Deck 11: George Kelly: Personal Construct Theory

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Question
Constructs

A) need constant revision.
B) apply to all situations.
C) rigidly bind our behavior.
D) are influenced by physiological forces.
Use Space or
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to flip the card.
Question
According to Kelly, the freedom to revise constructs is called

A) channelizing.
B) constructive revisionism.
C) constructive alternativism.
D) constructive dichotomy.
Question
George Kelly's approach to personality is called

A) psychoanalysis.
B) positive construct theory.
C) individual psychology.
D) personal construct theory.
Question
Kelly's personality theory is based on the importance of

A) the unconscious.
B) our interpretation of our environment.
C) motivation.
D) drives.
Question
Kelly's early clinical work dealt with

A) psychotic children.
B) students who were referred by their teachers for counseling.
C) severely neurotic adults.
D) institutionalized psychotic adults.
Question
If Kelly had worked with schizophrenics in a mental institution in his formative professional years,

A) his theory would also apply to neurotic patients.
B) Kelly would have made good use of his cognitive information -processing abilities.
C) Kelly would have stayed in the U.S. Navy.
D) his theory might not have depended so heavily on cognitive information-processing abilities.
Question
For Kelly, the only way to understand people is to understand their

A) childhood experiences.
B) unconscious desires.
C) interpretations of events and their social relationships.
D) past patterns of reinforcement.
Question
According to Kelly, a construct is

A) an innate drive.
B) our way of explaining or interpreting the world.
C) a result of past reinforcement.
D) the need to actualize the self.
Question
Personal constructs are oriented toward the

A) reconstruction of past events.
B) anticipation of future events.
C) actualization of unconscious desires.
D) release of psychic energy.
Question
Far more than the other theorists, Kelly's approach emphasizes ____ functioning.

A) intellectual
B) biological
C) unconscious
D) irrational
Question
A construct is a

A) group of shared family experiences that shape an individual in a certain direction.
B) set of early experiences in childhood that constricts our personality in adulthood.
C) distorted interpretation of the world that is not in accord with reality.
D) person's way to devise intellectual hypotheses to explain or interpret events.
Question
Once formed, constructs tend to

A) last only a short time.
B) allow no possibility for change.
C) weaken as we grow older.
D) guide our behavior.
Question
A person makes hypotheses and tests them against

A) cultural norms and taboos.
B) fictional goals.
C) experiences.
D) unconscious fears and wishes.
Question
Kelly's cognitive approach to personality

A) was based on previous theories, such as humanistic theory.
B) suggests a person functions solely on the emotional level.
C) aims to examine personal constructs.
D) was to study subjects as incapable of rational functioning.
Question
Once we have formed a construct, we

A) take it on faith.
B) test it against reality.
C) make it a permanent part of our personality.
D) all of the answers
Question
Kelly's personality theory derived from

A) his experience as a clinician.
B) the laboratory.
C) observations of infants and children.
D) interpretations of social and historical factors.
Question
In developing his theory, Kelly drew heavily on

A) psychoanalysis.
B) behaviorism.
C) trait theory.
D) Kelly's theory is not based on any of these theories.
Question
Like scientists, all of us construct theories, which Kelly called

A) emotional and illogical assumptions.
B) scientific comparisons of data.
C) personal constructs.
D) insights from our unconscious.
Question
According to Kelly, he was ____ committed to a particular therapeutic technique and a specific theory about the nature of personality.

A) heavily
B) not
C) neutrally
D) decidedly
Question
The cognitive revolution in psychology

A) was not consistent with the movement's subject matter and methods.
B) had run its course by the time Kelly proposed his theory.
C) was greatly influenced by Kelly's theory.
D) was greatly influenced by Maslow's and Roger's theories.
Question
A construct's range of convenience is the

A) range of events to which it can be applied.
B) number of needs it satisfies.
C) number of people who hold the same construct.
D) applicability to normal and abnormal behavior.
Question
The test of a construct system is how well it

A) softens harsh reality.
B) duplicates reality.
C) predicts events.
D) explains past events.
Question
Kelly believed we are motivated by

A) being alive.
B) instinctual perceptions.
C) past events.
D) a hierarchy of needs.
Question
Choices that help define the construct system

A) have a high predictive efficiency.
B) reject the secure choice.
C) represent the high risk/high reward choice.
D) reject intellect in favor of emotion.
Question
According to the individuality corollary,

A) different people perceive the same event in different ways.
B) constructs reflect an event's objective reality.
C) people differ in their physiological drives.
D) people differ in what they find reinforcing.
Question
Kelly viewed human nature as

A) genetically determined.
B) rational.
C) determined by childhood events.
D) a hierarchy of needs arranged as constructs.
Question
The ____ corollary explains how we construe the constructions of others.

