Monday, 2 March 2015

Personality

Personality-some definitions
It at all there is one word that is mostly misused in everyday conversation, it is the term personality. Personality is perhaps the most familiar and at the same time the most difficult concept. It is difficult to give a simple acceptable definition of personality. According to Allport "Personality is a dynamic organization within the individual of those psychological systems that determine his characteristic behaviour and thought. In 1937 Allport gave a list of 50 diverse definitions of personality. This led George kelly to speak of all such definitions of personality as constructive alternatives'. Each point of view provides new information then permits a closer appreciation of personality. Personality, according to the most general definition, is a composite of mental abilities, interests, attitudes, aptitudes and other variables characterizing thoughts, feelings and behaviour. These are the intellectual, emotional and social aspects of personality.
The aim of education is to promote a total and harmonious development of personality; Wholesome, integrated, self actualized, well adjusted personality are all synonymous. Such a person has a realistic assessment of himself, his strength and weakness. According to skinner in an integrated personality there is harmonious development of thoughts and feelings. Allport points but that an individual with an integrated personality will have clear life values and he involved in such valves. He is able to evaluate himself without bias. This will generate a good philosophy of life. The motto of mental health is, know yourself, accept yourself and be yourself. An integrated personality implies balance between one's abilities and desires. The development of an integrated personality first implies the satisfaction of the deficiency needs of an individual, like bodily needs and psychological needs like love, belonging and esteem needs. The home and the school have a responsibility in this direction.
Assessment of personality
The history of personality assessment is as old as man on earth. With the development of civilization new methods were evolved. With all this, assessment of personality presents a variety of obstacles. In spite of this sufficient progress has been made in this direction. There are also certain pseudo scientific methods of assessing personality like astrology, palmistry. Physiognomy etc. But more formal and scientifically objective appraisal of personality is necessary when important decisions are to be made regarding educational vocational and personal guidance programmes. Generally before measuring personality it is necessary to draw up a list of personality traits like honesty, integrity, persistence, cooperation, initiate, sense of humour etc. The traits to be measured will depend upon the purpose for which an individual’s personality is to be assessed. So personality is an integration, a blend, a merger or an organized whole.
Rating scales
Ratings are simply the assignment of a numerical score that indicates the rater's judgement of the observed individual’s standing on a given personality trait. This type of device is useful chiefly to learn what impression an individual has made in respect to some specified tracts or attitudes, Rating scales may he devised for a great variety of traits like tact, generosity, leadership, punctuality emotional control etc. Rating may be done on a 3 point scale (above average/average/Below. It may be a 5 point scale also. Punctuality may be rated as always punctual, almost punctual, generally punctual, sometimes punctual and rarely punctual. This is a judgement based on a 5 point scale. The rater places a mark at an appropriate place on the scale to represent the degree to which the subject possesses the tract.
Personality Inventories
We have seen that rating scales are intended to reveal how other persons have been impressed by the subject. Personality inventions on the other hand are self rating questionnaires which deal not only with overt behaviour but also with persons own feelings about himself and his environment resulting in inprospertion. They are more valuable than rating scales because they get at the inner aspects personality not reached by rating scale. The questionnaires are standardized ones. They conform to the rules of validity and reliability. The nature of responses given by a subject to the items in a questionnaire will indicate his standing in some personality trait or the test may provide an overall estimate of personal adjustment. Wood worth's personal date sheet, Allport’s  Ascendance-submission reaction study, Bells 'adjustment inventory the Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory and Mooney's problem check list are some standard personality questionnaires and inventories.

Woodworth's personal data sheet
The first objective test to be developed were adjustment inventories in the early attempts to measure personality in the USA as part of the effort to save time in selecting recruits for First world war R. S. Woodworth was the first psychologist who invented the first inventory which he called the personal data sheet. The inventories consisted of 116 questions about common physical and mental systems to be answered with check marks by appriate answers (Yes or No). The total number of yes was taken as a measure of general maladjustment.
Minnesota Multiphasic personality Inventory (MMPI)
After the first world war there was a surge of personality testing. The authors of many other adjustment inventories following wood worth's footsteps gave to the world of psychology many self reporting tests. Between 1920 and 1930 there was a mush room growth of self reporting tests of various traits.
Minnesota Multiphasic personality Inventory is an indirect type of objective inventory published in 1943. It comes in group form with printed answer sheet, and in an individual form in which 550 items are printed on separate cards, which the subject sorts into three slots in a box marked True/False/cannot say. Some are rather extreme psychotic symptoms 'as' My soul sometime leaves my body'. Some items relate to psydical symptoms as "I have a great deal of stomach trouble". The original aim of the authors of the inventory was to create an aid to psychiatric cases. The inventory was developed to detect pathological cases. Hathaway and his collaborators made a determined effort to enhance the usefulness of the MMPI by providing several correction keys.
The A—S Reaction study
The A— S (Ascendance-submission reaction study by G.W. Allport and F. H. Allport (1928) was one of the first trait measures. The retest reliability is 74, that is moderate. The evidence of validity is still weaker. The criteria for ratings were self and others. It can hardly he regarded as at precise or trust worthy measuring stick.
