📋 Course Outline
- Course rationale and learning assessments
- Self and personality: definitions and components
- Determinants of personality: environment and biology
- Personality domains and OCEAN scoring
- William James and self-concept models
- Carl Rogers real self and ideal self
- Body image and influences on self-worth
- Reproductive cycle and prenatal development
- Male and female reproductive system parts
- Neural processing and memory formation
- Self-care definition and benefits
📖 1. Course rationale and learning assessments
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Personal identity : Personal identity is the set of factors and forces that shape how a person understands and maintains who they are over time.
- Identity development : Identity development is the process by which influences and forces affect how personal identity forms and stays stable.
- Intended Learning Outcomes : Intended Learning Outcomes are the specific abilities students should demonstrate after completing the course.
- Criteria for assessment : Criteria for assessment are the weighted components used to grade student learning across activities, outputs, and major exams.
📝 Essential Points
- The course focuses on the nature of identity and the factors that affect its development and maintenance.
- Learning is supported by connecting classroom discussions with students’ everyday experiences.
- Students are expected to examine aspects of the self and the influences shaping the self.
- Students must integrate aspects of self and identity by developing a theory of the self.
- Students apply new skills and learnings about self-life after completing the course.
- Assessment weights are 40% activities/exercises/quizzes, 20% projects/outputs, and 40% major examinations for a total of 100%.
💡 Memory Hook
Identity = factors + forces; Assessment = 40/20/40 (activities/outputs/exams).
📖 2. Self and personality: definitions and components
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Personality traits : Personality traits are stable individual differences that tend to show up consistently across time and situations.
- Five-Factor Model : The Five-Factor Model is a trait system that organizes personality into five broad dimensions.
- OCEAN traits : OCEAN traits are the five Big Five dimensions: Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism.
- Facets : Facets are subcomponents within each Big Five trait that allow a more detailed description of personality.
- Self-concept : Self-concept is a person’s mental picture of who they are, including beliefs about their abilities and characteristics.
📝 Essential Points
- Trait psychology assumes people differ on basic trait dimensions that persist over time and across situations.
- The Big Five dimensions are Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism.
- Lexical approach research suggests many personality-describing words overlap because they function like synonyms.
- Trait scores on one Big Five dimension do not determine scores on the other dimensions (e.g., high Extraversion can pair with either high or low Neuroticism).
- Some trait theorists argue there are additional traits not fully captured by the Five-Factor Model.
- Self-concept is generally more malleable in younger people during identity formation, and becomes more detailed with age.
💡 Memory Hook
OCEAN = 5 trait levers: Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, Neuroticism.
📖 3. Determinants of personality: environment and biology
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Neurophilosophy : Neurophilosophy is a modern inquiry that applies neuroscience methods to classic philosophical questions about mind and self.
- Materialistic view of the self : Materialistic views treat mental states as identical with, reducible to, or explained by physical brain states.
- Eliminative materialism : Eliminative materialism argues that everyday mental vocabulary should be replaced with concepts grounded in neuroscience.
- Merleau-Ponty phenomenology : Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology treats the self as an integrated unity where mind and body are intertwined in lived experience.
- Self-subject : Self-subject is the idea that perception happens from an embodied subject whose consciousness and world are mutually connected.
📝 Essential Points
- Neurophilosophy links behavior of the self to neuropharmacological states and neural activity in specialized brain areas.
- The self is treated as a product of brain activity, so identity and behavior depend on biological processes.
- Eliminative materialism claims a new conceptual framework is needed to better reflect the mind and self.
- Merleau-Ponty rejects a strict separation of mind and body by describing them as seamlessly woven in experience.
- Consciousness is described as a process that includes both sensing and interpreting rather than only raw sensations or only reasoning.
- The world is framed as a field of perception where consciousness assigns meaning, making self and world inseparable in experience.
💡 Memory Hook
Brain-first vs lived-unity: neurophilosophy ties self to brain states; Merleau-Ponty ties self to embodied perception.
📖 4. Personality domains and OCEAN scoring
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- OCEAN scoring : OCEAN scoring is a personality assessment framework that summarizes traits across five broad domains.