A) individuality
B) commonality
C) fragmentation
D) sociality
Question
In a dichotomized construct, the alternative we select is determined by

A) past reinforcements.
B) how exactly it reflects past events.
C) how well it predicts future events.
D) unconscious forces.
Question
The more permeable his or her construct system is, the more a person

A) tends toward neurotic behavior.
B) vacillates from one construct to another.
C) sticks to tried-and-true behavior.
D) is open to new experiences.
Question
To anticipate events correctly, constructs must be

A) based on exact replications of past events.
B) dichotomous or bipolar.
C) general enough to encompass various events.
D) focused on the similarities among events.
Question
The only way a construct system can remain rigid is if the person

A) is self-actualizing.
B) has a wide range of convenience.
C) encounters no new experiences.
D) is extremely self-confident.
Question
When we select the high risk/high reward alternative in a dichotomized construct, we are

A) extending the construct system.
B) defining the construct system.
C) discarding old constructs and forming new ones.
D) reinforcing the construct system.
Question
If people construe an experience similarly, then their cognitive processes will be

A) similar.
B) identical.
C) dissimilar because of the individuality corollary.
D) unaffected.
Question
In a dichotomized construct, we choose between each of the following except

A) security and adventure.
B) self-actualization and stagnation.
C) definition and extension of the construct system.
D) high risk and high reward.
Question
The ____ corollary says that people perceive events in different ways.

A) range
B) modulation
C) sociality
D) commonality
Question
Kelly's theory is based on the idea that

A) people in a culture construe events in identical ways.
B) future events duplicate past events.
C) personality is unchanging.
D) themes from the past will appear in the future.
Question
The idea that two constructs may be consistent in one situation and inconsistent in another situation is the

A) congruence corollary.
B) fragmentation corollary.
C) successive modulation corollary.
D) situational corollary.
Question
The main characteristic of the organization corollary is that

A) ordinary constructs are formed early in life.
B) constructs are arranged in a hierarchy with the physiological ones at the bottom.
C) some constructs are subordinate to others.
D) the system is more rigid than the individual constructs.
Question
Why does poor Jim continue to act in a hostile manner, even when rebuffed for it, instead of being friendly? Kelly would say Jim

A) makes a low risk choice because at least he can predict how others will react to it.
B) has never tried friendliness, so he cannot predict what will happen.
C) suffers from uncertainty, even though the rewards for friendliness are greater.
D) all of the answers
Question
The dichotomy corollary says that

A) we modify our constructs as a function of new experience.
B) constructs are bipolar.
C) we try to understand how other people think, and modify our behavior accordingly.
D) people perceive events in different ways.
Question
The REP Test is scored

A) like all self-report inventories.
B) by computer.
C) subjectively.
D) by determining its validity coefficient.
Question
All of the following are criticisms of Kelly's theory except which?

A) It omits motivation and emotion.
B) It is based on an unrepresentative sample.
C) The concept of the unconscious lacks empirical support.
D) The rational image of human nature does not coincide with reality.
Question
Persons high in cognitive complexity are also

A) likely to score high on the REP Test.
B) likely to have authoritarian parents.
C) low in empathic ability.
D) able to predict the behavior of others better than persons low in cognitive complexity.
Question
Kelly's primary assessment technique is the

A) free-association test.
B) Rorschach Inkblot Test.
C) interview.
D) Q sort.
Question
Kelly's theory of personality is more popular in ____ than in the United States.

A) Russia and China
B) Europe, Canada, and Australia
C) Central and South America
D) South Africa and Egypt
Question
The results of the REP Test

A) are objective.
B) depend on the skill and training of the psychologist giving it.
C) depend on the client's story.
D) are quantified through summations on the repertory grid.
Question
Kelly promoted a form of psychotherapy called ____ therapy.

