Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Group 2 NSTP
Group 2 NSTP
PERSONAL VALUE
• OBJECTIVES
• • Define Value
• • What is Personal Value
• • Value in may different ways
• • List of Personal Values
WHAT IS VALUE?
VALUE
Knowledge Growth
Wisdom Integrity
Power Religiousness
Ethical Standards Being Loved
Independence Challenge
Accomplishment Faith
Recognition Health (Physical/Mental)
Courage Money
Responsibility Good time / Pleasure
Creativity Helpfulness
Security Friendship
Dedication Self-Esteem
Justice and Parity
KNOWLEDGE
S E LF AWA R E N E S S I S U N D E R S TA N D I N G O N E ' S O W N O R
I N D I V I D U A L P E R S O N A L I T Y.
S EL F R E F E R S TO Y O U R S E L F, H I MS E L F, H E R S E L F, A N D
O N E S E L F AWA R E N E S S I S D E F I N E D A S S H O W I N G
RE A L I Z AT I O N , PA RT I C I PAT I O N A N D K N O W L E D G E O F O N E ' S
GROWTH.
O N E O F T H E K E Y TO T H E I N N E R S E L F I S S E L F
CO N S CI O U S N E S S G I V E S Y O U A N D I D E A O F U N D E RW E A R
Y O U R P E R S O N A L I T Y T H AT C A N H E L P Y O U D E V E L O P A S A
P E RS O N O R A S A I N D I V I D U A L .
TYPES
PERSONALITY
VALUES
HABITS
NEEDS
EMOTIONS
FEEDBACK
TYPES OF SELF-AWARENESS
THERE ARE TWO DISTINCT KINDS OF SELF-
AWARENESS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE.
1. 1. Skills development
2. 2. Motivation
3. 3. Leadership
TEMPERAMENT
TEMPERAMENT REFERS TO PERSONALITY TRAITS THAT
DETERMINE HOW SOMEONE REACTS TO THE WORLD. ARE
THEY QUIET OR RAMBUNCTIOUS? EASYGOING OR
APPREHENSIVE? THE TRAITS OF TEMPERAMENT ARE
MOSTLY INNATE TRAITS THAT WE ARE BORN WITH,
ALTHOUGH THEY CAN BE INFLUENCED BY AN
INDIVIDUAL’S FAMILY, CULTURE OR THEIR EXPERIENCES.
A PERSON’S TEMPERAMENT STYLE PLAYS A ROLE IN HOW
THEY BEHAVE AND INTERACT WITH OTHER PEOPLE AND
WITHIN THEIR WORLD.
There are nine different traits of temperaments:
Activity level
Biological rhythms
Sensitivity
Intensity of reaction
Adaptability
Approach/Withdrawal
Persistence
Distractibility
Mood
EACH PERSON HAS THEIR OWN UNIQUE COMBINATION OF
PERSONALITY OR TEMPERAMENT TRAITS, SO YOU MAY BE
SIMILAR TO ANOTHER PERSON OR YOUR CHILD ON ONE TRAIT
AND DIFFERENT ON ANOTHER. THESE TRAITS ARE PART OF
SOMEONE’S PERSONALITY AND ONE OF THE WAYS THAT MAKES
EACH OF US UNIQUE. THERE IS NO RIGHT OR WRONG
TEMPERAMENT—EVERY PERSON HAS THEIR OWN UNIQUE
STYLE OF THINKING, ACTING AND INTERACTING WITH THE
WORLD.
IN ANCIENT GREECE,
HIPPOCRATES (C.460–370
BC) INTRODUCED A
THEORY OF FOUR
TEMPERAMENTS, WHICH IS
THE FIRST WRITTEN
THEORY ON LINKS
BETWEEN PERSONALITY
AND HEALTH KNOWN
TODAY, ALTHOUGH HIS
TEMPERAMENT THEORY
TOOK ITS ORIGIN IN THE
EVEN OLDER EGYPTIAN
AND MESOPOTAMIAN
PHILOSOPHY OF
“HUMORISM” (SUDHOFF, Hippocrates (c.460–370 BC)
1926).
Hippocrates’ temperament theory suggests that four bodily fluids (called
humors)—namely, black bile, yellow bile, phlegm, and blood—directly
affect an individual’s personality, behavior, and health (Johansson &
Lynøe, 2008). Thus, in contrast to theorizing around trepanation,
Hippocrates did not attribute mental illness (or other diseases) to evil
spirits but to physiological reasons, in terms of imbalances of circulating
body fluids that also affected one’s personality.
BASED ON HIPPOCRATES’
THEORY, ANOTHER
ANCIENT GREEK
PHYSICIAN, SURGEON, AND
PHILOSOPHER, GALEN (C.
AD 129–200), DESCRIBED IN
HIS DISSERTATION DE
TEMPERAMENTIS—THE
FIRST TYPOLOGY OF
TEMPERAMENTS. THIS
TYPOLOGY WAS BASED ON
THE FOUR HUMORS AND
CONSIDERED THE
BALANCE AND IMBALANCE
OF TEMPERAMENT PAIRS.
Galen (c. AD 129–200)
According to Galen, the imbalance of pairs resulted in one of the four
temperament categories (or personality types): sanguine (being
optimistic and social), choleric (being short-tempered and irritable),
melancholic (being analytical and quiet), and phlegmatic (being relaxed
and peaceful).