- Openness : Openness is the personality domain reflecting how receptive a person is to new ideas, novelty, and varied experiences.
- Conscientiousness : Conscientiousness is the personality domain describing how organized, responsible, and self-disciplined a person tends to be.
- Extraversion : Extraversion is the personality domain capturing a person’s tendency toward sociability, energy, and positive engagement with others.
- Agreeableness : Agreeableness is the personality domain measuring how cooperative, trusting, and considerate a person is in interpersonal behavior.
📝 Essential Points
- OCEAN is commonly used to compare individuals by placing them on trait continua rather than labeling them as one fixed type.
- Each OCEAN domain is scored separately, so a person can show a mix of high and low traits across domains.
- Openness is reflected in preferences for variety and intellectual curiosity rather than routine-only choices.
- Conscientiousness is reflected in planning, reliability, and follow-through on commitments.
- Extraversion is reflected in seeking social interaction and showing higher outward energy.
- Agreeableness is reflected in warmth, empathy, and conflict-reducing cooperation in group settings.
💡 Memory Hook
OCEAN = 5 trait waves: Open, Conscientious, Extraverted, Agreeable, Neurotic (think “ocean has 5 currents”).
📖 5. William James and self-concept models
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Self-concept : Self-concept is the set of beliefs and feelings a person holds about who they are, including how they see their abilities and worth.
- Body image : Body image is a mental representation of how someone thinks and feels about their physical attributes, shaped by both personal and social influences.
- Self-esteem : Self-esteem is a person’s overall evaluation of their own value, which can be positive or negative based on personal and social standards.
- Internal body image : Internal body image is how a person personally perceives and evaluates their own appearance and physical traits.
- External body image : External body image is how a person believes other people view their body, including perceived social judgments.
📝 Essential Points
- Body image includes perception, feelings about appearance, self-talk about the body, and beliefs about others’ views.
- Body image can be distorted by internal factors such as emotions, moods, early experiences, and attitudes learned from parents.
- Media exposure can reinforce cultural beauty beliefs and increase pressure toward negative body image.
- Preoccupation with distorted body image can drive behaviors linked to eating disorders and severe anxiety.
- Positive body image is supported by accepting that attractive bodies come in many shapes and sizes and by self-acceptance and esteem.
💡 Memory Hook
Body image = what you think/feel about your body; self-esteem = how valuable you think you are.
📖 6. Carl Rogers real self and ideal self
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Real self : The real self is a person’s actual view of who they are, based on their lived experiences and current feelings.
- Ideal self : The ideal self is a person’s internal picture of who they want to be, shaped by goals, values, and expectations.
- Self-concept : Self-concept is the overall set of beliefs a person holds about themselves, including both real and ideal self views.
- Incongruence : Incongruence is the mismatch between the real self and the ideal self that can create psychological tension.
📝 Essential Points
- A larger gap between real self and ideal self tends to increase emotional discomfort and self-doubt.
- A smaller gap between real self and ideal self supports greater psychological harmony and stability.
- Self-concept is influenced by experiences, especially how a person interprets what happens to them.
- When people feel judged or pressured, their ideal self may become harder to reach, widening incongruence.
- Incongruence can lead to defensive behavior because the person tries to protect the ideal self image.
💡 Memory Hook
Gap = pain: bigger real–ideal mismatch → more distress; smaller mismatch → more congruence.
📖 7. Body image and influences on self-worth
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Body image : Body image is a person’s perception and feelings about their own physical appearance.
- Self-worth : Self-worth is the value a person assigns to themselves, often shaped by how they see their body and how others respond.
- Gender dysphoria : Gender dysphoria is clinical distress that can occur when a person’s gender identity conflicts with their assigned sex.
- Transsexual : Transsexual refers to someone who seeks or has undergone social transition, and in many cases also medical transition.
- Pansexual : Pansexual is a sexual orientation where attraction is directed toward people regardless of their sex or gender identity.
📝 Essential Points
- Body image can influence self-worth by linking perceived appearance to feelings of adequacy or confidence.
- Not all people experience distress from gender incongruence, but many become distressed when desired hormones and/or surgery are unavailable.
- DSM-5 describes gender dysphoria as a broad spectrum of individuals who transiently or persistently identify with a gender different from natal gender.
