How Freud sees me
How Bandura sees me
How Adler sees me
How Jung sees me
How Rogers sees me
How Eysenck see me
Sigmund Freud believed that we all had an unconscious that was filled with socially unacceptable thoughts that we filter out. This theory does not completely hold up today because we do not constantly think of unacceptable things and we are not aware of what is in our unconscious
Bandura was a believer in the spotlight effect, the idea that we overestimate others' judgement of us. Making a mistake like wearing something weird to school may be all you can focus on, but most of the time, peopled do not even notice your mistakes
Alfred Adler believed that birth order would affect the personality of children. He claimed they would want to overcome their childhood inferiority complex. It is common for the oldest to be a leader, the middle to always want to one up the others, and the youngest to be reliant on others
Carl Jung had unique thoughts about the unconscious mind. He believed it contained archetypes that represent types of people we witness in our lives. In this example, a wise person, characterized by Jung as a sage, is used to describe someone's grandpa
Carl Rogers believed in humanistic theories in which personality was studied with a focus on growing as a person. He believed people are basically good, but environment can change them. In this scene, someone who has not been exposed to many environments is a good person, but it is predicted that as they are exposed to more people, there is a greater chance they will stray from their healthy ways
Hans and Sybil Eysenck developed a type of factor analysis that mainly tested on 2 or 3 dimensions, extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism.  In the scene, the job interviewer makes a ridiculous comment of assessing the interviewee's personality based on three characteristics, showing the impreciseness of this test compared to others
Murder
Theft
Drugs
Guns
Everyone is going to realize I accidentally wore my classical era robe to school!
These boys would be lost without me
I am actually the leader of the family
I cannot do anything on my own
Hey that wise old guy in the movie reminds me of you, grandpa
This is my child
What a good little girl! It's only downhill from here
I will determine if you get the job based on three numbers
How Freud sees me
How Bandura sees me
How Adler sees me
How Jung sees me
How Rogers sees me
How Eysenck see me
Sigmund Freud believed that we all had an unconscious that was filled with socially unacceptable thoughts that we filter out. This theory does not completely hold up today because we do not constantly think of unacceptable things and we are not aware of what is in our unconscious
Bandura was a believer in the spotlight effect, the idea that we overestimate others' judgement of us. Making a mistake like wearing something weird to school may be all you can focus on, but most of the time, peopled do not even notice your mistakes
Alfred Adler believed that birth order would affect the personality of children. He claimed they would want to overcome their childhood inferiority complex. It is common for the oldest to be a leader, the middle to always want to one up the others, and the youngest to be reliant on others
Carl Jung had unique thoughts about the unconscious mind. He believed it contained archetypes that represent types of people we witness in our lives. In this example, a wise person, characterized by Jung as a sage, is used to describe someone's grandpa
Carl Rogers believed in humanistic theories in which personality was studied with a focus on growing as a person. He believed people are basically good, but environment can change them. In this scene, someone who has not been exposed to many environments is a good person, but it is predicted that as they are exposed to more people, there is a greater chance they will stray from their healthy ways
Hans and Sybil Eysenck developed a type of factor analysis that mainly tested on 2 or 3 dimensions, extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism.  In the scene, the job interviewer makes a ridiculous comment of assessing the interviewee's personality based on three characteristics, showing the impreciseness of this test compared to others
Murder
Theft
Drugs
Guns
Everyone is going to realize I accidentally wore my classical era robe to school!
