fbpx
Wikipedia

Personal development

Personal development or self-improvement consists of activities that develop a person's capabilities and potential, build human capital, facilitate employability, enhance quality of life, and facilitate the realization of dreams and aspirations.[1] Personal development may take place over the course of an individual's entire lifespan and is not limited to one stage of a person's life. It can include official and informal actions for developing others in roles such as teacher, guide, counselor, manager, coach, or mentor, and it is not restricted to self-help. When personal development takes place in the context of institutions, it refers to the methods, programs, tools, techniques, and assessment systems offered to support positive adult development at the individual level in organizations.[2][need quotation to verify]

Overview Edit

Among other things, personal development may include the following activities:[3][4][5]

Personal development can also include developing other people's skills and personalities.[6] This can happen through roles such as those of a teacher or mentor, either through a personal competency (such as the alleged skill of certain managers in developing the potential of employees) or through a professional service (such as providing training, assessment, or coaching).[6]

Beyond improving oneself and developing others, "personal development" labels a field of practice and research:

  • As a field of practice, personal development includes personal-development methods, learning programs, assessment systems, tools, and techniques.
  • As a field of research, personal-development topics appear in psychology journals, education research, management journals and books, and human-development economics.

Any sort of development—whether economic, political, biological, organizational or personal—requires a framework if one wishes to know whether a change has actually occurred.[7][need quotation to verify] In the case of personal development, an individual often functions as the primary judge of improvement or of regression, but the validation of objective improvement requires assessment using standard criteria.

Personal-development frameworks may include:

  • Goals or benchmarks that define the end-points
  • Strategies or plans for reaching goals
  • Measurement and assessment of progress, levels or stages that define milestones along a development path
  • A feedback system to provide information on changes

As an industry Edit

Personal development as an industry[8] has several business-relationship formats of operating. The main ways are business-to-consumer and business-to-business.[9] However, there have been two new ways emerge: consumer-to-business and consumer-to-consumer.[10] The personal development market had a global market size of 38.28 billion dollars in 2019.[11]

Business-to-consumer market Edit

A wide array of personal development products are available to individuals. Examples include self-help books; education technology, neuroenhancement, and experiential learning (instructor-led training, motivational speeches, seminars, social or spiritual retreats).

Business-to-business market Edit

Some consulting firms such as DDI and FranklinCovey specialize in personal development, but as of 2009 generalist firms operating in the fields of human resources, recruitment and organizational strategy—such as Hewitt, Watson Wyatt Worldwide, Hay Group, McKinsey, Boston Consulting Group, and Korn/Ferry—have entered what they perceive as a growing market, not to mention smaller firms and self-employed professionals who provide consulting, training and coaching.[non-primary source needed]

Origins Edit

Major religions—such as the age-old Abrahamic and Indian religions—as well as 20th-century New Age philosophies have variously used practices such as prayer, music, dance, singing, chanting, poetry, writing, sports and martial arts.

Michel Foucault describes in Care of the Self[12] the techniques of epimelia used in ancient Greece and Rome, which included dieting, exercise, sexual abstinence, contemplation, prayer, and confession—some of which also became practices within different branches of Christianity.

Wushu and T'ai chi ch'uan utilize traditional Chinese techniques, including breathing and energy exercises, meditation, martial arts, as well as practices linked to traditional Chinese medicine, such as dieting, massage, and acupuncture.

Two individual ancient philosophical traditions: those of Aristotle (Western tradition) and Confucius (Eastern tradition) stand out[13] and contribute to the worldwide view of "personal development" in the 21st century. Elsewhere anonymous or named founders of schools of self-development appear endemic—note the traditions of the Indian sub-continent in this regard.[14][15][16][17]

South Asian traditions Edit

Some ancient Indians aspired to "beingness, wisdom and happiness".[18]

Paul Oliver suggests that the popularity of Indian traditions for a personal developer may lie in their relative lack of prescriptive doctrine.[19]

Islamic personal development Edit

Khurram Murad describes that personal development in Islam is to work towards eternal life in Jannuh. There are many avenues in the journey to paradise, such as devoted practicing of the laws of the Quran and Sunnah, such as optimized service towards the self and others. Sincere worship of Allah is the foundation for self-discovery and self-development. [20] Allah has provided ways to help those striving towards eternal life, including staying away from things of the world. These worldly things can distract those away from the path to paradise. It does not mean worldly success is inherently disruptive but can become so when spiritual beliefs do not align with the Sunnah. In the end, paradise will bring satisfaction to those working on their personal development because of the pleasure that comes from Allah.[21]

Aristotle and the Western tradition Edit

The Greek philosopher Aristotle (384 BCE – 322 BCE) wrote Nicomachean Ethics, in which he defined personal development as a category of phronesis or practical wisdom, where the practice of virtues (arête) leads to eudaimonia,[22] commonly translated as "happiness" but more accurately understood as "human flourishing" or "living well".[23] Aristotle continues to influence the Western concept of personal development to this day, particularly in the economics of human development[24] and in positive psychology.[25][26]

Confucius and the East Asian tradition Edit

In Chinese tradition, Confucius (around 551 BCE – 479 BCE) founded an ongoing philosophy. His ideas continue to influence family values, education and personnel management in China and East Asia. In his Great Learning Confucius wrote:

The ancients who wished to illustrate illustrious virtue throughout the kingdom first ordered well their own states. Wishing to order well their states, they first regulated their families. Wishing to regulate their families, they first cultivated their persons. Wishing to cultivate their persons, they first rectified their hearts. Wishing to rectify their hearts, they first sought to be sincere in their thoughts. Wishing to be sincere in their thoughts, they first extended to the utmost their knowledge. Such extension of knowledge lay in the investigation of things.[27]

Contexts Edit

Psychology Edit

Psychology became linked to personal development in the early 20th century starting with the research efforts of Alfred Adler (1870–1937) and Carl Jung (1875–1961).