A) client-centered
B) construct revision
C) fixed role
D) corollary
Question
Kelly's main contribution to assessment is the

A) Role Construct Repertory (REP) Test.
B) Q-Sort.
C) Thematic Apperception Test (TAT).
D) Word Association Test.
Question
The REP Test

A) is restricted to clinical use.
B) has been used in market research.
C) is useful only for personality research.
D) cannot be used with schizophrenics.
Question
Research on Kelly's theory has shown that

A) constructs measured by the REP Test are stable over time.
B) the REP Test is unreliable.
C) brief social interactions lead to changed constructs.
D) all of the answers
Question
Friendships among college students are likely to endure when their constructs are

A) permanent.
B) opposite.
C) similar.
D) formed in childhood.
Question
Today, Kelly's theory of personality is

A) considered the leading candidate to replace Freudian ideas.
B) the cause of raging controversy among psychologists.
C) almost totally forgotten.
D) much broader and supported more elsewhere, than in the United States.
Question
Adults high in cognitive complexity are likely to be

A) products of diverse influences in childhood.
B) products of authoritarian parenting.
C) politically conservative.
D) rigid and inflexible in their thinking.
Question
The self-characterization sketch is used to determine

A) specific neuroses.
B) the accuracy of the repertory grid.
C) the corollaries dominating the client's life.
D) how people perceive themselves in relation to others.
Question
The Role Construct Repertory (REP) Test is used to

A) uncover complexes.
B) determine the person's roles.
C) reveal the development of anticipations.
D) uncover the pattern of constructs.
Question
Kelly's approach to psychotherapy

A) is called fixed role therapy.
B) involves changing undesirable constructs.
C) has the client act the role of a fictitious person.
D) all of the answers
Question
Kelly believed that a therapist should

A) focus on childhood experiences.
B) accept what the client says at face value.
C) focus on emotional, not rational factors.
D) find the unconscious conflicts among constructs.
Question
REP test research shows that schizophrenics are unstable and inconsistent in construing

A) objects.
B) other people.
C) both people and objects.
D) Schizophrenics cannot respond to REP Test questions.
Question
All of the following are important aspects of Kelly's image of human nature except

A) optimism.
B) free will.
C) pessimism.
D) rationality.
Question
Kelly's theory has been criticized because his theory

A) focuses on the emotional aspects of human functioning rather than intellectual and rational aspects.
B) focuses on intellectual and rational aspects of human functioning to the exclusion of emotional aspects.
C) focuses equally on both intellectual and emotional aspects of human functioning.
D) focuses on explicit emotions.
Question
According to Kelly, each of us desires to predict the future with the highest possible degree of certainty.
Question
Give your opinion on whether or not the following people would be able to fill out and score The Role Construct Repertory Test (REP):
Give your opinion on whether or not the following people would be able to fill out and score The Role Construct Repertory Test (REP):  <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Question
In the Commonality Corollary, people from the same culture may show a resemblance in their behaviors and characteristics even though they are exposed to different life events.
Question
In the Dichotomy Corollary, our constructs are bipolar, mutually exclusive alternatives.
Question
Kelly believed that the hostile person does not know how people will react to friendliness because he or she has rarely tried it.
Question
In your opinion, what can be done to reduce confrontation at the personal level between people? Give at least a five point detailed answer, in relation to Kelly's theory.
Question
Kelly's theory could be considered as very similar to contemporary cognitive psychology.
Question
To what extent do you feel arguments, even wars, result because people construe events with different construct systems? Defend your answer with Kelly's Personal Construct Theory.
Question
Compare the usefulness or utility of Kelly's 11 constructs for life events with Erikson's 8 lifespan phases. What are at least two things that are similar for both of these theories and what are at least two dissimilarities between the two?
Question
For Kelly, freedom of choice could not be obtained by people at any stage of life.
Question
The Choice Corollary describes similarities among repeated events, according to Kelly.
Question
Kelly proposed that the way to understand someone's personality is to examine them physically, emotionally, and intellectually.
Question
Kelly treated severely disturbed psychotics in mental hospitals and neurotics with troublesome emotional problems.
Question
(A) Give the definition for Dichotomy Corollary, in your own words. (B) Using a real-life example of a person you know, explain how all constructs are bipolar or dichotomous.
Question
A construct is a person's unique way of looking at life, like an intellectual hypothesis devised to explain or interpret events.
Question
A permeable construct is one where people are exposed to new experiences every day, therefore the process of testing the fit of a construct to see how well it predicted the event is ongoing.
Question
Kelly's personality theory is much the same as other approaches in the text.
Question
According to Kelly, it is the operation of our mental processes and not the specific events that influence the formation of personality.
Question
The Organizational Corollary describes relationships among constructs.
Question
Over the course of life, we become rigid and uncompromising in our constructs.
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Deck 11: George Kelly: Personal Construct Theory
1
Constructs

