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Personality Development

The four main factors that affect personality development are heredity, birth order, parental characteristics, and cultural environment. Isolation in childhood can negatively impact development by depriving a child of social interactions that shape personality. Personality is influenced by both nature (genetics) and nurture (environment/learning), with most experts agreeing that environmental factors have the greatest impact, though heredity provides certain innate traits.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
1K views12 pages

Personality Development

The four main factors that affect personality development are heredity, birth order, parental characteristics, and cultural environment. Isolation in childhood can negatively impact development by depriving a child of social interactions that shape personality. Personality is influenced by both nature (genetics) and nurture (environment/learning), with most experts agreeing that environmental factors have the greatest impact, though heredity provides certain innate traits.

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anon-163576
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Personality Development

1. What are the four main factors that affect


the development of personality?
2. How does isolation in childhood affect
development?
Personality
• To social scientists, personality is the sum total
of behaviors, attitudes, beliefs, and values that
are characteristic of an individual.
• Our personality traits determine how we adjust
to our environment and how we react in specific
situations.
• No two individuals have the same personalities.
Each individual has his or her own way of
interacting with other people and with his or her
social environment.
Personality Development
• People’s personalities continue to develop
throughout their lifetimes. Specific traits change
at different rates and to different degrees.
• Some personality traits seem to remain constant
throughout a person’s life, while others undergo
dramatic changes.
• Personality development is more obvious during
childhood, when people are experiencing rapid
physical, emotional, and intellectual growth.
• At adulthood, personality traits change at a
slower rate. However personality development
varies form individual to individual.
Nature vs. Nurture
• Sociologists debate what determines personality
and social behavior.
• Some argue that it is heredity – the transmission
of genetic characteristics from parents to
children.
• Others suggest that the social environment –
contact with other people – determines
personality.
• This debate is usually referred to in terms of
nature versus nurture, or inherited genes versus
environment and social learning.
The Nature Viewpoint
• Since the 1800s this viewpoint states that much
of human behavior is instinctual in origin.
• An instinct is an unchanging behavior pattern.
Instinct is most often applied to animal behavior.
(Ex. Birds building nests)
• Supporters of this viewpoint claim biology as the
basis for human behavior. They claim that
instinctual drives are responsible for practically
everything – laughing, motherhood, warfare,
religion, even the creation of society.
The Nurture Viewpoint
• From this viewpoint a person’s behavior and
personality are the result of his or her social
environment and learning.
• The work of Ivan Pavlov helped this viewpoint
gain acceptance. He found that supposedly
instinctual behaviors could be taught. (Ex. Dog
Experiment)
• Sociologist John B. Watson suggested that what
applied to dogs could apply to humans. He
claimed that he could take a dozen healthy
infants and train them to become anything he
wanted – doctors, lawyers, artists, beggars, or
thieves.
Sociobiology
• The emergence of sociobiology – the
systematic study of the biological basis of all
social behavior – emphasized the nature
viewpoint.
• Sociobiologists argue that such varied cultural
characteristics and behavioral traits as religion,
cooperation, competition, slavery, envy, etc. are
rooted in the genetic make-up of humans.
• In general sociobioligists argue that most of
human social life is determined by biological
factors.
Blending of factors…
• Most social scientists assume that personality
and social behavior result from a blending of
heredity and social environmental influences.
• They believe that environmental factors have the
greatest influence.
• Heredity, birth order, parents, and cultural
environment are among the principal factors
that social scientists see influencing personality
and behavior.
Heredity
• Everyone has certain characteristics that are
present at birth. (body build, hair type, eye color,
and skin)
• Heredity characteristics also include certain
aptitudes. An aptitude is a capacity to learn a
particular skill or acquire a particular body of
knowledge.
• Example: a natural talent for music and art would be
considered an aptitude.
• However, some aptitudes can be learned and
developed because of environmental factors.
• Example: Parents encouragement
• Heredity provides you with certain biological
needs, but culture determines how you meet
those needs.
Birth Order
• Our personalities are influenced by whether we
have brothers, sisters, both, or neither.
• Children with siblings have a different view of the
world than do children who have siblings.
• The order in which we are born into our families
also influences our personalities.
• People born first or last in a family have a
different perspective than do people in the
middle.
• Example: first born are likely to be achievement
oriented and responsible. Later born are more
likely to be better in social relationships,
affectionate, friendly, or rebels and risk-takers.
Parental Characteristics
• Parents influence their childrens’
personalities. The age of the parent can
be a bearing on the children’s
development. (EX. Younger vs. older)
• Other parental characteristics like level of
education, religious orientation, economic
status, occupation, and cultural heritage
can and often do influence a child’s
personality and their social behavior.
Cultural Environment
• Culture has a strong influence on personality
development. The cultural environment
determines the basic types of personalities that
will be found in a society.
• Each culture gives rise to a series of personality
traits – model personalities – that are typical of
members of that society.
• EX. U.S. personalities are competitive,
assertiveness and individualism.
• EX. The Ik (eek) of northern Uganda

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