P. F. – R. B. Cattel
The sixteen personality factors questionnaire (16 P. F.) was developed by R. B. Cattell on the basis of factor analytic studies of personality. The 16 P. F. test has two forms containing 187 items in each form. The subject is asked to respond to all the items of the test and is instructed to express his choice most honestly. The test gives reliable information on 16 personality fact ors.
The Eysenck personality Inventory (EPI)
The inventory was recently developed by H. J. Eysenck and Sybil Eysencek for assessing neurotic tendencies. The inventory has been developed on the assumption that there only two dimensions of personality, the stable, the stable unstable and introverted-betroverted. The inventory is brief, consisting of 57 questions reasonably reliable.
Projective Techniques
The unconscious structure of personality cannot be assessed by interview and self reporting techniques. We must see things as they are, but we see things as we are this is a case of projection. Projection according to Freund, means externalizing of couflicts or other internal conditions. By contrast with inventories that attempt to potray the personality segmentally and imply that personality is the sum of segments, a projective technique attempts to view and understand personality as a whole and its components in their interrelationships. This view point is generally known as global theory. Projective technique of assessing personality was developed as a protest by psychoanalysis and Gestalt oriented psychologists against the behaviouristic and statistical emphasis in the testing of personality in 1920.
Projective tests are so named because they induce the individual to project himself into the test situation and thus reveal his motives, aspirations and apprehensions. He projects his own personality through the responses just as a film projector projects the image on the screen. Perception of Ink blots, interpretation of pictures, sentence completion are some of the projective tests. We shall now examine two widely used projective tests. One is the Rorschach test and another is the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT). At the end we shall review the other types of projective tests.
The Rorschach test
This test was developed by the Swiss psychiatrist Hermann Rorschach in 1928. It makes use of 10 standard ink blots. One such inkblot is illustrated above. The subject is shown the ten ink blots, one at a time in a definite order and position He is asked what does it look like? What could this be? Responses are scored in terms of
i.                    the total number of items seen, whether the item involved the whole inkblot or only parts
ii.                 Qualities perceived (colour, form movement)
iii.               Kinds of things reported (like anatomical parts, animals, plants, people and so on).
From the various responses as classified above, the clinician infers certain personality traits. If 'Movement' responses predominate, the person is thought to be an introvert. If colour responses are mare numerous, the person is regarded as having warm, free emotional characteristics. All the suing is not however simple. Scoring of Rorschach date is becoming fully standardized.
The Thmatic Apperception Test (TAT)
This test was developed by Murray and Morgan in 1938. The materials consist of 19 cards containing vague pictures, and one blank card. Like Rorschach, the TAT is an unstructured experiment. The pictures are ambiguous enough to permit a variety of interpretations by various subjects. The pictures are presented in a definite sequence and the subject is asked to make up a story to fit each picture. In the case of the blank card, the subject is instructed to imagine some picture on the card, describe it and then tell a story about it.
The TAT unlike the Rorschach, has no standardized scoring system. The content of the story plays a central role in interpreting the responses. Though Rorschach and TAT are projective tests, there is fundamental difference between the two : The Rorschach is intended to reveal the structure and organization, (or disorganisation) of an individual's personality, while the TAT is devised to bring out the content of one's personality viz, drives, needs, sentiments, conflicts and fantasies.
Other projective tests
There are many other varieties of projective tests, some developed for smaller children and others making use of different devices. Bellak developed a children's Apperception Test for use with smaller children. The test is used on the assumption that young children identify more readily with animals than with human figures. It consists of ten drawings of animals in various social situations.
Another well known test modelled on projective technique is the Rosen weig's picture Frustration Test. The test utilizes a series of 24 action pictures in which the subject is required to identify with one of the figures and express verbalization of the given frustrating situation in the test.
The word association test is one of the oldest projective techniques originally employed by Carl Jung. In this test certain emotionally tinged words are placed among related neutral words. These words are read to the subject, who is then asked to give first word that comes to his mind. The responses which indicate conflict are said to be characterized by lengthy reaction time, stammering or other signs of tension.
A semi projective test used for assessment of personality is the sentence completion method. While completing the sentence, the subject reveals his emotional and social conflicts. A well known incomplete sentence Blank was prepared by Rotter. Other techniques include as play-technique, drawings, finger painting, clay-modelling etc. The subject projects his personality which can be evaluated in the form of content, colour or symbols used and integration shown in the drawings.
Situational Tests
We can call the situational tests as a kind of performance tests. The subjects are observed in situation and they do not know that they are being assessed. The tests are camouflaged. A honesty test can be conducted on young children. For example, n a vocabulary test, a list of words may be given to the subject, who is asked to check only the words known to him. In the list some fictitious words are also included. If a subject checks fictitious words also he is exposing his dishonesty by his over statement. A check list of books I have read' can be similarly loaded with fictitious titles.
