1 / 16

Personality and Sport

Personality and Sport. What is Personality?. Personality is the sum of characteristics that make a person unique. Why Do W e Study Personality?. The study of personality helps us to work better with students, athletes, and exercisers. Personality.

evette
Download Presentation

Personality and Sport

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Personality and Sport

  2. What is Personality? Personality is the sum of characteristics that make a person unique.

  3. Why Do We Study Personality? The study of personality helps us to work better with students, athletes, and exercisers.

  4. Personality • Psychological Core: The most basic level of you personality. • The deepest component, it includes you attitudes and values, interests and motives, and beliefs about yourself and your self-worth. • “the real you” • Typical Responses: the ways we each learn to adjust to the environment or how we usually respond to the world around us. • Role Related Behavior: How you act based on what you perceive your social situation to be.

  5. The core, or stable, aspect of personality provides the structure we need to function effectively in society, where as the dynamic, or changing, aspect allows for learning.

  6. Why Study Personality Structure?

  7. Approaches to Personality

  8. Psychodynamic Approach • It places emphasis on unconscious determinants of behavior; such as what Freud called the id, or instinctive drive, and how these conflicts with the more conscious aspects of personality, such as the superego (one’s moral conscience) or the ego ( the conscious personality). • This approach focuses on understanding the person as a whole, rather than identifying isolated traits or dispositions.

  9. Psychodynamic • A major weakness of the psychodynamic approach has been the difficulty of testing it. • Another weakness of the psychodynamic approach is that it focuses almost entirely on internal determinants of behavior, giving little attention to the social environment. • Key contributio9n of this approach is the recognition that not all the behavior of an exerciser or athlete is under conscious control, and that at times it may be appropriate to focus on unconscious determinants of behavior. • Ex. Aerial skier bad crash

  10. Trait Approach • Assumes that the fundamental unites of personality—its traits—are relatively stable. • Personality traits are enduring and consistent across a variety of situations. • They minimize the role of situation or environment factors and consider that the cause of behavior generally reside within the person.

  11. Big Five • Neuroticism: nervousness, anxiety, depression, anger versus emotional stability • Extraversion: enthusiasm, sociability, assertiveness, high activity level versus introversion • Openness to experience: Originality, need to variety, curiosity • Agreeableness: amiability, altruism, modesty • Conscientiousness: constraint, achievement striving, self-disciplined

  12. Regardless of the view endorsed, trait theorists argue that the best way to understand personality is by considering traits that relatively enduring and stable over time.

  13. Situation Approach • Argues that behavior is determined largely by the situation or environment. • Observational learning (modeling) • Social Reinforcement (feedback) • Environmental influences and reinforcements shape the way you behave. • Many football players are gentle and shy off the field, but the game (the situation) requires them to act aggressively. • You can influence behavior in sport by changing the reinforcement in the environment.

  14. Interactional Approach • Considers the situation and person as codeterminants of behavior—that is as variables that together determine behavior. • Not only do personal traits and situational factors independently determine behavior, but at times they interact or mix with each other in unique ways to influence behavior.

  15. Researchers using an interactional approach ask these kinds of question: • Will extroverts perform better in a team situation and introverts in an individual situation? • Will highly motivated people adhere to a formal exercise program longer that exercisers with low self-motivation? • Will self-confident children prefer competitive sports and youngsters with low self-confidence prefer noncompetitive sport situation?

  16. Findings • Team-sport athletes were more dependent, extroverted, and anxious but less imaginative that individual-sport athletes. • Compared with female nonathletes, women athletes were more achievement oriented, independent, aggressive, emotionally stable, and assertive. • Morgan’s mental health model proposes that successful athletes exhibit greater positive mental health than less successful (or unsuccessful) athletes exhibit. • Exercise and increased levels of fitness appear to be associated with increases in self-esteem, especially among individuals initially low I self-esteem. • The authors found the gymnasts who made the team coped better with anxiety, used more internal imagery, and employed more positive self-talk than those who didn’t make the team.

More Related