- HIV is a virus that attacks and destroys CD4 (T) cells, weakening defense against illnesses such as tuberculosis, pneumonia, and cancer.
- Only untreated HIV may progress to AIDS, and there is no effective cure for HIV, though ART can control replication and reduce risk of advancing to AIDS.
- Genital herpes can recur because the virus remains in the body for life, even though antiviral drugs control symptoms but do not eliminate the virus.
💡 Memory Hook
Body image → self-worth: “what you see” affects “what you feel.”
📖 8. Reproductive cycle and prenatal development
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Self-extension : Self-extension is the process where identity expands through interaction with objects, including control, creation, knowledge, and proximity effects.
- Extended self : The extended self is identity that includes valued possessions and links individual meaning to family, group, subcultural, and national identities.
- Consumer identity : Consumer identity is the consumption pattern that helps people define and live out who they are through brands and products.
- Consumerism : Consumerism is a preoccupation with buying consumer goods that grows when markets and technology make consumption easier.
📝 Essential Points
- Self-extension can begin early as infants learn to separate self from the environment through possessions.
- Material possessions’ influence on identity tends to decrease with age but stays strong because people use goods to express self and seek happiness.
- Accumulating possessions can function as a record of the past and a guide for how people see their origin and future.
- Extended self can explain behaviors that look selfless when judged only by a narrow individual self.
- Products become part of the extended self more often when purchases require high investment or effort, such as high price or long saving time.
- Products can relate to self either by enhancing self without becoming possessions or by becoming valued possessions through self-based choice, acquisition investment, use investment, bonding during use, collections, and记
💡 Memory Hook
Cause→effect: effortful buying → more likely to become part of the extended self.
📖 9. Male and female reproductive system parts
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Male reproductive system : The male reproductive system is the body set of organs that produces sperm and delivers them for fertilization.
- Female reproductive system : The female reproductive system is the body set of organs that produces eggs and supports pregnancy and childbirth.
- Sperm : Sperm are male reproductive cells that can fertilize an egg to start pregnancy.
- Egg : An egg is a female reproductive cell that can be fertilized by sperm to begin pregnancy.
📝 Essential Points
- The male reproductive system’s core job is sperm production and transport to the female reproductive tract.
- The female reproductive system’s core job is egg production and creating conditions for fertilization and pregnancy.
- Fertilization occurs when sperm meets an egg, forming the starting point for development.
- Reproductive organs work together as a system, so damage or dysfunction in one part can affect fertility.
- Sperm and eggs are specialized cells designed for fertilization rather than general body functions.
💡 Memory Hook
Male = “Sperm ship” (deliver sperm); Female = “Egg nest” (receive egg and support pregnancy).
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Synaptic frequency and recency : Synaptic frequency and recency describe how often and how recently synapses are activated during learning.
- Emotional strengthening : Emotional strengthening is the effect of engaging feelings that makes learned information more durable in memory.
- Brain structural change : Brain structural change is the idea that learning physically alters brain structure over time.
- Distributed memory storage : Distributed memory storage means memories are represented across multiple brain regions rather than in one location.
- Metacognition : Metacognition is higher-order thinking that monitors and controls the cognitive processes used for learning.
📝 Essential Points
- Practice increases memory by raising synaptic activation frequency and maintaining fluency through repeated use.
- Engaging emotions during learning improves retention compared with purely neutral study.
- Learning can increase the brain’s capacity to learn later, supporting lifelong learning ability.
- Because memories are stored in multiple brain parts, using all senses during study can improve recall.
- Metacognition includes knowledge about cognition and regulation of cognition during learning.
- Metacognitive knowledge has three types: declarative, procedural/strategy, and conditional/task-related knowledge.
💡 Memory Hook
Practice + emotion + brain change + distributed storage = stronger recall; add metacognition to steer your learning.
📖 11. Self-care definition and benefits
🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions
- Self-care : Self-care is any deliberate activity you do to support your mental, emotional, and physical health.
- Self-care benefits : Self-care improves mood and lowers anxiety while also strengthening your relationship with yourself and others.
- Self-care not selfish : Self-care is not a selfish act because it replenishes your energy so you can care for others too.