Situational tests were extensively used during the second world war in a programme for the selection of man for secret duties in army. Hartshorne and may have devised a number of such situational tests and performance tests of honesty. Such tests have poor validity. Situation tests often involve interpersonal situations. Situation tests may use two techniques, one is psycho-drama and another is socio-drama.
i. Psychodrama
Situational tests are the very recent developments in personality testing. In situational tests the behaviour of the individual is evaluated in action. Psychodrama is a technique used for assessing personality as part of situational tests. Its psychodrama the individual has to play a role spontaneously in a situation. His behaviour is observed by trained observers. This technique is used to assess the personality of maladjusted persons. The director or therapist plays an important role in organising situations in which the subject may express his bottled up emotions. The central principle of psychodrama is spontaneity of the individual. The psychodrama releases the tension and re-educates the individual for better adjustment.
ii. Sociodrama
The purpose and emphasis are different in sociodrama. In psychodrama the subject taking the role is involved but socio drama potrays problems with which the audience is concerned. It deals with the problems of the group, its structure and thinking. Many modern pictures written and directed by creative thinkers are the examples of sociodrama. They reflect on the screen the corruption, nepotism, favouritism and redtapisn of the administrative set up.
Personality
Personality" a psychological concept which is having a deeper connotation than men/ other concepts. It becomes imperative for all teachers to read, feel and practise the concepts related to personality
Knowing bits and pieces of an individual is no doubt helpful to solve some momentary problem. But teachers should go deeper in to the aspects of individual behaviour, not only for understanding the behaviour of the pupil., but also for guiding, shapping and helping the individual pupil to actualize themselves better as human resources. Students in the formal educational setting "Late confronted by problems (both academic and non-academic), Human environment demands human solution. Very often the teacher by applying principles of non-human' not to speak of 'inhuman' principles thwarts the pupil's goals and behaviour; The burning problems at the academic institution 'pupil adjustment' to the learning environment, 'learning' and motivation'.
A successful teacher must comprehend the ways and wee, why and how of the individual pupil's learning behaviour. To do thissuccessfully, understanding 'personality as a multi-dimensionalphenomena, is a must. So in these packages, we are dealing at length with the concept of personality.
We have also dealt at length in this package, the determinants of personality, to justify the general construct of personality as the totally of an individual as a social being. Assessment of personality is also described.
The importance of mental hygiene is stressed, for developing good go dance and counselling programmes at intra and inter institutional levels. We have concluded our discussion of personality by introducing the concept of self actualization which is the ultimate goal of education. Human oriented education should help the learner to realize his potentials, so that he could adjust to the most challenging social and economic situation in which he or she is placed. Perhaps the aim of all learning as the great, Persian Poet said is "self learning". We have provided the range of concept related to personality "as being and becoming". A good teacher who has discovered himself should lead his wards to the pure realm of 'discovery learning', when he will raise question such as "who am I?" "What am I?" "What can l learn?" "how can I learn?" and lastly, not the least "what can I contribute?”
OBJECTIVES
On completion of this package, you should be able to:
1.Describe the development of personality through three stages.
2. State the concept of personality.
 3. List the type, trait and social learning theories, related to personality.
4. List and describe the determinants of personality.
 5. Describe at least two psychological tools, for assessing personality
 6. Define personality.
7.List the behaviour problems commonly met with in schools.
8. List the way coping with normal and abnormal behaviour inside classroom.
9. List the criteria for mental hygiene in schools.
10. Define mental hygiene,
11. Define juvenile delinquency.
12. Develop a case study of a problem pupil in the school.
13. Define self appraisal
14. Describe the strategy leading to self appraisal.
15. Define self-actualisation.
16. Describe the importance of self -actualization.
17. Describe motivation and self-actualization.
18. Summarise the changes that occur in personality with age.
 19. Describe the kind of pupil the schools should develop.
20. Describe the role of culture in shaping personality.
Development of Personality
Development of personality takes pace from two general influences biological and situational. Our attitude and values, self concept, mode of adjustment, reaction to frustrating situations are important in determining the dynamic aspects of our personality, Socialization also important for personality development. Psychological deprivation, during infancy provides a serious handicap for the development personality.
 We will  be discussing the following in this package.
1.      Concept of personality. Type & Traits and social learning theories
2.Devorninat he of personality
3. Personality assessments
4.Behaviour problems & Coping behaviour,
5.Educalon and positive mental health, self-appraisal and  actualization.
Concept of Human Resources
 A dedicated teacher or all those who are dedicated to pedagogy must have two goals; one to help the pupil 'develop a wholesome personality and the economic growth, due to the contribution of the fully developed individuals. Many may brush aside the fact that, the area of economic growth has no immediate relevancy to the area of personality development.
The Definitional controversy
About forty years ago Gordon All port found no less than fifty different definitions of personality. He categorized these definitions into five areas and labelled them as follows
 1. Omnibus. These definitions view personality as the "sum total" "aggregate-' or "constellation" of properties or qualities.
2. Integrative and configurationally. Under this view of personality the organization of personal attributes is stressed.
3. Hierarchical. Those definitions specify the various level of integration or organization of personality.
4. Adjustment. This view emphasizes the adjustment (adaption survival, and evaluation) of the person to tee environment.
5. Distinctiveness. The definitions for this category stress theuniqueness of each personality.
Drawing from these five approaches and not being satisfied from any one, AIlport offered his own definitions of personality, "Personality is the dynamic organization within the individual of those psycho physical systems- that determine his unique adjustments to his environment.”
