Group 2 Per Dev
Group 2 Per Dev
Group 2 Per Dev
The Social and Emotional domain describes children’s ability to develop positive
relationships and ideas about themselves and their abilities, regulate their emotions, behavior,
and impulses, and express emotions. Appropriate social and emotional development is critical
to life-long development and learning and is associated with a wide array of positive
outcomes. Such skills allow children to feel confident in their abilities to interact with others,
approach new situations, and express their individuality.
Children begin developing social-emotional skills at birth. Research indicates that
children are born ready to connect with other people in their environment. When a child’s
emotional and physical needs are met, learning pathways to the brain are formed, which lead
to learning in all developmental domains. Emotional signals, such as smiling, crying, or
demonstrating interest and attention, strongly influence the behaviors of others. Similarly, the
emotional reactions of others affect children’s social behaviors.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
By the end of the lesson, the students will be able to:
A. identify the components of emotional intelligence (EQ) and the signs of social
intelligence (SQ)
B. discuss transactional analysis and ego states
C. analyze the strokes and life positions
LEARNING CONTENTS
The American psychologist and science journalist Daniel Goleman first coined the term
emotional intelligence. He wrote for the New York Times for over 12 years, reporting on the
complexity of the human brain and behavioral sciences. Goleman’s EQ theory comprises five
core components: empathy, effective communication or social skills, self-awareness, self-
regulation, and motivation.
1. Self-awareness
2. Self-regulation
Once a person has achieved the first component, they can move on to self-regulation. An
individual with a good awareness of their own emotions can better manage the emotions and
behaviors that come along with them. This may involve noticing a difficult emotion and
slowing down or resisting any impulsive action that may follow.
3. Motivation
Motivation is the process that stimulates and directs someone toward achieving their goals. It
is a key part of EI, 2016 research suggests. Motivation allows a person to remain true to their
goals and persevere, even during challenging times.
A person with low motivation may be discouraged easily by any obstacle and give up. A
person with high motivation realizes that the reward of their personal goals is worth the time
and effort spent getting there, even when they face obstacles.
4. Empathy
Empathy refers to how tuned to the emotions of others a person is. Someone with high EI can
accurately identify which emotions another person is feeling and can tell the difference
between genuine and false emotions.
A person may do this by noticing certain facial expressions or changes in another person’s
voice or body language.
5. Social skills
A person with higher levels of EI may be better at interacting appropriately with others than a
person with low levels of EI. EI can help a person build relationships, communicate with
others, and maintain friendships.
SOCIAL QUOTIENT/INTELLIGENCE
What is Social Quotient (SQ)?
• The theory of social quotient was first brought to the forefront by American psychologist
Edward Thorndike in 1920.
• He defined it as, "The ability to understand and manage men and women and boys and girls,
to act wisely in human relations."
• No one is born socially intelligent. Instead, it involves a set of skills that an individual
learns over time.
Social Brain
The spindle cells. Intuition or the “gut feeling” is a result of these cells. These are
triggered when the best of the choices is to be made i.e., we need to choose as our gut guides
us. Listening to their intuition is a must for leaders provided it is attuned to the mood of
others. A spindle cell is the fastest acting neuron in our brain that guides our social decisions.
Human brains contain more of these spindle cells than any other species. Mirror
neurons enable a person to mimic or mirror what the other being does. These neurons play a
vital role in organizations as their presence prompts the followers to mirror their leader’s
feelings and deeds.
Pay close attention to what (and who) is around you. Emphasizes the importance of being
observant and aware of your surroundings. It encourages mindfulness and vigilance to
enhance situational awareness, promoting safety, and fostering a deeper connection with your
environment and the people in it.
Appreciate the important people in your life. Underscores the significance of recognizing
and expressing gratitude for the individuals who play significant roles in your personal and
emotional well-being. Cultivating appreciation enhances relationships and contributes to a
positive and fulfilling life.
Transactional Analysis and Ego States
TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS
Transactional Analysis is first and foremost a therapeutic tool for positive change and
growth. It can be used either in therapy for the individual concerned or on a more surface
level for problem solving in everyday life.
TA is basically the study of how people take on certain behaviors, either by accident
or from their early caretakers or authority figures and then continue to play them out in their
adult lives. It is a model for people to use to work towards ‘autonomy’, a place from where
they can choose to live the way they want to and not to be still acting as if they are controlled
by past events or messages.
Transactional Analysis then is a modern psychotherapy model, which has; it’s own
particular language and theory of personality. It states that the person transacts with a person
in certain ways, structures their time between life and death in a particular way, plays their
own particular games and lives out their own unique script.
DEVELOPMENT OF TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS
Dr. Eric Berne developed transactional analysis in the last 1950s, using “transaction”
to describe the fundamental unit of social intercourse, with “transactional analysis” being the
study of social interactions between individuals. His influences included contemporaries such
as René Spitz, Erik Erikson, Paul Federn, Edoardo Weiss, as well as Freud and Wilder
Penfield, a Canadian neurosurgeon.
