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Psychoanalytic And Psychodynamic, (Freud, Adler, Mahler)
Springer - Social Work ASWB Master's Exam
37
Social Work
Post-Graduate
08/26/2019

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Term
Psychodynamic theories...
Definition
- explain the origin of the personality
- all emphasize unconscious motives and desires
- emphasize importance of childhood experiences in shaping personality
Term
Psychoanalytic Theory
Definition
- client is seen as the product of his past and treatment involves dealing with the repressed material in the unconscious
- personalities arise because of attempts to resolve conflicts between unconscious sexual and aggressive impulses and societal demands to restrain these impulses
Term
conscious
Definition
contains all the information that a client is paying attention to at any given time.
Term
preconscious
Definition
contains all the information outside of a client’s attention but readily available if needed—thoughts and feelings that can be brought into consciousness easily.
Term
unconscious
Definition
contains thoughts, feelings, desires, and memories of which clients have no awareness but that influence every aspect of their day-to-day lives.
Term
Freud proposed that personalities have three components: the _____, ______, and _______.
Definition
the id, the ego, and the superego.
Term
Id
Definition
A reservoir of instinctual energy that contains biological urges such as impulses toward survival, sex, and aggression. The id is unconscious and operates according to the pleasure principle, the drive to achieve pleasure and avoid pain.
Term
Ego
Definition
The component that manages the conflict between the id and the constraints of the real world. Some parts of the ego are unconscious, whereas others are preconscious or conscious. The ego operates according to the reality principle—the awareness that gratification of impulses has to be delayed in order to accommodate the demands of the real world. The ego’s role is to prevent the id from gratifying its impulses in socially inappropriate ways.
Term
Ego-Syntonic/Ego-Dystonic:
Definition
Syntonic = behaviors “insync” with the ego (no guilt)

Dystonic = behavior “dis-n-sync” with the ego (guilt)

(ego-dystonic is also referred to as ego alien)
Term
The ego’s job is to...
Definition
determine the best course of action based on information from the id, reality, and the superego. When the ego is comfortable with its conclusions and behaviors, a client is said to be ego-syntonic.However, if a client is bothered by some of his or her behaviors, he or she would be ego-dystonic (ego alien).

Inability of the ego to reconcile the demands of the id, the superego, and reality produces conflict that leads to a state of psychic distress known as anxiety.
Term
Ego strength
Definition
is the ability of the ego to effectively deal with the demands of the id, the superego, and reality. Those with little ego strength may feel torn between these competing demands, whereas those with too much ego strength can become too unyielding and rigid. Ego strength helps maintain emotional stability and cope with internal and external stress.
Term
Superego
Definition
The moral component of personality. It contains all the moral standards learned from parents and society. The superego forces the ego to conform not only to reality, but also to its ideals of morality. Hence, the superego causes clients to feel guilty when they go against society’s rules.
Term
Psychosexual Stages of Development
Definition
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He believed that at each stage of development, children gain sexual gratification or sensual pleasure from a particular part of their bodies. Each stage has special conflicts, and children’s ways of managing these conflicts influence their personalities.
Term
Fixation
Definition
s an inability to progress normally from one stage into another. When the child becomes an adult, the fixation shows up as a tendency to focus on the needs that were overgratified or overfrustrated.

If a child’s needs in a particular stage are gratified too much or frustrated too much, the child can become fixated at that stage of development.
Term
Oedipus complex
Definition
developed during the phallic stage. The Oedipus complex refers to a male child’s sexual desire for his mother and hostility toward his father, whom he considers to be a rival for his mother’s love. Freud thought that a male child who sees a naked girl for the first time believes that her penis has been cut off.
Term
castration anxiety
Definition
Freud thought that a male child who sees a naked girl for the first time believes that her penis has been cut off. The child fears that his own father will do the same to him for desiring his mother—a fear called castration anxiety. Because of this fear, the child represses his longing for his mother and begins to identify with his father. The child’s acceptance of his father’s authority results in the emergence of the superego.
Term
techniques of analysis in psychoanalytic psychotherapy
Definition
dream, resistances, transferences, and free association
Term
Alfred Adler
Definition
a follower of Freud and a member of his inner circle, eventually broke away from Freud and developed his own school of thought, which he called individual psychology.
Term
Adler believed that the main motivations for human behavior are
Definition
...not sexual or aggressive urges, but striving for perfection. He pointed out that children naturally feel weak and inadequate in comparison to adults. This normal feeling of inferiority drives them to adapt, develop skills, and master challenges.
Term
compensation (Adler)
Definition
the attempt to shed normal feelings of inferiority
Term
People with an exaggerated sense of inferiority... (Adler)
Definition
...overcompensate, which means that, rather than try to master challenges, they try to cover up their sense of inferiority by focusing on outward signs of superiority such as status, wealth, and power.
Term
(Adler) Healthy individuals...
Definition
...have a broad social concern and want to contribute to the welfare of others.
Term
(Adler) Unhealthy individuals...
Definition
...are those who are overwhelmed by feelings of inferiority.
Term
(Adler) The aim of therapy is...
Definition
...to develop a more adaptive lifestyle by overcoming feelings of inferiority and self-centeredness and to contribute more toward the welfare of others.
Term
Self Psychology
Definition
defines the self as the central organizing and motivating force in personality. As a result of receiving empathic responses from early caretakers (self-objects), a child’s needs are met and the child develops a strong sense of selfhood. “Empathic failures” by caretakers result in a lack of self-cohesion.

The objective of self psychology is to help a client develop a greater sense of self-cohesion. Through therapeutic regression, a client reexperiences frustrated self-object needs.
Term
Self Psychology

Mirroring:
Definition
behavior validates the child’s sense of a perfect self
Term
Self Psychology

Idealization:
Definition
child borrows strength from others and identifies with someone more capable
Term
Self Psychology

Twinship/Twinning:
Definition
child needs an alter ego for a sense of belonging
Term
Ego Psychology
Definition
focuses on the rational, conscious processes of the ego. Ego psychology is based on an assessment of a client as presented in the present (here and now). Treatment focuses on the ego functioning of a client, because healthy behavior is under the control of the ego.
Term
Ego Psychology addresses the following four things:
Definition
Behavior in varying situations

Reality testing: perception of a situation

Coping abilities: ego strengths

Capacity for relating to others

The goal is to maintain and enhance the ego’s control and management of stress and its effects.
Term
Object relations theory
Definition
- Margaret Mahler
- centered on relationships with others
- According to this theory, lifelong relationship skills are strongly rooted in early attachments with parents, especially mothers.
- Objects refer to people, parts of people, or physical items that symbolically represent either a person or part of a person.
- Object relations, then, are relationships to those people or items.
Term
Object relations theory

Normal Autism
Definition
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Term
Object relations theory

Normal Symbiotic
Definition
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Term
Object relations theory

Separation/Individuation
(Subphase) Differentiation/Hatching
Definition
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Term
Object relations theory

Separation/Individuation
(Subphase) Practicing
Definition
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Term
Object relations theory

Separation/Individuation
(Subphase) Rapprochement
Definition
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Term
Object relations theory

Object Constancy
Definition
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