Unfortunately, Allport's analysis did not lead to universal agree-ment on the meaning of personality. Much of the controversy can be attributed to the fact that lay persons and behavioural scientists define personality from different perspectives. Lay persons tend to equate personality with social success (good, popular or "a lot of Personality') and to describe personality by a single dominant characteristic (strong, weak, shy or polite). When it is realized that more than 4,000 words in the dictionary can be used to describe personality this way, the definitional problem becomes staggering. The academicians take different theoretical perspectives. So they differ in their definition,
The Comprehensive meaning of personality
 The word personality has an interesting derivation, It can be traced to the Latin words `perssonare’, which translates as “to speak, through” The Latin term was used to denote the masks worn by actors in ancient Greece and Room. This Latin Meaning is particularly relevant to the contemporary analysis of personality. Common usage, of the word personality emphasizes the role which the person (actor) displays to the public. The academic definitions of Personality concerned more directly. With the person (actor) than with the role played. Probably the most meaningful approach would-be to both the person and the role, as Floyed Ruch does in his definition. He states that the human personality includes:
1. External appearance and behaviour of social stimulus value
2. Inner awareness of self as a permanent organizing force
3. The particular pattern or organization of measurable trait both "inner", and “outer”.
More simply, in this package personality will mean how people affect others, how they understand and view themselves, and pattern of inner and outer measurable traits.
How people affect others primarily depends upon their external appearance (height, weight, facial feature, colour and other physical aspects) and behaviour (vulgar, friendly, courteous, arid so on). The roles concept is closely tied to these aspects of personality. A very large, friendly. Worker will have a different impact on other people than a very small courteous manager. Obviously all the ramifications, of perception enter into these aspects of personality.
People's attempts to understand themselves are called the self concept in personality theory. The self is -a unique product of many interacting parts and may be thought of as the personality viewed from within. The pattern of measurable traits adds an important dimension to the understanding of the human personality.
In summary, personality is a very diverse and complex psychological  concept it incorporates all the psychological processes studied, so for and more. As defined above, personality is concerned with external appearance and behaviour, self, and measurable, traits. Probably the best concluding statement on the meaning of personality was given by Kaiuckhohn and Murray when they said that to some extent, a person's personality is like  all other people, like some other people, like no other people Personality is patty outer but mostly inner.
Theories of Personality
There are various theorises of personality. Some are based on the concept of unconscious. Others explain in terms of traits. Let us examine in a detailed manner the type, trait and social learning theories for application in pedagogy.
Type Theories
The type theories represent an attempt to put some degree of order into the chaos of personality theory. Both Lay person and scholar would feel more comfortable if they could place personalities info clearly identifiable categories. This is a basic aim of any Scientific end generally endeavour. The search for personality types has the following three approaches
1.      The physique or body -type theories have concentrated on determining a relationship between features of the face or body and personality. Sheldon’s body types, are most widely known classification of personality types.
2.      The physiological theories have concentrated on the relationship between body chemistry or endocrine balance and personality. Typically, certain chemical substances are correlated with temperament.
The third Way to type personalities is in terms of behaviour an example, of psychological factors. Jung’s introvert and extrovert types are an example. However, as Jung himself pointed out, the turns out  the introvert-extrovert typology turns out to be more in the nature of a coot than discretely separate types.
The continuum reference mode by Jung generally applies to the other type theories as well. They tend to over-simplify the very complex human personality, it is doubtful that any truly meaningful personality type theories can ever be developed.
Eysenck’s theory
Hans J. Eysenck migrated from Germany to England. He did his Ph. D. in psychology from London University. He is a professor of psychology in London University and has conducted many experiments in the field of personality. He is also in charge of the psychological Department at the institute of psychiatry. Thus he combines experimental and clinical work in his new theory of personality. Eysenck's theory of personality is the outcome of numerous original studies conducted by him. He found that most of the prevalent personality theories were loaded with complex and undefined variables. Eysenck emphasises the need to find the dimensions of personality before theory can be constructed. According to him, these dimensions of personally can be discovered with the help of factor-analysis.
Eyrenck's main interest is to identify the primary dimension of personality. He discovered major dimensions of personality on The basis of large scale investigations involving thousands of subjects. These dimensions are neuroticism- emotional stability and introversion-extroversion. The neurotic person is slow in thought and action and unsociable He lacks emotional stability and capacity to exert himself. On the other hind art emotionally stable person is calm, even tempered carefree and thoroughly reliable. Eysenck also discovered that people also differed on another dimension which he calls introversion—extroversion. Introvert is characterised by excessive tiredness-, constant introspection feeling of guilt and over concern with religious and ethical matters. An extrovert is impulsive, changeable, irresponsible and lacking in moral fibre, He is active and sociable.
In his subsequent programme of research Eysenck discovered the third dimension --- psychoticism. He found that an individual high, in his dimension is less fluent poor in his concentration, memory and reading. The factor psychoticism is found independent of neuroticism. The factors neuroticism and pyschoticism are different in symptoms. Recently Eyseeck has added another dimension of personality intelligence.