A) need constant revision.
B) apply to all situations.
C) rigidly bind our behavior.
D) are influenced by physiological forces.
A
2
According to Kelly, the freedom to revise constructs is called

A) channelizing.
B) constructive revisionism.
C) constructive alternativism.
D) constructive dichotomy.
C
3
George Kelly's approach to personality is called

A) psychoanalysis.
B) positive construct theory.
C) individual psychology.
D) personal construct theory.
D
4
Kelly's personality theory is based on the importance of

A) the unconscious.
B) our interpretation of our environment.
C) motivation.
D) drives.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Kelly's early clinical work dealt with

A) psychotic children.
B) students who were referred by their teachers for counseling.
C) severely neurotic adults.
D) institutionalized psychotic adults.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
If Kelly had worked with schizophrenics in a mental institution in his formative professional years,

A) his theory would also apply to neurotic patients.
B) Kelly would have made good use of his cognitive information -processing abilities.
C) Kelly would have stayed in the U.S. Navy.
D) his theory might not have depended so heavily on cognitive information-processing abilities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
For Kelly, the only way to understand people is to understand their

A) childhood experiences.
B) unconscious desires.
C) interpretations of events and their social relationships.
D) past patterns of reinforcement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
According to Kelly, a construct is

A) an innate drive.
B) our way of explaining or interpreting the world.
C) a result of past reinforcement.
D) the need to actualize the self.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Personal constructs are oriented toward the

A) reconstruction of past events.
B) anticipation of future events.
C) actualization of unconscious desires.
D) release of psychic energy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Far more than the other theorists, Kelly's approach emphasizes ____ functioning.

A) intellectual
B) biological
C) unconscious
D) irrational
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
A construct is a

A) group of shared family experiences that shape an individual in a certain direction.
B) set of early experiences in childhood that constricts our personality in adulthood.
C) distorted interpretation of the world that is not in accord with reality.
D) person's way to devise intellectual hypotheses to explain or interpret events.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Once formed, constructs tend to

A) last only a short time.
B) allow no possibility for change.
C) weaken as we grow older.
D) guide our behavior.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
A person makes hypotheses and tests them against

A) cultural norms and taboos.
B) fictional goals.
C) experiences.
D) unconscious fears and wishes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Kelly's cognitive approach to personality

A) was based on previous theories, such as humanistic theory.
B) suggests a person functions solely on the emotional level.
C) aims to examine personal constructs.
D) was to study subjects as incapable of rational functioning.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Once we have formed a construct, we

A) take it on faith.
B) test it against reality.
C) make it a permanent part of our personality.
D) all of the answers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Kelly's personality theory derived from

A) his experience as a clinician.
B) the laboratory.
C) observations of infants and children.
D) interpretations of social and historical factors.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
In developing his theory, Kelly drew heavily on

A) psychoanalysis.
B) behaviorism.
C) trait theory.
D) Kelly's theory is not based on any of these theories.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Like scientists, all of us construct theories, which Kelly called

A) emotional and illogical assumptions.
B) scientific comparisons of data.
C) personal constructs.
D) insights from our unconscious.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
According to Kelly, he was ____ committed to a particular therapeutic technique and a specific theory about the nature of personality.

A) heavily
B) not
C) neutrally
D) decidedly
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The cognitive revolution in psychology

A) was not consistent with the movement's subject matter and methods.
B) had run its course by the time Kelly proposed his theory.
C) was greatly influenced by Kelly's theory.
D) was greatly influenced by Maslow's and Roger's theories.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A construct's range of convenience is the

A) range of events to which it can be applied.
B) number of needs it satisfies.
C) number of people who hold the same construct.
D) applicability to normal and abnormal behavior.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The test of a construct system is how well it

A) softens harsh reality.
B) duplicates reality.
C) predicts events.
D) explains past events.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Kelly believed we are motivated by

A) being alive.
B) instinctual perceptions.
C) past events.
D) a hierarchy of needs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Choices that help define the construct system

A) have a high predictive efficiency.
B) reject the secure choice.
C) represent the high risk/high reward choice.
D) reject intellect in favor of emotion.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
According to the individuality corollary,

A) different people perceive the same event in different ways.
B) constructs reflect an event's objective reality.
C) people differ in their physiological drives.
D) people differ in what they find reinforcing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Kelly viewed human nature as

A) genetically determined.
B) rational.
C) determined by childhood events.
D) a hierarchy of needs arranged as constructs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The ____ corollary explains how we construe the constructions of others.