Inspired by Freud’s theory of personality—primarily his belief that the human psyche
is multifaceted and that different components interact to produce a variety of emotions,
attitudes and complex behaviors—and Penfield’s groundbreaking experiments involving the
stimulation of specific brain regions with electrical currents, Berne developed an approach
that he described as both neo- and extra-Freudian.
Discerning the need to build upon the philosophical concepts Freud introduced with
observable data, Berne developed his own observable ego states of Parent, Adult, and Child,
following Freud’s proposal of the existence of the Id (emotional and irrational component),
Ego (rational component), and Superego (moral component) as different and unobservable
factions of personality.
Berne also took special note of the complexities of human communication. He
highlighted the fact that facial expressions, gestures, body language, and tone may be
regarded as more important by the receiver than any spoken words. In his book Games
People Play, he noted that people may sometimes communicate messages underpinned with
ulterior motives.
EGO STATES
TA recognized that the human personality is made up of three “ego states,”; each of
which is an entire system of thought, feeling, and behavior from which we interact with each
other. The Parent, Adult, and Child ego states and the interaction between them form the
foundation of transactional analysis theory.
An ego state for Berne is:
‘a system of feelings accompanied by related set of behavior patterns.’
For example, spontaneous feelings, compliance and rebellion are all features of the
child ego state and may be activated by the individual at any time throughout his life.
Berne recognized that three such ego states must be in everyone and that together they
make up the unique individuals Personality.
For Berne the ego states are not roles but are phenomenological realities.
Each ego state is concerned with what actually happened in the past for that person
and how they acted will determine how they act in the here and now. The decisions that they
made then will determine the decisions and behaviours they now make in the present.
The Parent Ego State
(Case Study One)
Bob was the leader of his group of friends and it was he who always set the time that
they should meet, where they should go and what they ‘should do’. He often shook his finger
at his friends reprovingly. People in his circle of friends eventually got fed up of him and
many left the group.
(Case Study Two)
Mary and Joan were good friends and they went everywhere together. When Joan’s
mother died it was Mary who looked after her and often put her arm around Joan saying such
words as ‘Don’t worry about things. I will help you with all your work; I love you a lot you
know’.
The above then, are examples of a controlling parent behavior and a nurturing parent
behavior, of the Parent Ego state.
The Parent Ego State
The parent ego state contains the attitudes and behaviours that are observed and
copied from the individual’s caretakers and figures. In other words the spoken and unspoken
rules. The “shoulds’ and the ‘oughts” of life. The individual’s early parent is formed in the
child from birth to approx five years and in Transactional Analysis terms is called the parent
in the child or the P1. The complete parent ego state or the P2 is formed between the ages of
five years to approx twenty years as a result of even more external stimuli from their
authority of caretaker figures.
When the P2 is activated in later life, the person will be acting in the ways that their
authority figures will have acted, indeed this is the model that the individual will have
incorporated into his own parent, though it must be noted that each individual will have a
different parent ego state and will act in their own unique way.
The Adult Ego State
(Case Study Two)
James decided to go and see his aunt who lived in the next town – as he had never left
his town before, he had to get his map out to work out how he would get there – this he did
successfully and he got to his aunt’s house at the time he said he would. Thus we can see that
James used his adult ego state to work out logically, given the facts, how to solve a given
problem.
The Adult Ego State emerges around six months in the child and is concerned
primarily with appraising facts, reasoning, thinking, evaluating and responding to available
data.
It is described by many Transactional Analysis writers like a computer, concerned
only with rationality and logic.
However, I think this position is somewhat misleading and I prefer Berne’s
commentary, which describes that adult as coming from an integrated stance which does not
mean that when the person activates their adult ego state, he is coming from just a rational
position, but that he also has access to feelings, thinking and attitudes. Indeed, the person will
be part of the ‘here and now’ and experiencing and coming from an integrated adult stance.
The Child Ego State
(Case Study One)
When john’s mother died when he was three years old, he was too young to really
understand what had happened, he just felt hurt that his mother had gone away. When he was
fifteen years of age, John had a hard time trusting women – he often complained that women
left him and let him down a lot when he most needed them. Other people felt that women
were really good to him and helped him a lot.
(Case Study Two)
Fiona when a small girl could get her father to do anything she really wanted. Indeed
as she grew up she was very good at managing to get men to do what she wanted. Later, she
was fired from several jobs by her bosses who said they felt she was manipulating them.
(Case Study Three)
As a child, Freda’s parents argued a lot and her major method of defense was to
withdraw and spend a lot of time alone going for long walks. At eighteen she got sacked from
many jobs for daydreaming and fantasizing. In her personal life, she would withdraw
mentally if her friends argued with her. They got fed up with her and left.