Evaluation of the type theory
A satisfactory theory is hot impossible. It may be that we will eventually isolate men into personality type as distinctive as blood types. There are no logical barriers against such theories. The fact is, however, that present theories, including Eysenck’s have produced the evidence needed to gain widespread support. Even if the evidence were more satisfactory than it is now two dangers in type theory would remain.
1. The type description tends to assert too much about the individual. As soon as a person is tagged according to type theory, the assumption is that great many assertions can safety be made about him; that is, he is expected to have all the characteristic belonging to that type. But the determiners of individual personality are too numerous and they combine into something both too rich and too unusual to be described by a single general term.
The danger is that of assigning the person to a stereo-type, Mention some of the names of regional groups such as "Sikhs' "Bengalis' etc and we readily come to behave certain stereo-type qualities of each. Such stereo-types ignore the individual differences, among members of a group A stereotype is, to be sure, a faulty type classification and even a type classification, that easily lends itself to abuse,
2) The type description tends to held to outmoded cones phone of personality and especially neglects cultural influences Psychologists are now aware of the enormous importance of childhood experiences and later opportunities in shaping personality. Type theories are generally sponsored by those who regard human characteristics as chiefly the result of biological inheritance. That is why many type theories refer to body form or body chemistry. The body is an important locus of personality, but personality is also interpersonal, that is, dependent upon relations to other people. When one understands the richness and diversity of cultural influences, he loses fall, in type theories.
 Trait Theories
Another approach to the study of personality has been the search for identifiable traits. A personality trait can be defined as an enduring attribute of a person that appears consistently in a variety of situations, in combination, such traits distinguish one personality from another. The two most widely known trait theories come from the classic works of Gordon Allport and Raymond Cattell.
Allport's Trait Theory
Allport bases his theory on the distinction between common traits and personal dispositions. Common traits are used to compare people. For example, the theoretical, economic, aesthetic, social political, and religious categories in Allports' Scale of Values Test are primarily used for comparative purposes. However besides the common traits, there are traits which are completely unique. These unique are personal dispositions, according to  Allport.
They can be cardinal (most pervasive,) central (unique and limited in number), or secondary- (peripheral). Allport's emphasis on personal disposition is a departure from the more traditional common 'trait approach. He gives more recognition to the complexity and uniqueness of the human personality. 'Traits differ in intensity runt magnitude. No two individuals are alike. Each individual is unique in his adjustment
Cattell's Trait Theory
Cartel' takes a different approach from Allport. Many thousands of words can be used to describe personality. By eliminating overlapping meanings. Catell was able to come up with 171 words that can be used to describe personality traits. He then made distinction between what he called surface traits and source traits. Some examples are wise-foolish, affectionate-cold, sociable-seclusive, and honest-dishonest. Such traits lie on the surface of the personality and are largely determined by the underlying source traits. Using factor analysis, Cattell was able to determine twelve source traits. Examples, include affectothymia (good nature and trustfulness) verses sivothymia (critical and suspicious attitudes), ego strength (maturity and realism) verses emotionality and neuroticism (immaturity and evasiveness) dominance versus submissiveness; and surgency (cheerfulness and energy) versus desurgency (depressed and subdued feelings),
Cattel regards trait, as the basic structural element of personality. He gives more importance to source traits. He discovered these traits with the help of life record data, questionnaire data and objective test, data. Cattell has given much 'importance to attitudes in the functioning of personality. He discovered five components of attitude in the functioning of personality, namely unconscious Id, ego expression, super ego, physiological need expression and repressed complexes.
The value of Trait Theories : Overall the trait theories seem to make more sense than the type theories. The type theories unrealistically attempt to place personalities into discrete discontinuous categories. The trait theories, on the other hand, give recognition to the contiguity of personalities. The trait theorists have also contributed personality tests and factor- analysis techniques to the behavioural science.
The trait approach is a straight forward one, leading itself readily to experimentation. By breaking down the total field of personality into more manageable items, the consistencies and generalities can be readily subjected to study. Hence methods of trait appraisal legitimate and 'merit additional' careful investigation. There are some interesting theoretical problems as to how traits should be considered. For example, should they be considered motivational (as in the need for achievement ) emotional (as in the expression of anxiety), attitudinal (as in prejudce)? Merely choosing a trait -approach does not answer these questions.
The piecemeal nature of traits means that something is needed to describe their organization within the individual. The trait profile that emerges from a set of rated traits is not an adequate description of a personality, even though it may be a true one. When behaviour it broken down into traits, we have no way of knowing how the traits fit into a hierarchical order in the goal-seeking behaviour of the individual. One method of meeting this objection to the trait profile is to consider the overall characteristics of the profile. The proposed method, known as profile analysis, consists of appraising trait patterns as individual stressing interrelationships and hierarchical organizations as well individual trait.
