Human Behavior
Person in Environment
Biopsychosocial Dimensions
Sociocultural Dimensions
100

A range of behaviors exhibited by humans and are influenced by culture, attitudes, emotions, values, ethics, etc..

Human Behavior

100

Spontaneous generation, phrenology, blank slate theory

Defunct Theory

100

A problem-oriented approach that is concerned with identifying a problem or dysfunction within a person. 


The Medical Model

100

Allows us to better understand the connection between our personal lives and larger social forces that influence us

Sociological Imagination

200

A set of ideas that attempt to explain certain events of phenomena

Theory

200

Used to better understand people as active agents whose lives, relationships, and environments impact one another.

Micro-Mezzo-Macro Approach

200

Regulate organs and functions, mood, energy levels, blood glucose, etc.

Hormones

200

Major theorists include:

Marx, Weber, Simmel, DuBois

Conflict Theory

300

To reasonably predict and explain behavior in a way that will help you develop appropriate and effective interventions for your clients

The purpose of theory

300

Understanding human behavior through assessing an individual’s interrelated biological, psychological, and social functioning.

Biopsychosocial Approach

300

Responsible for processing color, shape, and motion. 

Occipital Lobe

300

People create their own reality based on their experiences

Social Constructionism

400

It promotes social work values and ethics

Philosophical Underpinnings

400

Each part plays an important role in the function of the whole, and the whole in turn supports and sustains the parts.

System

400

governs ego and ensures actions are assessed with possible consequences taken into consideration

Reality Principle

400

the advocacy of social, economic, and political equality between both sexes and is often expanded to apply to equal rights to all minority groups.

Feminist Theory

500

These are often a problem that practioners try to avoid: problems with observations, overgeneralizations, biases and value judgments, lack of inquiry

Human pitfalls of research

500

The thought that clients are experts on their situation, insightful into successful approaches  to problem solving used in the past, and resilient and resourceful


Strengths Perspective

500

Denial, intellectualization, projection, reaction formation, repression

Defense Mechanisms

500

Important concepts include:

Ethnic identity, ethnicity, ethnos, ideology, and social class

Cultural Perspectives

M
e
n
u