People who spend a lot of time operating from a child ego state usually are acting as
they did when they were a child. For example, Freda lost a lot of jobs because she
daydreamed when she should have been concentrating on her work. Fiona attempted to
manipulate men in her life with the expectation that she would get what she wanted as she
had from her father when a child.
Being in your child ego state does not mean that you are being childish. It simply
means that you are acting out as you did when you were a child.
The Child Ego State
The Child Ego State is primarily concerned with feelings though that does not mean
that when in the ‘here and now’ experience the person does not have access to attitudes and
thinking, but it simply means that when activated feelings are usually the executive energy
force.
The child ego state is the part of the personality, which is preserved from actual
childhood; it also contains all the impulses a person was born with. The child ego state is, as
said above, primarily about spontaneous feelings, needs and wants of the child. It is also
important to note that the child ego state contains ‘recordings’ of childhood memories and
experiences. Therefore, when the person feels and acts as they did when they were very
young, they are experiencing their child ego state.
The personality can be subdivided further into the Nurturing and Controlling parent
and the Free and Adapted child. An example of the nurturing side of the parent ego state
would be the person who lovingly takes care of the dog who go injured whilst crossing the
road. An example of the controlling parent being activated would be in the person who might
say ‘all dogs should be kept on leads and not allowed to roam free’ and do nothing to look
after the injured dog. From this particular example we can see how the same ego state can act
in different ways according to person’s past messages.
An example of the difference between the free and adapted child ego state would be
for example, the person who complies to almost anything and perhaps may automatically say
‘thank you’ whilst repressing other feelings as opposed to the free child stance of free and
spontaneous feelings, according to the situation. The free child is naturally inquisitive,
curious and often does act without thinking of the consequences.
Another stance of the adapted child position is one of pseudo-rebellion. In other
words, an aware adaptation to a particular situation is the flip child of the compliant child
stance.
TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS IN THERAPY
The goal of transactional analysis is helping the individual in therapy gain and
maintain autonomy by strengthening the Adult state. Typically, the individual and the
therapist will establish a contract that outlines the desired outcome they wish to achieve in
therapy. This may contribute to the person in therapy taking personal responsibility for events
that take place during treatment. The individual will generally then become more able to rely
on their Adult ego states to identify and examine various thoughts, behaviors, and emotions
which might hinder the ability to thrive.
Transactional analysis is frequently applied in the areas of medicine, communications,
education, and business management as well as therapy. The mainstream appeal of this
technique has attracted parents, professionals, social workers, and others who strive to
achieve maximum personal development. Transactional analysis is considered to be one
effective method of enhancing relationships with oneself and with others.
Studies show that transactional analysis, often used by counselors and clinicians to
address issues currently faced by the person in treatment, can be an effective tool in the
treatment of emotional and relationship difficulties that may develop as a result of chronic
health challenges.
Transactional analysis is used widely in the educational arena, and this method can
serve as a vessel through which educational principles and philosophy can be incorporated
into the daily lives of students. This type of therapy can be administered to children and
adults of all ages, regardless of social circumstances.
Conclusion
Transactional Analysis (TA) is a psychological theory that explores how people communicate
and interact. One of its central concepts is "ego states," which represent different aspects of
an individual's personality. There are three ego states: Parent (learned behaviors from
authority figures), Adult (rational and objective thinking), and Child (emotions and learned
behaviors from childhood). TA examines how these ego states influence communication in
transactions, which are interactions between people.
Dr. Eric Berne developed transactional analysis in the last 1950s, using “transaction” to
describe the fundamental unit of social intercourse, with “transactional analysis” being the
study of social interactions between individuals.
The goal of transactional analysis is helping the individual in therapy gain and maintain
autonomy by strengthening the Adult state. Typically, the individual and the therapist will
establish a contract that outlines the desired outcome they wish to achieve in therapy.
Humans are born with a fundamental need for connection. Throughout our lives, we look
for and receive this connection through diverse forms of verbal and nonverbal
communication:
a smile;
a hug;
praise for something we do or who we are, and
a challenge to something we do or who we are.
In transactional analysis, these modes of contact are called strokes. Eric Berne described
strokes as ‘a unit of recognition’ one person acknowledging another by way of act or speech.
Types of strokes:
positive and negative
verbal and nonverbal
conditional and unconditional.
For example:
Telling someone "I love you" is an unconditional positive stroke, affirming their
entire being.
Saying "I love your cooking" is a conditional positive stroke, focusing on a specific
aspect of their being.
Expressing dislike for someone's cooking is a conditional negative stroke.
Saying "I hate you" is the ultimate unconditional negative stroke, rejecting their
entire being.