There is some objection to assigning traits to an individual as though they assert something fundamental the way he is causing him to do what he does. Another way of looking at the matter is to consider the trait as an assertion of the individual’s capability of behaving in certain ways under certain environmental provocation: thus he is capable of aggression under some circumstances and of natural behaviour under others. In their study of aggressive boys for example, Bandura and Waters found that all boys were, not aggressive under all provocations. The boys had to be  known well before it could be predicted when they would express 'aggression and when they would inhibit it.
Some sort of interactive 'theory is needed to replace a pure "trait" theory, That is the "trait" has to be appraised according to a range of situational circumstances, in which the disposition of capability to act in a certain way tends to be called into play: when these circumstances are ' known, practices of trait modification are' likely to be suggested also.
Psycho-analytic Theory of Personality
Sigmund Freud was born in Czecholovakia but spent most of his years in Vienna, in Austria. His theory of personality is a dynamic theory, a theory that explains how a person has come to his or her present state of perfection or imperfection. The trait and the type theories are structural theories. Freud was the first to talk about the dynamic aspect of personality, Prior to his time it was assumed that the personality of a person was determined by the biological forces, the genes, the instincts. Freud explained personality as being shaped by the interaction between biological and intra-psychic forces. Thinking and reasoning are psychic (mental) forces and, these forces within (intra) an individual interact with his biologic forces (instincts', natural dispositions) and shape his personality.
He explains personality in terms of its structure and in terms of its dynamics. Mind has different areas of structures, There are three regions or systems; the unconscious the preconscious and the conscious. The unconscious mind is the storehouse of the memories of childhood emotions. The newly born child is simply a mass of blind biological desires. It is motivated only by biological urges, such as hunger, sleep, thirst, mobility or escape from pain. These biological instincts demand immediate gratification (satisfaction), The little mental activity that the child has is aimed at satisfying these physiological demands; The child, the new born, therefore, thinks with its body and not with its mind. This thinking if at all it is thinking is non-logical though at times it may be creative. This greedy, selfish childish', socially unrealistic way of behaving is the primary process according to Freud. What the child now has is only body-think and not mind think. The child therefore has no way of attaching verbal labels to the primary process experiences. Therefore these memories of childhood thinking and emotions are not available to the mind later in an individual's life. But these body thoughts' reside in the memory system and constitute what Freud calls the unconscious mind. The unconscious mind is filled with conscious thought. These unconscious thoughts are tied to the gratification of biological reeds of the new born. The biological needs of the new born are generally satisfied immediately and the child lives in pleasure. The primary process (that is the unconscious thinking) thus is pleasure oriented, The unconscious mind functions (thinks) on pleasure principle, that is it thinks always in terms of satisfying the needs, getting immediately whet it wants then and there.
But all is not pleasure for the child throughout. As the child grows, restrictions to the immediate satisfaction of the needs are imposed. The child does not get everything it wants then and there. The child slowly learns that it has to give up sometimes momentary pleasures, for more long term benefits. The child for more long term benefits. The child stats thinking rationally and learns to delay the immediate gratification of needs. The unconscious bodily needs have to be controlled, the pleasure principle has to Ito carded. The external, world has its own reality. It cannot be what the child wants it to be.  A conscious awareness of this reality becomes necessary for the child to survive. This way of consciously becoming aware of the logic and tee reason that tire external environmental is having, is called secondary process thinking by Freud. Secondary process thinking takes place in the conscious mind and this conscious mind is survival system functioning on reality principle. Reality principle is imposed on the child by the external world and the pleasure principle wars against the reality principle. The battles that pleasure and reality principles fight cause consciousness to emerge in the child. Thus the conscious mind develops.
In between the conscious and the unconscious minds there is a boundary area that Freud calls preconscious mind. Primitive urges, coming up from the unconscious mind will wait at the preconscious level to escape to the conscious level. If the urges seem to be threatening to the individual they may not become conscious directly but nay frighten hire without being visible. But in general preconscious thoughts can be made conscious without much difficulty.
Thus Freud views the structure of the personality with three regions, unconscious, preconscious and conscious, Ha explains the dynamics of personality on tied basis of libidos. Libido (lib-bee-doh) is the dynamic life force that propels all living organisms. This life force is discharged by three psychic 'selves'. The pleasure self, the pleasure ego, with all its unconscious biological urges acting on the pleasure principle is named as id (the Latin word for it). ‘Id' functions from the unconscious mind. The reality self is the ego, It is the conscious self obeying the reality principle. It is that part of our intra-psychic self that we are conscious of, The moral self represents the morals, laws, customs, and standards of the social environment and it is named super ego. It is above (super-id ) the ego, Super ego is the 'conscience' that we have.
When the child is new born libido is discharged by id. Id discharged libido in the most satisfying ways it can, just as any 'unconscious' (not thinking) animal would try to do, For a new born the oral receptors only are matured enough to release any energy So Freud calls the stage when the new born releases the libido through oral (month) receptors, the oral stage._ The psycho logical world of the child is now cent tired on its mouth, When the external world puts restrictions on the feeding pleasures of the child that is when the child is new forced to wait for its meal—the pleasure principle and the reality principle quarrel and in the midst of this quarrel the conscious mind (ego) emerges, Ego then takes hold of the situation and controls the libidinal energy and thereby the functioning of id.