These boys would be lost without me
I am actually the leader of the family
I cannot do anything on my own
Hey that wise old guy in the movie reminds me of you, grandpa
This is my child
What a good little girl! It's only downhill from here
I will determine if you get the job based on three numbers
How Freud sees me
How Bandura sees me
How Adler sees me
How Jung sees me
How Rogers sees me
How Eysenck see me
Sigmund Freud believed that we all had an unconscious that was filled with socially unacceptable thoughts that we filter out. This theory does not completely hold up today because we do not constantly think of unacceptable things and we are not aware of what is in our unconscious
Bandura was a believer in the spotlight effect, the idea that we overestimate others' judgement of us. Making a mistake like wearing something weird to school may be all you can focus on, but most of the time, peopled do not even notice your mistakes
Alfred Adler believed that birth order would affect the personality of children. He claimed they would want to overcome their childhood inferiority complex. It is common for the oldest to be a leader, the middle to always want to one up the others, and the youngest to be reliant on others
Carl Jung had unique thoughts about the unconscious mind. He believed it contained archetypes that represent types of people we witness in our lives. In this example, a wise person, characterized by Jung as a sage, is used to describe someone's grandpa
Carl Rogers believed in humanistic theories in which personality was studied with a focus on growing as a person. He believed people are basically good, but environment can change them. In this scene, someone who has not been exposed to many environments is a good person, but it is predicted that as they are exposed to more people, there is a greater chance they will stray from their healthy ways
Hans and Sybil Eysenck developed a type of factor analysis that mainly tested on 2 or 3 dimensions, extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism.  In the scene, the job interviewer makes a ridiculous comment of assessing the interviewee's personality based on three characteristics, showing the impreciseness of this test compared to others
Murder
Theft
Drugs
Guns
Everyone is going to realize I accidentally wore my classical era robe to school!
These boys would be lost without me
I am actually the leader of the family
I cannot do anything on my own
Hey that wise old guy in the movie reminds me of you, grandpa
This is my child
What a good little girl! It's only downhill from here
I will determine if you get the job based on three numbers
How Freud sees me
How Bandura sees me
How Adler sees me
How Jung sees me
How Rogers sees me
How Eysenck see me
Sigmund Freud believed that we all had an unconscious that was filled with socially unacceptable thoughts that we filter out. This theory does not completely hold up today because we do not constantly think of unacceptable things and we are not aware of what is in our unconscious
Bandura was a believer in the spotlight effect, the idea that we overestimate others' judgement of us. Making a mistake like wearing something weird to school may be all you can focus on, but most of the time, peopled do not even notice your mistakes
Alfred Adler believed that birth order would affect the personality of children. He claimed they would want to overcome their childhood inferiority complex. It is common for the oldest to be a leader, the middle to always want to one up the others, and the youngest to be reliant on others
Carl Jung had unique thoughts about the unconscious mind. He believed it contained archetypes that represent types of people we witness in our lives. In this example, a wise person, characterized by Jung as a sage, is used to describe someone's grandpa
Carl Rogers believed in humanistic theories in which personality was studied with a focus on growing as a person. He believed people are basically good, but environment can change them. In this scene, someone who has not been exposed to many environments is a good person, but it is predicted that as they are exposed to more people, there is a greater chance they will stray from their healthy ways
Hans and Sybil Eysenck developed a type of factor analysis that mainly tested on 2 or 3 dimensions, extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism.  In the scene, the job interviewer makes a ridiculous comment of assessing the interviewee's personality based on three characteristics, showing the impreciseness of this test compared to others
Murder
Theft
Drugs
Guns
Everyone is going to realize I accidentally wore my classical era robe to school!
These boys would be lost without me
I am actually the leader of the family
I cannot do anything on my own
Hey that wise old guy in the movie reminds me of you, grandpa
This is my child
What a good little girl! It's only downhill from here
I will determine if you get the job based on three numbers
How Freud sees me
How Bandura sees me
How Adler sees me
How Jung sees me
How Rogers sees me
How Eysenck see me
Sigmund Freud believed that we all had an unconscious that was filled with socially unacceptable thoughts that we filter out. This theory does not completely hold up today because we do not constantly think of unacceptable things and we are not aware of what is in our unconscious
Bandura was a believer in the spotlight effect, the idea that we overestimate others' judgement of us. Making a mistake like wearing something weird to school may be all you can focus on, but most of the time, peopled do not even notice your mistakes
Alfred Adler believed that birth order would affect the personality of children. He claimed they would want to overcome their childhood inferiority complex. It is common for the oldest to be a leader, the middle to always want to one up the others, and the youngest to be reliant on others
Carl Jung had unique thoughts about the unconscious mind. He believed it contained archetypes that represent types of people we witness in our lives. In this example, a wise person, characterized by Jung as a sage, is used to describe someone's grandpa
Carl Rogers believed in humanistic theories in which personality was studied with a focus on growing as a person. He believed people are basically good, but environment can change them. In this scene, someone who has not been exposed to many environments is a good person, but it is predicted that as they are exposed to more people, there is a greater chance they will stray from their healthy ways
Hans and Sybil Eysenck developed a type of factor analysis that mainly tested on 2 or 3 dimensions, extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism.  In the scene, the job interviewer makes a ridiculous comment of assessing the interviewee's personality based on three characteristics, showing the impreciseness of this test compared to others
Murder
Theft
Drugs
Guns
Everyone is going to realize I accidentally wore my classical era robe to school!