Throughout life, this communication develops our personality, informs our sense of self-
worth and defines our beliefs in ourselves, the world and others. Depending on the type of
strokes that we receive before adulthood we end up in one of four life positions, as defined in
Transactional Analysis.
Life Position
It is an individual's fundamental belief about themselves and others, which formed
during early childhood and influences their interpersonal relationships, communication
patterns, and overall psychological well-being throughout their life.
Eric Berne (1962) first articulated life positions in his article "Classification of
Positions." Berne identified four life positions:
There are different ways of diagramming these positions, but Ernst grid is one of the
famous and useful. According to Franklin Ernst who developed OK corral. Ernst’s grid
displays within four windows – our positive and negative views of the world. Those people
around us and ourselves.
From https://southcottpsychotherapy.co.uk/transactional-analysis-life-positions/
1. I am OK—You are OK
It is occupied by those who project their difficulties onto others, they may be
blaming and critical. Transactional games that reinforce this position involve a self-
styled superior (the “I’m OK”) who projects anger, disgust, or disdain onto a
designated inferior, or scapegoat (the “You’re not OK”). This position requires that
there be someone to be ‘worse than’ in order to maintain the sense of self as ok.
For example:
A student who always criticizes their classmates' ideas in group discussions,
believing that their own ideas are superior. They may dismiss others' contributions
and dominate the conversation, creating a tense and competitive atmosphere.
3. I am not OK—You are OK
People skills are abilities to have positive interactions and build relationships with
others. These skills are essential to success in your personal and professional life. Learning
what people skills are and ways you can develop or strengthen your skills may help you
become a better communicator and leader, or accomplish other goals you have for your
career or personal life. Developing people skills, or interpersonal skills, is important because
these abilities help you become more successful. People skills are any abilities that you can
use to interact with others.
2. Learn to listen.
Listening is more than simply hearing what someone is saying. Learning to listen
involves paying attention to what someone is saying so you understand them and can respond
appropriately.
Emotional Management
Emotional management is a set of skills that can help you react constructively to
people or events. Learning how to manage your emotions can benefit your career by
helping you make rational choices and develop relationships with others. Improving
your emotional management skills may take time and effort, but it can have positive
results in your professional life.
Emotional management skills are abilities that help you regulate your emotional
responses to situations. They are a key part of emotional intelligence, which is a term
that refers to a person's ability to identify and understand their own emotions and
those of other people.
Emotional factor
The emotional factor is all about a performer’s feelings and how these can influence the
outcome of any activity. This includes emotions which affect confidence, resilience and self-
control.
ANGER: an emotion that a performer may feel when frustrated, offended or wronged.
EI can help a person recognize and navigate their own, as well as others’, emotions.
Higher levels of EI can positively influence a person’s emotional and physical health as
well as make them more resilient to stress.
Social Quotient also referred to as Social Intelligence Quotient is the ability of a person
to manage people and to know how to present oneself, what to say, and what not to say
in a social situation.
Five components of EQ: Self-awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social
skills.
A person can improve their EI by practicing meditation and by making small changes to
their routine.
The spindle cells. Intuition or the “gut feeling” is a result of these cells. These are
triggered when the best of the choices is to be made i.e., we need to choose as our gut
guides us.
Mirror neurons enable a person to mimic or mirror what the other being does.
Effective listening is a communication skill that goes beyond simply hearing words. It
involves giving full attention to the speaker, understanding the message, and providing
feedback.
Conversational skills refer to the ability to communicate effectively during discussions.
This includes active listening, clear expression of thoughts, maintaining appropriate eye
contact.
Reputation management involves strategically influencing and controlling how an
individual or entity is perceived by others.
Lack of arguing refers to situations where there is an absence or minimal occurrence of
disputes, disagreements, or verbal conflicts.
Pay close attention to what (and who) is around you. Emphasizes the importance of
being observant and aware of your surroundings.
Work on increasing your emotional intelligence. Suggests focusing on developing skills
related to recognizing, understanding, and managing emotions—both yours and others'.
Respect cultural differences. Emphasizes acknowledging and appreciating the diversity
in customs, values, and behaviors among various cultures.
Practice active listening. Involves fully concentrating, understanding, responding, and
remembering what someone is saying.
Appreciate the important people in your life. Underscores the significance of
recognizing and expressing gratitude for the individuals who play significant roles in
your personal.
Strokes in transactional analysis are units of recognition through verbal or nonverbal
communication, including positive and negative, conditional, and unconditional types.
Life positions, influenced by early childhood experiences, shape individuals'
fundamental beliefs about themselves and others, leading to four possible positions: "I
am OK—You are OK," "I am OK—You are not OK," "I am not OK—You are OK," and
"I am not OK—You are not OK."
Developing people skills, or interpersonal skills, is important because these abilities help
you become more successful. People skills are any abilities that you can use to interact
with others
REFERENCES