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subject psychology paper no and title paper no 5 personality theories module no and title module no 38 introduction to personality assessment module tag psy p5 m38 table of contents ...

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                               Subject                                   PSYCHOLOGY 
                               Paper No and Title                        Paper No 5: Personality Theories  
                               Module No and Title                       Module No. 38: Introduction to Personality Assessment  
                               Module Tag                                PSY_P5_M38 
                                                                                                                                                                                
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS                                            
                               1. Learning Outcomes  
                               2. Personality assessment 
                               3. Sources of data in personality assessment 
                                           3.1. Interviews  
                                           3.2. Objective Self Report Techniques 
                                           3.3. Projective Techniques  
                                           3.4. Behavioral Techniques  
                                           3.5. Psycho-physiological Techniques 
                               4.  Ethical issues in personality assessment 
                                           4.1. Personal concerns: protecting the rights of the individual 
                                           4.2 Legal concerns: assessment and the law 
                                           4.3 Social concerns: assessment and society 
                                      5. Summary                                                            
           PSYCHOLOGY                                          PAPER 5 : Personality Theories  
                                                               MODULE 38 :  Introduction to personality assessment: sources of 
                                                               data in personality assessment, issues 
                                
                                                                                 
       ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ 
                       1.  Learning Outcomes  
                       After studying this module, you shall be able to 
                               Understand the nature of personality assessment. 
                               Learn about different sources of personality assessment 
                               Learn about ethical issues in personality assessment 
                       2.  Personality Assessment 
                       Personality assessment may be defined as the measurement and evaluation of psychological traits, 
                       interests, attitudes, cognitive and behavioral styles, and/or related individual characteristics. It 
                       consists of procedures for identifying similarities and differences among people in their personal 
                       characteristics and capacities. It plays an important role in psychological science and practice. 
                       Measures  of  personality  characteristics  help  researchers  examine  individual  differences  in 
                       response style, unravel the origins of distinctive behavior patterns, and map developmental paths 
                       to diverse types of life adaptation. It also helps practitioners discern the individual’s frame of 
                       mind and behavioral tendencies. They can use this information to reach relevant conclusions and 
                       make  useful  recommendations  in  a  broad  range  of  healthcare,  forensic,  educational  and 
                       organizational applications. 
                       Personality assessment in healthcare settings can be helpful in identifying psychological aspects 
                       of physical illness, monitoring adaptation to chronic illness or disability, estimating tolerance for 
                       surgical procedures and revealing the sources of an unhealthy lifestyle or poor compliance with 
                       prescribed treatment. In forensic settings, personality test indications of mental impairment can 
                       contribute in criminal cases to determinations of competence and sanity. In educational settings 
                       we can identify the need to provide counseling or special education services for students with 
                       conduct or learning problems with the help of result of personality assessment. In organizational 
                       settings,  personality  assessment can prove useful in evaluating candidates for employment or 
                       promotion, and test findings can help determine the fitness for duty of persons who have become 
                       psychologically impaired. 
                       3.  Sources of data in personality assessment  
                       The personality characteristics that define the nature and dispositions of an individual can be 
                       assessed in several ways: 
                        
                       3.1.Interview  
                       Interview is the core of any psychological assessment.  The  interview is focused on assessing the 
                       status of a particular individual. Researchers can ask different types of questions, which in turn 
                       generate different types of data. For example, closed questions provide people with a fixed set of 
                       responses, whereas open questions allow people to express what they think in their own words. 
                       Sometimes researchers use an interview schedule. This is a set of prepared questions designed to 
                       be asked exactly as worded. Interviews schedules have a standardized format which means the 
        PSYCHOLOGY                             PAPER 5 : Personality Theories  
                                               MODULE 38 :  Introduction to personality assessment: sources of 
                                               data in personality assessment, issues 
                        
                                  
   ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ 
          same questions are asked to each interviewee in same order 
          (McLeod, 2014). Interviews can be of several forms: 
           3.1.1. Structured Interview: This is also known as a formal interview (like a job interview). 
           The questions are asked in a set / standardized order and the interviewer will not deviate from 
           the interview schedule or probe beyond the answers received (so they are not flexible). These 
           are based on structured, closed-ended questions (McLeod, 2014). 
           3.1.2. Unstructured Interview: These are sometimes referred to as ‘Discovery Interviews’ & 
           are  more  like  a  ‘Guided  Conservation’  than  a  strict  structured  interview.  An  interview 
           schedule might not be used, and even if one is used, they will contain open-ended questions 
           that can be asked in any order. Some questions might be added / missed as the Interview 
           progresses (McLeod, 2014). 
           
