From the start of this week’s
reading, I found it very interesting.
The example of the elevator was very relatable to me. I have been in that situation before where
you all stand in awkward silence. Even
more, I can relate to the person who wants to test the theory by saying “hi
there.” I do this literally every
morning at work. I say “hello, good morning”
every day to over 60 kids that walk through my door and some adults. I, on a good day, get 5 to 15 hellos’, give or
take, back and that includes the adults. Some kids, when they see that they are nearing
where I stand will look down or walk faster.
After 8 months of school I would have liked that number to be much
higher. Although I do have a few that
try to say hi before I do. I will do my best to make that number higher by June.
So, when reading this week’s chapter
I recognized some phrases and terms I have heard or used, not knowing when and
by whom they came from. I took a few
early childhood classes years back and I think that’s where some of my
knowledge of some of these theories come from. As well as working closely with my
school social worker and psychologist for the population of students I work
with. There were many theories to read
by many of the most well known in this field.
Some things I understood where they were coming from and can see their
points but some were just too technical for me and I didn’t understand their
thinking. Table 2.4 on page 47 is a great comparison table for each man's theory. The two that stuck out to me the most were Freud born in 1856 and
Erikson born in 1902. I wanted to look
up their ages to see if that would help me understand the times in which their theories
were made and the years these men grew up in.
There is a 46-year difference between the two men not to mention a huge
difference in time and culture as well as countries and I wonder how much of
their societies and cultures their own theories influenced them growing
up. Did they develop as their theories
suggest?
Freud and Erikson point out how
important childhood and the stages of development are and it is vital to
personality development. I have worked
in a regular ed and a special ed preschool for a couple of years and I saw firsthand
how true Freud and Erikson were on the importance of the early stages of one’s
life. Both theories have somewhat similar but Erikson broke it down a little
more than Freud. Freud’s idea was called
Psychoanalytical Theory which focused on the power of one’s unconscious mind
(page 29). He believed we possess ideas
and impulses that we are not aware of but it comes out in our behavior. Freud breaks his theory into 5 stages, the
last being the Genital Stage from age 12 and older. Erikson theory called the Psychosocial Theory
(which I like better then Freud’s theory), breaking down the age groups further
to include all stages of life in more depth (12-18, 18-25, 25-65 and 65 and older).
I especially like that 25-65, he
considered middle age.
Both men agree each stage have
conflicts and struggles which Erikson calls the Identity Crisis (page 33). Freud's conflict focuses on pleasure centers
(pleasure seeking) or sex (page 30) while Erikson's theory takes a psychosocial
approach for a lack of a better term. Society
and acceptance is what Erikson feels our whole lives are shaped by those needs. Freud focused on the sexual development as
his focus throughout his stages. I find Erikson’s theory more relatable and
understandable. And knowing the time in
which they grew up makes sense.
One other person I’d like to talk
about is Albert Bandura (page 40). I
honestly have never heard of him till I read about him in this chapter. But his Social Cognitive Learning theory is something
I use. I work in a special ed self-contained
classroom. There are 6 students and 3
have Autism, one had LD and behavioral issues, one has severe ADHD and cannot
be medicated due to a medical issue and lastly, one student who is slower than
his peers and is a hearing student with two deaf parents which is his only
issue. All of them are so smart and
Bandura’s theory on modeling, observational learning and social learning is
what I use on an almost daily basis with these students. My class is considered by my district to be a
life skills class and these are critical concepts in our classroom.
Great comparisons with Freud and Erickson. Although they have much different theories that common thread between the two are crisis. Very happy to hear you were able to connect Bandura so well with your classroom. Social learning is very effective for life skills and Bandura's principles relate very well to the student population you teach.
ReplyDeleteI love the points on social learning. In my own paper I stated the same ideas about social interaction being a huge part in kids being successful. I lean more toward Erickson's ideas because his thoughts just made sense in the progression of life. I work in a special ed high school class and it is obvious the kids that grew up in a house with more social interaction and those that had minimal interaction.
ReplyDeleteKim, I had the same thoughts about Bandura social learning theory. I am able to use this in my class as well. I can keep calm because someone else is speaking to her students each morning as well. I start each class with good morning or good afternoon. I will not start class with my students responding back, at first they would just look at me like why is she speaking. I had to training them that you speak when you enter a space for the first time that day. I speak so its only right for them to speak also.
ReplyDeleteIt amazes me that adults can walk right by each other and never say a word. We set the tone and the children will follow. Kudos to you and making a world of a difference.
Great post ! I love how you discuss Freud and Erickson. Your example of their theories in the special ed classroom is also interesting. There are many of these theories I noticed we use in our every day lives without even realizing them. Subconsciously I feel we are aware of what helps and hurts overall behavior and development.
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