- Burnout prevention : Self-care helps protect energy needed to survive and thrive and reduces the risk of burnout or compassion fatigue.
- Wellness : Wellness is an interactive process of making healthy choices to build a more balanced and successful lifestyle.
📝 Essential Points
- Stress and burnout can worsen when you ignore your needs, so self-care supports ongoing functioning rather than waiting for illness.
- Self-care is described as a deliberate practice, not something that just happens by chance.
- Good self-care is linked to improved mood and reduced anxiety.
- Self-care is framed as planning and awareness of what you do, why you do it, how it feels, and what outcomes you get.
- Wellness is presented as integrating body, mind, and spirit and as a framework for organizing growth and development.
💡 Memory Hook
Self-care = deliberate upkeep for mind, emotions, body → better mood, less anxiety, more capacity to care for others.
📅 Key Dates
| Date | Event |
|---|
| JULY 16, 2020 | Date prepared for the course module |
| FIRST SEMESTER/ YEAR 1 | Semester/year of the course |
| 18 WEEKS | Period of study for the course |
📊 Synthesis Tables
Assessment weight breakdown
| Component | Weight | What it includes |
|---|
| Activities/Exercises/Quizzes | 40% | Activities/exercises/quizzes |
| Projects/Outputs | 20% | Group and/or individual projects including concept papers and plan development/implementation |
| Major Examinations | 40% | Two (2) written major examinations including Midterm and Final exams |
⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions
- Mixing up identity development with personal identity: identity development is the process shaping stability over time, while personal identity is the set of factors and forces shaping who you are.
- Assuming Big Five traits determine each other: the source states trait scores on one dimension do not determine scores on the others.
- Confusing self-concept with self-esteem: self-concept is a mental picture/beliefs about who you are, while self-esteem is the overall evaluation of your value.
- Thinking incongruence is always small: the course links a larger real–ideal gap to more emotional discomfort and self-doubt.
- Believing self-care is selfish: the course frames self-care as deliberate upkeep that replenishes energy so you can care for others too.
- Forgetting that practice and emotion both strengthen memory: the course lists frequency/recency and emotional strengthening as separate mechanisms.
- Treating “digital self” as only posting online: the course ties it to digital citizenship, online disinhibition, and how virtual behavior reflects identity consistency.
✅ Exam Checklist
- Define personal identity and identity development, and explain how the course expects students to integrate self and identity into a theory of the self.
- State the course assessment weights exactly as 40% activities/exercises/quizzes, 20% projects/outputs, and 40% major examinations.
- Differentiate personality traits, the Five-Factor Model, OCEAN, and facets, and explain the lexical approach idea of overlapping descriptors.
- List the five OCEAN domains and give the course-level meaning of each domain (Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, Neuroticism).
- Contrast neurophilosophy/materialistic views with eliminative materialism, and summarize Merleau-Ponty’s lived-unity/self-subject ideas.
- Explain self-concept and describe how self-concept changes with age (more malleable when younger; more detailed with age).
- Use William James’ framework (I-Self/Me-Self) and Rogers’ real self/ideal self, including what incongruence means.
- Describe body image and self-esteem, and connect body image distortions to self-worth and (in the course) distress patterns.
- Explain self-extension and the extended self, including how possessions can become part of identity through effortful acquisition/use/bonding/collections/memory markers.
- Know the course’s reproductive-system basics: male produces sperm and delivers; female produces eggs and supports pregnancy; fertilization starts development when sperm meets egg.
- Summarize the course’s memory-learning mechanisms: synaptic frequency/recency, emotional strengthening, brain structural change, distributed storage, and metacognition types (declarative, procedural/strategy, conditional
- Explain self-care and wellness: deliberate self-care benefits, burnout prevention, and wellness as integrating body, mind, and spirit.
- Apply the course’s sexual-self content: define sexual selfhood, describe the sexual response cycle stages (including desire if covered), and distinguish STIs/contraception basics (including HIV and genital herpes key non
- Explain material self/consumer identity/consumerism and self-extension mechanisms, including instrumental vs symbolic vs affective functions of possessions and semiotic signifier/signified idea for Activity #11.
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