Explaining Phobia

 

 

 

 

 

For this assignment, you will choose Option 2: Public Speaking Phobia Paper

 

Read the Explaining Phobia Paper and select one option to complete the assignment.

 

Do NOT use about.com, psychology.about.com, ask.com, simplypsychology.org, AllPsych.com, SparkNotes.com, wikipedia, or other sources that are not scholarly in nature.  

 

 You MUST have a minimum of 2 scholarly sources as references.  You may use your textbook but it does not count as one of these sources.

 

Format your paper according to APA guidelines.

 

 

 

Option 2: Public Speaking Phobia Paper

 

 

 

Bill is a 28-year-old man who recalls that he disliked giving speeches in high school and avoided speech class in college until his senior year. Everything was fine with his job until his latest promotion, because his new position requires public speaking on a weekly basis. He has tried to find a way to keep his job and avoid giving speeches, but he has not found a solution.

 

 

 

Write a 1,500- to 1,750-word paper that uses behavioral and cognitive theory to analyze public speaking phobia.

 

 

 

Analyze the three potential ways Bill could have developed this phobia: operational (stimulus-responseàconsequence), classical (CS-UCS-UCR-CR), and observational.

 

 

 

Discuss how extinction and cognitive learning could help Bill recover from his phobia.

 

 

 

Include the following in your paper:

 

 

 

  • Describe Bill’s phobia using inference and research of the development of simple phobias, such as public speaking phobias.

  • Describe, in detail, how the phobia could be explained by the following:

 

 

 

    • Classical conditioning

    • Operant conditioning

    • Observational learning

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cite at least two references in your paper to support your assessment.

 

 

 

Format your paper consistent with APA guidelines.

 

 

 

 

Behavioral and Cognitive Behavioral Theory

 

 

 

Read the Case of Jim in Chapter 11

 

 

 

Each team member should discuss the case using the behavioral or cognitive behavioral theory as a model.  Then use the behavioral or cognitive behavioral theory to discuss how you would use it to assess the client.  

 

 

 

THE CASE OF JIM

 

REP TEST: PERSONAL CONSTRUCT THEORY

Jim took the group form of Kelly’s Rep test separately from the other tests (Figure 11.2). Here we have a test that is structured in terms of the roles given to the subject and the task of formulating a similarity/contrast construct. However, the subject is given total freedom in the content of the construct formed. As noted previously in this chapter, the Rep test is derived logically from Kelly’s theory of personal constructs. Two major themes appear in these constructs. The first theme is the quality of interpersonal relationships. Basically, this involves whether people are warm and giving or cold and narcissistic. This theme is expressed in constructs such as gives love/is self-oriented, sensitive/insensitive, and communicates with others as people/is uninterested in others. A second major theme concerns security and is expressed in constructs such as hung up/healthy, unsure/self-confident, and satisfied with life/unhappy. The frequency with which constructs relevant to these two themes appear suggests that Jim has a relatively constricted view of the world—that is, much of Jim’s understanding of events is in terms of the warm/cold and secure/insecure dimensions.

FIGURE 11.2Rep Test Data—Case of Jim.

CONSTRUCT

CONTRAST

Self-satisfied

Self-doubting

Uninterested in communicating with students as people

Interested in communicating with students as people

Nice

Obnoxious

Sensitive to cues from other people

Insensitive to cues

Outgoing—gregarious

Introverted—retiring

Introspective—hung up

Self-satisfied

Intellectually dynamic

Mundane and predictable

Outstanding, successful

Mediocre

Obnoxious

Very likable

Satisfied with life

Unhappy

Shy, unsure of self

Self-confident

Worldly, openminded

Parochial, closeminded

Open, simple to understand

Complex, hard to get to know

Capable of giving great love

Somewhat self-oriented

Self-sufficient

Needs other people

Concerned with others

Oblivious to all but his own interests

So hung up that psychological health is questionable

Basically healthy and stable

Willing to hurt people in order to be “objective”

Unwilling to hurt people if he can help it

Closeminded, conservative

Openminded, liberal

Lacking in self-confidence

Self-confident

Sensitive

Insensitive, self-centered

Lacking social poise

Secure and socially poised

Bright, articulate

Average intelligence

How do the constructs given relate to specific people? On the sorts that involved himself, Jim used constructs expressing insecurity. Thus, Jim views himself as being like his sister (so hung up that her psychological health is questionable), in contrast to his brother, who is basically healthy and stable. In two other sorts of constructs, he sees himself as lacking self-confidenceand social poise. These ways of construing himself contrast with those involving his father. His father is construed as being introverted and retiring but also as self-sufficient, open-minded, outstanding, and successful.

The constructs used in relation to Jim’s mother are interesting and again suggest conflict. On the one hand, his mother is construed to be outgoing, gregarious, and loving; on the other, she is construed to be mundane, predictable, close-minded, and conservative. The close-minded, conservative construct is particularly interesting since, in that sort, Jim’s mother is paired with the person with whom he feels most uncomfortable. Thus, the mother and the person with whom he feels most uncomfortable are contrasted with his father, who is construed to be open-minded and liberal. The combination of sorts for all persons suggests that Jim’s ideal person is someone who is warm, sensitive, secure, intelligent, open-minded, and successful. The women in his life—his mother, sister, girlfriend, and previous girlfriend—are construed as having some of these characteristics but also as missing others.

COMMENTS ON THE DATA

The Rep test gives us valuable data about how Jim construes his environment. Jim’s world tends to be perceived in terms of two major constructs: warm interpersonal/cold interpersonal relationships and secure, confident/insecure, unhappy people. Through the Rep test we gain an understanding of why Jim is so limited in his relationships to others and why he has so much difficulty in being creative. His restriction to only two constructs hardly leaves him free to relate to people as individuals and instead forces him to perceive people and problems in stereotyped or conventional ways. A world filled with so little perceived diversity can hardly be exciting, and the constant threat of insensitivity and rejection can be expected to fill Jim with a sense of gloom.

The data from the Rep test, like Kelly’s theory, are tantalizing. What is there seems so clear and valuable, but one is left wondering about what is missing. There is a sense of the skeleton for the structure of personality, but one is left with only the bones. Jim’s ways of construing himself and his environment are an important part of his personality. Assessing his constructs and his construct system helps us to understand how he interprets events and how he is led to predict the future. But where is the flesh on the bones—the sense of an individual who cannot be what he feels, the person struggling to be warm amid feelings of hostility and struggling to relate to women, although confused about his feelings toward them?

 

 

 

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