This person believed that our personalities are made up of 3 different parts: The Id, the Superego, and Ego
Sigmund Freud
The unique human capacity of being see ourselves from the outside; the views we internalize of how we think others see us.
Self
The process of learning behaviors, norms, and values through the communication with others.
Socialization
A theory by Charles Horton Cooley, it argued that we develop our self through the internalizing others' reactions to us.
Looking-glass Self
This person is well known for developing a theory on the development of reasoning. He believed that there are 4 stages that we go through as we grow, with our level of reasoning advancing in each one.
Jean Piaget
The individuals, groups, and institutions that teach us the norms, values, and proper behavior in society.
Agents of Socialization
A term used to refer to radical cases of children who did not go through socialization.
Feral Children
What gave Jean Piaget the idea to look into the development of reasoning?
Children's Test answers
This person develop the theory of the Looking-glass Self which claimed that our self develops through internalizing others' reactions to us.
Charles Horton Cooly
What Freud described as our inborn basic drives
Id
Locations that involve human interaction.
Social Environments
Reasoning
He coined the terms Significant Others and Generalized Others, terms that relate to the influence people we are close to or generalized roles have over us.
George Herbert Mead
What Freud described as the balancing force between our basic drives and the internalized norms and values of our social groups.
Ego
A term coined by Herbert Mead, it refers to people who heavily influence us.
Significant Others
Lawrence Kohlberg study the development of _______.
Morality
This person built off of Jean Piaget's work on reasoning and develop his own theory on the development of morality.
Lawrence Kohlberg
Freud described this as our conscience, the internalized norms and values of our social groups
Superego
A term coined by Herbert Mead, it refers to the norms, values, attitudes, and expectations of certain roles in general.
Generalized Others
The technique developed by Sigmund Freud for treating emotional problems through the exploration of the unconscious mind.
Psychoanalysis