A) individuality
B) commonality
C) fragmentation
D) sociality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In a dichotomized construct, the alternative we select is determined by

A) past reinforcements.
B) how exactly it reflects past events.
C) how well it predicts future events.
D) unconscious forces.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The more permeable his or her construct system is, the more a person

A) tends toward neurotic behavior.
B) vacillates from one construct to another.
C) sticks to tried-and-true behavior.
D) is open to new experiences.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
To anticipate events correctly, constructs must be

A) based on exact replications of past events.
B) dichotomous or bipolar.
C) general enough to encompass various events.
D) focused on the similarities among events.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The only way a construct system can remain rigid is if the person

A) is self-actualizing.
B) has a wide range of convenience.
C) encounters no new experiences.
D) is extremely self-confident.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
When we select the high risk/high reward alternative in a dichotomized construct, we are

A) extending the construct system.
B) defining the construct system.
C) discarding old constructs and forming new ones.
D) reinforcing the construct system.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
If people construe an experience similarly, then their cognitive processes will be

A) similar.
B) identical.
C) dissimilar because of the individuality corollary.
D) unaffected.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
In a dichotomized construct, we choose between each of the following except

A) security and adventure.
B) self-actualization and stagnation.
C) definition and extension of the construct system.
D) high risk and high reward.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The ____ corollary says that people perceive events in different ways.

A) range
B) modulation
C) sociality
D) commonality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Kelly's theory is based on the idea that

A) people in a culture construe events in identical ways.
B) future events duplicate past events.
C) personality is unchanging.
D) themes from the past will appear in the future.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
The idea that two constructs may be consistent in one situation and inconsistent in another situation is the

A) congruence corollary.
B) fragmentation corollary.
C) successive modulation corollary.
D) situational corollary.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
The main characteristic of the organization corollary is that

A) ordinary constructs are formed early in life.
B) constructs are arranged in a hierarchy with the physiological ones at the bottom.
C) some constructs are subordinate to others.
D) the system is more rigid than the individual constructs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Why does poor Jim continue to act in a hostile manner, even when rebuffed for it, instead of being friendly? Kelly would say Jim

A) makes a low risk choice because at least he can predict how others will react to it.
B) has never tried friendliness, so he cannot predict what will happen.
C) suffers from uncertainty, even though the rewards for friendliness are greater.
D) all of the answers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
The dichotomy corollary says that

A) we modify our constructs as a function of new experience.
B) constructs are bipolar.
C) we try to understand how other people think, and modify our behavior accordingly.
D) people perceive events in different ways.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The REP Test is scored

A) like all self-report inventories.
B) by computer.
C) subjectively.
D) by determining its validity coefficient.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
All of the following are criticisms of Kelly's theory except which?

A) It omits motivation and emotion.
B) It is based on an unrepresentative sample.
C) The concept of the unconscious lacks empirical support.
D) The rational image of human nature does not coincide with reality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Persons high in cognitive complexity are also

A) likely to score high on the REP Test.
B) likely to have authoritarian parents.
C) low in empathic ability.
D) able to predict the behavior of others better than persons low in cognitive complexity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Kelly's primary assessment technique is the

A) free-association test.
B) Rorschach Inkblot Test.
C) interview.
D) Q sort.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Kelly's theory of personality is more popular in ____ than in the United States.

A) Russia and China
B) Europe, Canada, and Australia
C) Central and South America
D) South Africa and Egypt
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The results of the REP Test

A) are objective.
B) depend on the skill and training of the psychologist giving it.
C) depend on the client's story.
D) are quantified through summations on the repertory grid.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Kelly promoted a form of psychotherapy called ____ therapy.