These boys would be lost without me
I am actually the leader of the family
I cannot do anything on my own
Hey that wise old guy in the movie reminds me of you, grandpa
This is my child
What a good little girl! It's only downhill from here
I will determine if you get the job based on three numbers
How Freud sees me
How Bandura sees me
How Adler sees me
How Jung sees me
How Rogers sees me
How Eysenck see me
Sigmund Freud believed that we all had an unconscious that was filled with socially unacceptable thoughts that we filter out. This theory does not completely hold up today because we do not constantly think of unacceptable things and we are not aware of what is in our unconscious
Bandura was a believer in the spotlight effect, the idea that we overestimate others' judgement of us. Making a mistake like wearing something weird to school may be all you can focus on, but most of the time, peopled do not even notice your mistakes
Alfred Adler believed that birth order would affect the personality of children. He claimed they would want to overcome their childhood inferiority complex. It is common for the oldest to be a leader, the middle to always want to one up the others, and the youngest to be reliant on others
Carl Jung had unique thoughts about the unconscious mind. He believed it contained archetypes that represent types of people we witness in our lives. In this example, a wise person, characterized by Jung as a sage, is used to describe someone's grandpa
Carl Rogers believed in humanistic theories in which personality was studied with a focus on growing as a person. He believed people are basically good, but environment can change them. In this scene, someone who has not been exposed to many environments is a good person, but it is predicted that as they are exposed to more people, there is a greater chance they will stray from their healthy ways
Hans and Sybil Eysenck developed a type of factor analysis that mainly tested on 2 or 3 dimensions, extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism.  In the scene, the job interviewer makes a ridiculous comment of assessing the interviewee's personality based on three characteristics, showing the impreciseness of this test compared to others
Murder
Theft
Drugs
Guns
Everyone is going to realize I accidentally wore my classical era robe to school!
These boys would be lost without me
I am actually the leader of the family
I cannot do anything on my own
Hey that wise old guy in the movie reminds me of you, grandpa
This is my child
What a good little girl! It's only downhill from here
I will determine if you get the job based on three numbers
How Freud sees me
How Bandura sees me
How Adler sees me
How Jung sees me
How Rogers sees me
How Eysenck see me
Sigmund Freud believed that we all had an unconscious that was filled with socially unacceptable thoughts that we filter out. This theory does not completely hold up today because we do not constantly think of unacceptable things and we are not aware of what is in our unconscious
Bandura was a believer in the spotlight effect, the idea that we overestimate others' judgement of us. Making a mistake like wearing something weird to school may be all you can focus on, but most of the time, peopled do not even notice your mistakes
Alfred Adler believed that birth order would affect the personality of children. He claimed they would want to overcome their childhood inferiority complex. It is common for the oldest to be a leader, the middle to always want to one up the others, and the youngest to be reliant on others
Carl Jung had unique thoughts about the unconscious mind. He believed it contained archetypes that represent types of people we witness in our lives. In this example, a wise person, characterized by Jung as a sage, is used to describe someone's grandpa
Carl Rogers believed in humanistic theories in which personality was studied with a focus on growing as a person. He believed people are basically good, but environment can change them. In this scene, someone who has not been exposed to many environments is a good person, but it is predicted that as they are exposed to more people, there is a greater chance they will stray from their healthy ways
Hans and Sybil Eysenck developed a type of factor analysis that mainly tested on 2 or 3 dimensions, extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism.  In the scene, the job interviewer makes a ridiculous comment of assessing the interviewee's personality based on three characteristics, showing the impreciseness of this test compared to others
Murder
Theft
Drugs
Guns
Everyone is going to realize I accidentally wore my classical era robe to school!
These boys would be lost without me
I am actually the leader of the family
I cannot do anything on my own
Hey that wise old guy in the movie reminds me of you, grandpa
This is my child
What a good little girl! It's only downhill from here
I will determine if you get the job based on three numbers