By the time the child completes one year the anal receptors mature and id releases the libidinal energy through defecation. Proper toilet, training will help the ego to gain more influence over the dynamic flow of libidinal energy and id. This stage (fern 1 year to 3 years) is named the anal stage by Freud. During this stage id's pleasure zone moves from the mouth to the other end of the aliment any canal namely the anus.
The period between 3 to 5 is the phallic stage when the libidinal interest focuses on the external sex organs. Libid is dis-changed through sex organs,   that is, they become the  pleasure zone for the boy or girl. The child becomes emotionally (Oedipus crisis), and the girl to the father (Electra crisis). Ego fights against id, now getting support from super ego also. Super ego is that part of the personality that says 'No' to anti-social urges. This is the stages when 'Super ego develops taking the morals, and the standards of the parents and the social customs and approval of the society too child lives in The super ego gets supremacy over id and controls over the libidinal force it becomes the conscience and sets standards and urges ego to follow Them. The Oedipus or the Electra situation when being resolved leads to the development of ego.
The phallic stage is followed by a latent period when boys find 'heroes' among older male teachers or friends and girls develop crushes or other girls and older women. The latent period ends at puberty and the child finally enters the genital stage. Now the libidinal energy is focused on hetero sexual activities and pleasure comes mainly from contact with the opposite sex.
From the phallic stage onwards the ego finds itself caught between the Id (the biology) and the super ego (sociology, that is the social environment). It has to have control over the id and at the same time please super ego also. Id is irrepressible; super ego is stern. Id wants gratification of biological urges then and three, Super ego says, "No, it is not desirable acceptable, it is not the norm". The demands from id are unconscious; they rise from the unconscious mind. Super ego is alert in checking id's primitive demands. Ego is thus being attacked from both sides; id demanding, gratification end super ego warning against breaking social norms and moral principles. Ego has a feeling that something bad is to happen. Id is going to demand and super ego is going to resist. This is the feeling about the impending danger anxiety according to Freud Anxiety is the warning that the ego gets about the 'incoming disaster’.  Ego prepares itself to face the situation. It puts on the 'psyche armour'. This psychic armour is the defence mechanism. Ego has mains defence mechanism, different types of armours at its disposal to deal with the ultimatums from the id and the super ego. Defence mechanisms are the techniques used by the ego to defend itself against impulses from the id and 'commands from the super ego.
Major Determinants of Personality
The major determinants of personality can perhaps best be summarizad into four broad categories; biological, cultural, family and situational.
Biological Contributions
The study of the biological contributions to personality can be divided into several major approaches; heredity the brain, biofeedback and physical stature.
The Role of Heredity The impact of heredity on the human personality is a very active but still an unsettled area of study. One problem is that geneticists face major obstacle in scientifically gathering information on the human being. Animal scientists can conduct highly controlled breeding experiments but geneticists studying human heredity cannot. Through research on animals, it has been clearly shown that both physical and 'psychological characteristic can be transmitted through heredity.
The role of the Brain The second biological approach is to concentrate on the role that the brain plays in personality. Similar to the geneticists, the physiologists have been unable to supply precise information on the contributions of the brain, but also as in genetics, some promising inroads are being made. The most recent and exciting possibilities come from the work done with electrical stimulation of the brain (ESB). Preliminary researches indicate that better understanding of human personality and beaviour may come from the study of the brain.
Biofeedback
Similar to the work on electrical stimulation of the brain have been some of the widely publicized and spectacular results of biofeedback training (BFT). Up to recent years, physiologists felt that certain biological functions such as brain wave patterns, gastric secretions and fluctuations in blood pressure and skin temperature were beyond conscious control. Now some scientists and many quasi-scientists believe that these involuntary functions can be consciously controlled through biofeedback. In BFT the individual learns the internal rhythms of a particular body process through electorate signals fed back from equipment that is wired to the body (e.g, skin, brain, or heart). From this bio-feedback the person can learnt, to control the body process in question which may have implication for personality
Physical Characteristics and Rate of Maturing
Another biologically based approach is to analyze the effects of physical characteristics and rate of maturing on personality. This approach has, already proved to be a significant contribution to the human personality. An individual's external appearance, which was said be a vital ingredient of the personality, is biologically determined. The fact that a person is tall or short, fat or lean, handsome or ugly or fair or dark will influence the person's effect on others and in turn will affect his self-concept.
Cultural Contributions
At least traditionally, culture is usually considered to make a more significant contribution to personality than biological factor in terms of personality development. Culture is a major tenet to anthropology. Anthropologists, using cross-cultural analysis, have clearly demonstrated the important role that culture plays in the development of the human personality. The methods by which an infant is fed and toilet trained and makes the transition from adolescence to adulthood are all culturally determined. The culture largely determines attributes toward independence, aggression, competition and co-operatien. As noted by Mussen “Each culture expects, and trains its members to behave in the ways that are acceptable to the group, To a marked degree the child's cultural group defines range of experiences and situations he is likely to encounter and the values and personality characteristics that will be reinforced and hence learned",
Contribution from the Family and Social Group
Whereas the culture generally prescribes and limits what a person can be taught, it is the family, and later the social group, which selects, interprets and dispenses tae culture. Thus, it is the family and the social group which probably have the most significant impact on personality development.
