaping human personality. The id operates on the pleasure principle. It is regulated by both the ego‚ which operates on the reality principle‚ and the superego‚ which operates on the morality principle. Conflicts among these structures of the mind appear at each of Freud’s five basic stages
Premium Sigmund Freud Psychosexual development Anal stage
Theories of Motivation Although the term _theory_ is used in motivation theory‚ no single recognized theory of motivation exists. Rather‚ _motivation_ is used as an umbrella term for a number of theories that describe factors‚ traits‚ or situations that result in people moving beyond awareness and attitudes into behaviors. A number of workplace theories cite motivation as a key element in employee workplace behavior. Frederick Herzberg’s 1959 _hygiene theory_ contends that the external job environment
Premium Motivation
organisation behaviour. Theory affects the ways organisations organise their concepts and understanding and provide multiple ways of seeing the world which is the reason why different organisation behave differently. Different perspectives result in conflict and disagreement between people over what is the true truth. The purpose of this essay is understand the two different theories in organisation which in turn causes different behaviour in terms of power‚ control and conflict in organisation and the
Premium Google Organizational studies Google search
Summary of Piaget’s Theories Amy Ream CNSL/504 August 28‚ 2012 Joelle McNutt‚ MA.Ed. Summary of Piaget’s Theories The summary of Piaget’s theories includes stages of learning through cognitive development. The cognitive perspective was revolutionized by Jean Piaget‚ a Swiss psychologist. Piaget proposed “that all people pass in a fixed sequence through a series of universal stages of cognitive development”. (Feldman‚ 2008‚ p. 20) Piaget’s theory outlined four stages of development.
Premium Theory of cognitive development Jean Piaget Kohlberg's stages of moral development
learning theory‚ psychoanalytic theory‚ and the psychosocial theory are developmental theories. These theories are helpful for parents to understand the growth of a child through their stages of development. In so many circumstances parents don’t have the slightest clue as to why a child behaves irrationally‚ Some children have behavioral attitudes that are from cultures that are different‚ and children who are mentally abnormal are an exception to theoretical rules. Developmental theories can be beneficial
Premium Sigmund Freud Developmental psychology Psychosexual development