A) client-centered
B) construct revision
C) fixed role
D) corollary
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Kelly's main contribution to assessment is the

A) Role Construct Repertory (REP) Test.
B) Q-Sort.
C) Thematic Apperception Test (TAT).
D) Word Association Test.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
The REP Test

A) is restricted to clinical use.
B) has been used in market research.
C) is useful only for personality research.
D) cannot be used with schizophrenics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
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50
Research on Kelly's theory has shown that

A) constructs measured by the REP Test are stable over time.
B) the REP Test is unreliable.
C) brief social interactions lead to changed constructs.
D) all of the answers
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51
Friendships among college students are likely to endure when their constructs are

A) permanent.
B) opposite.
C) similar.
D) formed in childhood.
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52
Today, Kelly's theory of personality is

A) considered the leading candidate to replace Freudian ideas.
B) the cause of raging controversy among psychologists.
C) almost totally forgotten.
D) much broader and supported more elsewhere, than in the United States.
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53
Adults high in cognitive complexity are likely to be

A) products of diverse influences in childhood.
B) products of authoritarian parenting.
C) politically conservative.
D) rigid and inflexible in their thinking.
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54
The self-characterization sketch is used to determine

A) specific neuroses.
B) the accuracy of the repertory grid.
C) the corollaries dominating the client's life.
D) how people perceive themselves in relation to others.
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55
The Role Construct Repertory (REP) Test is used to

A) uncover complexes.
B) determine the person's roles.
C) reveal the development of anticipations.
D) uncover the pattern of constructs.
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56
Kelly's approach to psychotherapy

A) is called fixed role therapy.
B) involves changing undesirable constructs.
C) has the client act the role of a fictitious person.
D) all of the answers
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57
Kelly believed that a therapist should

A) focus on childhood experiences.
B) accept what the client says at face value.
C) focus on emotional, not rational factors.
D) find the unconscious conflicts among constructs.
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58
REP test research shows that schizophrenics are unstable and inconsistent in construing

A) objects.
B) other people.
C) both people and objects.
D) Schizophrenics cannot respond to REP Test questions.
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59
All of the following are important aspects of Kelly's image of human nature except

A) optimism.
B) free will.
C) pessimism.
D) rationality.
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60
Kelly's theory has been criticized because his theory

A) focuses on the emotional aspects of human functioning rather than intellectual and rational aspects.
B) focuses on intellectual and rational aspects of human functioning to the exclusion of emotional aspects.
C) focuses equally on both intellectual and emotional aspects of human functioning.
D) focuses on explicit emotions.
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61
According to Kelly, each of us desires to predict the future with the highest possible degree of certainty.
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62
Give your opinion on whether or not the following people would be able to fill out and score The Role Construct Repertory Test (REP):
Give your opinion on whether or not the following people would be able to fill out and score The Role Construct Repertory Test (REP):
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63
In the Commonality Corollary, people from the same culture may show a resemblance in their behaviors and characteristics even though they are exposed to different life events.
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64
In the Dichotomy Corollary, our constructs are bipolar, mutually exclusive alternatives.
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65
Kelly believed that the hostile person does not know how people will react to friendliness because he or she has rarely tried it.
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66
In your opinion, what can be done to reduce confrontation at the personal level between people? Give at least a five point detailed answer, in relation to Kelly's theory.
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67
Kelly's theory could be considered as very similar to contemporary cognitive psychology.
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68
To what extent do you feel arguments, even wars, result because people construe events with different construct systems? Defend your answer with Kelly's Personal Construct Theory.
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69
Compare the usefulness or utility of Kelly's 11 constructs for life events with Erikson's 8 lifespan phases. What are at least two things that are similar for both of these theories and what are at least two dissimilarities between the two?
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70
For Kelly, freedom of choice could not be obtained by people at any stage of life.
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71
The Choice Corollary describes similarities among repeated events, according to Kelly.
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72
Kelly proposed that the way to understand someone's personality is to examine them physically, emotionally, and intellectually.
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73
Kelly treated severely disturbed psychotics in mental hospitals and neurotics with troublesome emotional problems.
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74
(A) Give the definition for Dichotomy Corollary, in your own words. (B) Using a real-life example of a person you know, explain how all constructs are bipolar or dichotomous.
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75
A construct is a person's unique way of looking at life, like an intellectual hypothesis devised to explain or interpret events.
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76
A permeable construct is one where people are exposed to new experiences every day, therefore the process of testing the fit of a construct to see how well it predicted the event is ongoing.
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77
Kelly's personality theory is much the same as other approaches in the text.
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78
According to Kelly, it is the operation of our mental processes and not the specific events that influence the formation of personality.
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79
The Organizational Corollary describes relationships among constructs.
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80
Over the course of life, we become rigid and uncompromising in our constructs.
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