           3.1.3. Clinical Interview: 
                        OUTLIINE FOR A CLINICAL 
                            INTERVIEW 
                        
                         1.  Identifying Information 
                         2.  Presenting Complaints 
              
                         3.  History of Present Illness 
                         4.  Past Medical and 
                           Psychiatric History 
                         5.  Past Personal History 
              
                         6.  Family History 
                         7.  Pre-morbid Personality 
                         8.  Level of Insight and  
                           Motivation 
           
                         9.  Collateral History 
                            
                        
          Identifying  information: This information typically  includes  basic  demographic  data  such  as 
                        
          name, gender, age, race, marital status.  It  is  helpful  to  have  this  type  information  when  the 
                        
          interview begins as it helps to guide the interview process as it progresses.   
           
          Presenting complaints: This is the detailed account of the patient's central problem that led the 
          patient to seek treatment. This is usually elicited by fairly standard questions such as “what brings 
          you here today”. 
           
          History of present illness: This is a description of the current complaints that the person has. This 
          requires detailed elaboration often using the persons own words and supported by a relevant 
          functional enquiry. It includes nature of problem, onset, progression, maintaining - precipitating 
          factors, associated symptoms. 
           
    PSYCHOLOGY      PAPER 5 : Personality Theories  
                    MODULE 38 :  Introduction to personality assessment: sources of 
                    data in personality assessment, issues 
           
                                  
   ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ 
          Past  medical  and  psychiatric  history:  Obtaining  a  medical 
          history is necessary regardless of the problems patient presents. 
          This includes enquiry about past or current physical/psychiatric illness, time for which problem 
          persisted and any hospitalizations required. 
           
          Past personal history: This consists of the person’s prenatal history, attaining developmental 
          milestones, educational history – it gives a lot if information about personality and intelligence, 
          problems faced during adolescence, employment history – chronologically listing patient’s job, 
          durations and reasons for leaving the job and the marital history. Finally one should also cover 
          the past and present use of drugs, alcohol and cigarettes. 
           
          Family history: understanding a person’s problem requires the understanding of the person’s 
          family. Drawing a genogram is the clearest way to present the family. Important information 
          includes number of family members, their age, and family history of major illness. 
           
          Pre-morbid personality: In this segment one tries to understand what the person was like before 
          they became unwell. 
           
          Level of insight and motivation: This refers to the awareness of the patient about his problem and 
          motivation to change. It also takes into account the patient’s willingness to accept therapy and his 
          expectations.    
           
          Collateral history: A history from someone such as family and friends who knows the patient 
          well is collected and particularly useful when the person can’t or won’t talk. Other people may be 
          better placed than the patient to declare whether behavior or personality has changed. 
           
          3.1.4 Evaluation of interview technique 
           
          Interview  methods  are  very  useful  and  have  various  advantages.  Firstly,  standardization  of 
          interview  format  tends  to  increase  the  reliability  of  the  information  gathered.  Unstructured 
          interviews  are  more  flexible  as  questions  can  be  adapted  and  changed  depending  on  the 
          respondents’ answers. Also unstructured interviews generate qualitative data through the use of 
          open questions. This allows the respondent to talk in some depth, choosing their own words. This 
          helps the researcher develop a real sense of a person’s understanding of a situation. They also 
          have increased validity because it gives the interviewer the opportunity to probe for a deeper 
          understanding, ask for clarification & allow the interviewee to steer the direction of the interview 
          (McLeod, 2014). 
          However,  there  are  certain  demerits  of  using  this  method  –  they  can  be  time  consuming. 
          Erroneous conclusions may be drawn from face-to-face encounters due to the complication of the 
          interview situation, the attitudes, fears, and expectations of the interviewee, and the interviewer’s 
          manner and training. Research has been conducted to identify, control, and, if possible, eliminate 
          these sources of interview invalidity and unreliability. By conducting more than one interview 
          with the same interviewee and by using more than one interviewer to evaluate the subject’s 
          behavior,  light  can  be  shed  on  the  reliability  of  the  information  derived  and  may  reveal 
          differences in influence among individual interviewers. 
           
           
    PSYCHOLOGY      PAPER 5 : Personality Theories  
                    MODULE 38 :  Introduction to personality assessment: sources of 
                    data in personality assessment, issues 
           
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...Subject psychology paper no and title personality theories module introduction to assessment tag psy p m table of contents learning outcomes sources data in interviews objective self report techniques projective behavioral psycho physiological ethical issues personal concerns protecting the rights individual legal law social society summary after studying this you shall be able understand nature learn about different may defined as measurement evaluation psychological traits interests attitudes cognitive styles or related characteristics it consists procedures for identifying similarities differences among people their capacities plays an important role science practice measures help researchers examine response style unravel origins distinctive behavior patterns map developmental paths diverse types life adaptation also helps practitioners discern s frame mind tendencies they can use information reach relevant conclusions make useful recommendations a broad range healthcare forensic e...

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