How past experiences affect your life
Sociologist Herbert Mead developed a theory known as social behaviorism, which helped
explained why past social experiences help form an individuals’ personality.
Mead did not believe that personality was developed by drives or biologically,
but more on terms socially. He stated
that the self only developed when people interact with one another. Without the
interaction of other people an individual can’t develop a personality. An
example of this is if a child is left in total isolation for a long period of
time then they don’t mature both physically or mentally. Next, social experience is crucial, and this
includes the exchange of symbols. Only people attach meanings to words and
symbols. If you tell a dog to sit and it obeys then you may give it a snack.
However, this doesn’t mean it knows why to sit down, but it does so to get
food. You can tell a dog to sit for numerous of reasons such as wanting to
impress your friends, or to calm it down because it is running all over the
place. Also, Mead noted that understanding individual intentions is
critical. This will help us to analyze
how an individual will respond even before we act. For example, when we’re driving we all
anticipate what others may do because of experience. If an individual behinds
you is speeding up rather quickly, then you can assume that they are about to
switch lanes, or you can assume that they are in a rush and need to get
somewhere quickly. Mead refers to this as taking another individual’s role. Another important theory that is related to
social behaviorism is the looking-glass
self. This is basically like mirroring what we think others think of
us. If we think others view you as being
“good looking,” then you will see yourself as being good looking, or if you
think people think that you are fat then you will have that image of yourself.
People take the roles of other people during development. Infants have very
little knowledge so they tend to mimic others. Children often have creative
minds and take on roles of other significant others or people such as parents
that have a special importance in their social development. For example, children will play house in
which someone will take the role of a mother while another take that of a
father. As they age children will learn to take various roles and adjust to
their surroundings. As we continue to age we will continue to see changes in
our social life. There are a lot of critics of Mead’s theories and some claim
that he focus too much on the society in developing an individual’s behavior.
Another sociologist Erik H. Erikson stated that unlike Freud who believed that
personality was pretty much set in stone in the first couple of years of an
individual’s life, that personality changes in stages and occurs all the way up
to death. His theory is not all that accurate as well, because people
experience changes in different orders and time. Through all of the
disagreements, sociologists generally agree on this main idea, and that is that
the family has the greatest impact on an individual’s socialization abilities.
When an individual is an infant they have no control and usually rely on their
parents and family members to help nurture them. Through family they learn
several of communication techniques such as trust, culture, and beliefs. Don’t get me wrong, not all learning comes
solely from family; they can come from the environment as well because in a lot
of cultures they use the environment to help raise a child. I guess the saying
is true in which it takes a “village to raise a child.” It may not be
surprising to you that different social classes tend to raise their children
differently. An interesting survey that happened in the United States compared what a lower
class family would want in a child compared to that of an upper class
family. A lower class family would
usually favor obedience and conformity while an upper class family would tend
to favor creativity and good judgment (NORS, 2003). Have you ever wondered why?
Well the reason is lower class workers tend to have jobs that they must be very
obedient in and are highly supervised. Subconsciously they are gearing their
children towards that route and will even use physical punishment to achieve
it. In upper class workers they tend to have jobs that inspire individuality
and creativity which is very similar to the traits they would like to have in
their children. School also has a large effect on an individual’s
personalities. If you think about it you spend a huge chunk of time each day at
school. It’s also interesting to note that children tend to play with people as
the same race and gender, and that boys are more physical and aggressive while
girls are more well behaved. Boys also tend to find abstract activities more
interesting like video games and girls tend to be more artistic. The same thing
follows when they get to college because boys tend to major in physical
sciences, and computing while girls usually major in humanities and arts. In
school is where children discover peer groups or individual that has similar
interest as themselves. People tend o
indemnify more with their peer groups and can have conversations about things
they understand like clothes, music, and style.
Peer groups are a way for individuals to escape adult supervision, and
people are usually more out spoken in peer groups. During the adolescent years people tend to
identify more with their peer groups because they identify themselves as an
adult and that is also a time in which parents are concerned about who their children
hang around because they know that who they hang around influence their
behavior deeply. During these years the
mass media heavily affects individuals as well.
Studies have showed that television have made people more passive and
lessoned their creativity. In the United States
we spend he most time watching television and own the most T.V sets per
household.
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