self-fulfilling

(adjective)

Describing a prediction that causes itself to occur as predicted.

Related Terms

  • intelligence quotient
  • gifted

Examples of self-fulfilling in the following topics:

  • Cultural and Societal Influences on Child Development

    • American children raised by authoritative parents tend to have high self-esteem and social skills.
    • Importantly, stereotype threat has been shown to be something of a self-fulfilling prophecy—not because the negative stereotype is accurate, but because fear of fulfilling that stereotype can lead to additional anxiety, which in turn can reduce performance.
  • The Intellectually Gifted

    • This may lead them to feel self-conscious about being different or to be bullied by their peers.
    • By labeling some children as "gifted" and others as "not gifted," schools can create a self-fulfilling prophecy where those who are not accepted into the program do not perform as well as those who are accepted.
  • Maslow's Humanistic Theory of Personality

    • He was mainly concerned with an individual's innate drive toward self-actualization—a state of fulfillment in which a person is achieving at his or her highest level of capability.
    • Each layer of the pyramid must be fulfilled before moving up the pyramid to higher needs, and this process is continued throughout the lifespan.
    • Maslow believed that successful fulfillment of each layer of needs was vital in the development of personality.
    • The highest need for self-actualization represents the achievement of our fullest potential, and those individuals who finally achieved self-actualization were said to represent optimal psychological health and functioning.
    • Maslow viewed self-actualizers as the supreme achievers in the human race.
  • Cluster B: Antisocial, Borderline, Histrionic, and Narcissistic Personality Disorders

    • Identity disturbance: markedly and persistently unstable self-image or sense of self;
    • Pejorative terms are often used to describe people with BPD (such as difficult, treatment resistant, manipulative, demanding, and attention-seeking) and may become a self-fulfilling prophecy, as the negative treatment of these individuals triggers further self-destructive behavior.
    • The person consistently uses physical appearance to draw attention to self;
    • People with NPD are characterized by exaggerated feelings of self-importance.
    • Valued by parents as a means to regulate their own self-esteem.
  • Positive Psychology

    • Positive psychology has roots in the humanistic psychology of the 20th century, which focused heavily on happiness and fulfillment.
    • The next level of needs are esteem needs, which are concerned with gaining recognition and respect from others and self.
    • Once these four levels of needs are met, Maslow believed people turn toward what he called self-actualization.
    • Also referred to as "being needs," these include such things as a desire for knowledge and understanding, an appreciation of beauty and order, and a desire for fulfillment of one’s potential.
    • Maslow's research on self-actualization was a central component of both humanistic and positive psychology.
  • Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs

    • People will often look for ways to achieve a sense of mastery, and they may seek validation and praise from others in order to fulfill these needs.
    • At the highest level of the hierarchy, attention shifts to the need for self-actualization, which is a need that essentially equates to achieving one’s full potential.
    • According to Maslow and other humanistic theorists, self-actualization reflects the humanistic emphasis on positive aspects of human nature.
    • Maslow suggested that this is an ongoing, life-long process and that only a small percentage of people actually achieve a self-actualized state.
    • In Maslow's hierarchy of needs, higher levels of needs can only be pursued when the lower levels are fulfilled.
  • Humanistic Therapy

    • Humanistic therapy helps individuals access and understand their feelings, gain a sense of meaning in life, and reach self-actualization.
    • It encourages viewing ourselves as a "whole person" greater than the sum of our parts and encourages self exploration rather than the study of behavior in other people.
    • The aim of humanistic therapy is to help the client develop a stronger, healthier sense of self, as well as access and understand their feelings to help gain a sense of meaning in life.
    • Humanistic theory aims to help the client reach what Rogers and Maslow referred to as self-actualization—the final level of psychological development that can be achieved when all basic and mental needs are essentially fulfilled and the "actualization" of the full personal potential takes place.
    • The term "actualizing tendency" was also coined by Rogers and was a concept that eventually led Maslow to study self-actualization as one of the needs of humans.
  • Rogers' Humanistic Theory of Personality

    • Carl Rogers' humanistic personality theory emphasizes the importance of the self-actualizing tendency in forming a self-concept.
    • Rogers further divided the self into two categories: the ideal self and the real self.
    • The ideal self is the person that you would like to be; the real self is the person you actually are.
    • We experience congruence when our thoughts about our real self and ideal self are very similar—in other words, when our self-concept is accurate.
    • He claimed that a fully functioning person would continually aim to fulfill his or her potential in each of these processes, achieving what he called "the good life."
  • Humanistic Psychology

    • Humanistic psychology adopts a holistic view of human existence through explorations of meaning, human potential, and self-actualization.
    • In the late 1950s, a group of psychologists convened in Detroit, Michigan, to discuss their interest in a psychology that focused on uniquely human issues, such as the self, self-actualization, health, hope, love, creativity, nature, being, becoming, individuality, and meaning.
    • Self-actualized people, he believed, have more of these peak experiences throughout a given day than others.
    • The top of the pyramid is self-actualization, in which a person is believed to have reached a state of harmony and understanding.
    • In Maslow's hierarchy of needs, a person must first have their lower-level, physical needs met before they can progress to fulfilling higher-level, psychological needs.
  • Arousal Theory of Motivation

    • According to drive-reduction theory, the body is motivated to engage in whatever behavior is necessary to fulfill an unsatisfied drive.
    • This behavior is called electrical self-stimulation.
    • Electrical self-stimulation apparently provided a reward that reinforced the habit to press the lever.
    • Fulfilling the impulse brings about a physiological reward similar to the rat pressing the button.
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