Socialization process
The contribution of the family and social group in combination with the culture is commonly referred to in the behavioural sciences as the process of socializatien". Meissen cir fines socialization as the process by which an individual infant acquires, from the enormously wide range of behavioral potentialities that are open to him at birth, those behaviour patterns that are customary and acceptable according to the standard of his family and social group. Socialization starts with initial contact between a mother and her new infant. After infancy other members of the immediate family (father, brothers, sisters and close relatives or friends) and the social group (peers, school friends, and members of the work group) play influential roles in the socialization process. The process takes place throughout a person's life.
Identification process
The parents play an especially important part in the identification process which is important to the person's early development. Usually, the parent of the same sex as the child will serve as the model for the child's identification. The process can be examined from three different perspectives.
First identification can be viewed as the similarity of behaviour (including feelings and attitudes) between child and model.
Second, identification can be looked at as the child's motives, or desires to be Like the model.
Third, it can be viewed as the process through which the child actually takes on the attributes of the model.
From all three perspectives, the identification process is fundamental to the undarstanding of personality development.
Horne Environment
There is a substantial amount of empirical evidence to indicate that the overall home environment created by she parents is critical to personality development. For example, children, with markedly institutional upbringing (orphans) or children reared in a cold unstimulating home have a much greater potential to be socially and emotional y maladjusted than children raised by parents in a warm, loving wad stimulating environment. The key variable is not the parents parse, but rather the type of atmosphere that is generated for the child. As explained by Mussen.
Children between the ages of four and six from democratic homes are more stable, less argumentative, more sensitive to praise and blame, more socially successful, and more considerate than children from authoritarian homes. Over-attention or over-indulgence at home also leads to many kinds of maladaptive infantile behaviour for instance, crying easily, dawdling, lack of independence and persistence, withdrawal, and high dependence on adults.
Clinical case histories of maladjusted children and adults also show the important role that the parents play. The most common element in histories of mal-adjusted persons is that of friction between their mother and father. Birth-order and sibling (brothers and sisters) contribute to personality. So far, studies of birth order have produced some very interesting but inconclusive results. First born and only children in a family have a stronger need to affiliate than do children born later. They are probably more anxious more dependent on others, especially in anxious situations; and more inclined to go along with the group than are other children." First-borns may be more serious, less carefree, and more likely to be a problem than later-borns.
The importance that developmental history plays in personality should never be slighted, but it should also be recognized that the immediate situation may predominate. It is situation interacting with the human being (including the individuals personality) that are vital antecedents to behaviour. An example is the worker whose developmental history has shaped a personality which incorporates a high need for power and achievement. However when placed in to a highly bureaucratized work situation, this individual may become frustrated tad react apathetically and/or aggressively. Thus, on the surface this worker appears lazy and/or a trouble maker. Yet the developmental history would predict that the individual would be a very hard worker striving to get ahead. The countless potential combinations of the situation and the human being make it virtually impossible to predict, accureitely from the developmental history alone the ways in which the personality will be behaviourally expressed. The interaction is too complex, and when the role of consequences is included, becomes obvious that the developmental aspects of personality fall very short of understanding, predicting, and controlling human behaviour.
Personality Assessment
There are two major ways of measuring end describing personality the self report personality inventories and the projective techniques. The self- report approach relies on paper and pencil tests". They are based on these assumption that the personality consists of group of traits, The purpose of the tests is to measure traits such as masculinity-femininity, introversion-extroversion, dominance-sub-missiveness, and independence-dependence. The results are usually shown on an overall personality profile, The biggest problem with self report personality tests is that they are designed and interpreted on the basis of a priority rather than empirical data and can be easily faked. An important exception is the highly regarded Minnesota Multiphasic Personality inventory (MMPI), which has empirically validated dimensions and scales which identify those who are faking.
Probably the greatest weakness of the trait approach, based on personality tests or rating scales, Is that the traits measured do not correlate well, if at all, with actual behaviour. Experiments that objectively measure some bit of behaviour-say, sample of honesty-show that this behaviour does not have much to do with the trait -honesty--as measured on a personality test, The reason, psychologists now know, is that the behaviour of people is not very consistent even if their responses on paper and-pencil tests of personality are.
The others approach to testing personality is by projective means. In contrast to the self-report, projectives attempt to test the whole personality rather than a set of traits. The best known projective tests are the word association and Rorschach inkblot tests and the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT), Word association tests are one o' the oldest tests used in the behavioural sciences. Even Whilhelm Wundt the founder of modern experimental psychology, utilized the technique in the study of thought process. Word associations are still widely used e assessing personality for clinical purposes.
The Rorschach and the TAT present a series of stimuli to the test taker. In the Rorschach the stimuli consist of unstructured ink-blots. In the TAT a series of realistic pictures are presented. Subjects respond to the stimulus by telling a story about what they see. By doing this the test-takers project their personalities. Using some pre-determined guides, a qualified psychologist or Psychometrist will then interpret these projection and make conclusions about the individual's personality.