Friday 28 March 2014

Activity ( Chapter 10)

Activity

Problem-solving Group :


1. Define & analyse the problem

- Some group members are not good in acting. Therefore, many NG scenes during shooting the video for assignment.

2. Establish criteria for evaluating solutions

- Act naturally.

3. Identify possible solutions

- Practice and find a suitable environment, adjust emotion while acting, and cannot keep laughing.

4. Evaluate solutions

- Find a solution that is most important in acting

5. Select solutions

- Adjust emotion to the scene you act.

6. Test solutions

- If failed, try again. If okay, then proceed.

Thursday 27 March 2014

27/3/2014 Quiz

Guys!!

All the best for Quiz today!!





Chapter 9 - Friends, Lovers, and Families

Chapter 9 ~

Friends, Lovers, and Families 


Friendship




- is an interpersonal relationship ( involve 2 parties)

- mutually productive (gain something from the relationship)


Friendship Types

1. The Friendship of Reciprocity

- both parties share, receive and give

- based on trust and mutual affection and reflects loyalty and selflessness

Example : Best friends throughout childhood, school, college / university, work.




2. The Friendship of Receptivity

- one party clearly provides more for the other

Example : Professional relationships - bosses & employees, doctors & patients.




3. The Friendship of Association

- friendships are formed based on the several "convenient" factors - proximity, location & peer groups

Example : Classmates, university mates, neighbours, office colleagues.




Why do we seek out friends & close relationships??

1. Utility purposes

- we need people with different and varied skills, resources and talents around us

Example : People to fix your computer.



2. Affirmation

- help you to recognize your attributes

3. Ego Support

- someone who bahave in supportive & encouraging



4. Stimulation

- someone who can inspire us and give us fresh ideas


5. Security

- we need people who can trust & wouldn't betray you




Development Stages of Friendship

1. Initial Contact & Acquaintanceship

- impression are formed

2. Casual Friendship

- a sense of togetherness takes place

3. Close & Intimate Friendship

- most intimate form of togetherness


The value of friendship can be affected by : 

1. Culture

- different cultures would bring about different meaning to friendships & relationships

a. Collectivist Society

b. Individualist Society

c. High Ambiguity

d. Low Ambiguity


2. Gender Differences

- men are more keen to develop more acquaintances, but not true friend

- women are more able to keep and maintain close friends around them, but tends to get jealous more



3. Technology

- the meaning of friendships has been diluted by the improvement and usage of technology in our lives.


Romantic Relationship

1. Eros

- passionate love

Example : obsess that person badly, scare to lose your partner


2. Ludus

- game playing love

Example : playboy and playgirl



3. Storge

- affectionate & close but not exciting

Example : old people love



4. Pragma

- Practical approach to love




5. Mania

- love is sharp ( painful obsession)



6.Agape

- unconditional love

Example : love of parents towards their children








Families

Types of Family : 

1. Traditional couples

- conventional form of a family

2. Independent couples

- stresses individuality as the main theme in family

3. Separate couples

- not really a family but stay together


Family & Communication

1. Equility

- family members seek equal love, understanding with others

2. Balanced split

- each members have balanced amount of responsibilities

3. Unbalanced split

responsibilities of family members are not equal

4. Monopoly

- one person is the authority

Monday 24 March 2014

Chapter 8 - Interpersonal Communication

Chapter 8 - Interpersonal Communication

Relationship Stages :

Contact

1. Perceptual Contact

- human senses (sight, smell, taste, hear, touch)

Example : You see what the person looks like, you hear what the person sounds like, you smell the person.

2. Interactional Contact

- exchange basic information

Example : Hello, my name is Anderson.

- nonverbal

Example : Exchanging smiles

Involvement

- experiment and try to learn more about the other person

- share your feelings and your emotions







Intimacy

A feeling that you can be honest and open when talking about yourself, that you can express thoughts and feelings you wouldn't reveal in other relationships.

1. Interpersonal commitment phase

- you commit yourselves to each other ina kind of private way

2. Social bonding phase

- the commitment is made public


Deterioration

Weakening of bonds between both parties ( the downside of the relationship progression)



Repair

1. Intrapersonal repair

- change your behaviors or expectations of your partner

2. Interpersonal repair

- talk and discuss about the problems











Dissolution

- cutting of the bonds tying you together

1. Intrapersonal separation

- You may not see each other anymore or may not return messages

Example : Move into separate houses



2. Social or public separation

- Avoidance of each other and a return to being "single"

Example : Divorce






Relationship Theories

 1. Attraction Theory

a. Similarity

- Attracted to people with similar taste, beliefs, and ideas with you

Example : Your mate act like you.



b. Proximity

- Attracted to people close to you in terms of location

Example : Your best friend is the one who sit around you in the class.




c. Reinforcement

- Attracted to people who give rewards or reinforcements

Example : You increase your liking towards a friend when she buy you an expensive present.


d. Physical attractiveness and personality

- Attracted to physical and mental attributes, inner and outer beauty.

Example : You like to make friend with good-looking people.


2. Relationship Rules Theory

a. Friendship Rules

- friendships are maintained by rules

- when these rules are followed, the friendship is strong and mutually satisfying

b. Romantic Rules

- more towards lovers and couples

c. Family Rules

- tell you which behaviours will be rewarded and which will be punished

d. Workplace Rules

- part of the corporate culture that an employee would learn from observing other employees as well as from official memos on dress, sexual harassment, and the like

3. Relationship Dialectics Theory

- people in relationship experience dynamic tensions between pairs of opposing motives and desires



a. The tension between closeness and openness 

- conflict between the desire to be in a closed, exclusive relationship and wish to be in a relationship that is open to different people


b. The tension between autonomy and connection

- desire to remain an autonomous, independent individual and the wish to connect intimately to another person and to a relationship

c. The tension between novelty and predictability

- the competing desires for newness, different experiences and adventure on the one hand and for someness, stability and predictability on the other


4. Social Penetration Theory

- describes relationship in term of the number of topics that people talk about and their degree of "personalness"

Breath - The number of topic you and your partner about

Depth - The degree to which you penetrate the inner personality- the core- of the other individual



5. Social Exchange Theory

- You develop relationships that will enable you to maximize your profits

  • Rewards
  • Costs
  • Profit
Example : You want rewards from your partner in a relationship.




6. Equity Theory

- The idea of social exchange, but goes a step further and claims that you develop and maintain relationship in which the ratio of your rewards relative to your costs is approximately equal to your partner's


The Dark Side of Interpersonal Relationships

1. Jealousy

- feel envy

a. Cognitive Jealousy

- involve suspicious thinking, worrying or imagining the different scenarios in which your partner may be interested in another person

Example : Your boyfriend didn't message you last week which does not happen often. He said he is busy but you don't believe him.



b. Emotional Jealousy

- involve the feelings you have when you see your partner, say, laughing, or talking with a rival, or kissing.


Example : Your boyfriend being too close with another girl and you got angry with it.




c. Behavioral Jealousy

- what you do to the jealous feelings and emotions

Example : You read your lover's emails or messages.




2. Relationship Violence

a. Physical abuse

Example : slapping, kicking, hitting your partner















b. Verbal or emotional abuse

Example : Criticize your partner with bad words






c. Sexual abuse

Example : Forced sex