Adler refused to limit psychology to analysis alone. He made the important point that aspirations focus on looking forward and do not limit themselves to unconscious drives or to childhood experiences.[28] He also originated the concepts of lifestyle (1929—he defined "lifestyle" as an individual's characteristic approach to life, in facing problems) and of self-image,[28] as a concept that influenced management under the heading of work-life balance, also known as the equilibrium between a person's career and personal life.[29]

Carl Gustav Jung made contributions to personal development with his concept of individuation, which he saw as the drive of the individual to achieve the wholeness and balance of the Self.[30]

Daniel Levinson (1920–1994) developed Jung's early concept of "life stages" and included a sociological perspective. Levinson proposed that personal development comes under the influence—throughout life—of aspirations, which he called "the Dream":

Whatever the nature of his Dream, a young man has the developmental task of giving it greater definition and finding ways to live it out. It makes a great difference in his growth whether his initial life structure is consonant with and infused by the Dream, or opposed to it. If the Dream remains unconnected to his life it may simply die, and with it his sense of aliveness and purpose.[31]

Research on success in reaching goals, as undertaken by Albert Bandura (1925–2021), suggested that self-efficacy[32] best explains why people with the same level of knowledge and skills get very different results. Having self-efficacy leads to an increased likelihood of success. According to Bandura self-confidence functions as a powerful predictor of success because:[33]

  1. It causes you to expect to succeed
  2. It allows you take risks and set challenging goals
  3. It helps you keep trying if at first you do not succeed
  4. It helps you control emotions and fears when life may throw more difficult things your way

In 1998 Martin Seligman won election to a one-year term as President of the American Psychological Association and proposed a new focus: on healthy individuals[34][35] rather than on pathology (he created the "positive psychology" current)

We have discovered that there is a set of human strengths that are the most likely buffers against mental illness: courage, optimism, interpersonal skill, work ethic, hope, honesty and perseverance. Much of the task of prevention will be to create a science of human strength whose mission will be to foster these virtues in young people.[36][full citation needed]

— Martin E. P. Seligman, Positive Psychology: The Scientific and Practical Explorations of Human Strengths, Part 1, Chapter 1

[37]

Social psychology Edit

Social psychology[38] heavily emphasizes and focuses on human behavior and how individuals interact with others in society.[39] Infants develop socially by creating trusting and dependent relationships with others—namely parental figures. They learn how to act and treat other people based on the example of parental figures and other adults they interact with often.[40] Toddlers further develop social skills. Additionally, they begin to gain a desire for autonomy and grow more and more independent as they grow older. The balance of social involvement and autonomy varies per person, but normally autonomous behavior increases with age. Some studies suggest that selfishness begins to diminish, and prosocial behaviors increase, between the ages of six years old to twelve years old.[41] Additionally, the years of adulthood are times of development—self-actualization, relational and occupational development, loss, and coping skills development, etc.—affected by those around us: parents, co-workers, romantic partners, and children. Social psychology draws from many other psychological theories and principles yet views them through a lens of social interaction.

Psychodynamic psychology Edit

The psychodynamic view of personal development varies from other perspectives. Namely, that the development of our traits, personalities, and thinking patterns are predominantly subconscious.[42] Psychodynamic theory suggests these subconscious changes—which emerge as external actions—are formed from suppressed sexual and aggressive urges and other internalized conflicts.[43] Sigmund Freud and other notable psychodynamic theorists postulate that these repressed cognitions form during childhood and adolescence. Conscious development would then be "digging up" these repressed memories and feelings. Once repressed memories and emotions are discovered, an individual can sift through them and receive healthy closure.[44] Much, if not all, of conscious development occurs with the aid of a trained psychodynamic therapist.

Cognitive-Behavioral Psychology Edit

Cognitive-behavioral views on personal development follow traditional patterns of personal development: behavior modification, cognitive reframing, and successive approximation being some of the more notable techniques.[45] An individual is seen as in control of their actions and their thoughts, though self-mastery is required. With behavior modification, individuals will develop personal skills and traits by altering their behavior independent of their emotions.[45] For example, a person may feel intense anger but would still behave in a positive manner. They are able to suppress their emotions and act in a more socially acceptable way. The accumulation of these efforts would change the person into a more patient individual. Cognitive reframing plays an instrumental role in personal development.[46] Cognitive-behavioral psychologists believe that how we view events is more important than the event itself. Thus, if one can view negative events in beneficial ways, they can progress and develop with fewer setbacks.[47] Successive approximation—or shaping—most closely aligns with personal development. Successive approximation is when one desires a final result but takes incremental steps to achieve the result. Normally, each successful step towards the final goal is rewarded until the goal is achieved. Personal development, if it is to be long-lasting, is achieved incrementally.[45]

Educational psychology Edit

Educational psychology focuses on the human learning experience: learning and teaching methods, aptitude testing, and so on.[48] Educational psychology seeks to further personal development by increasing one's ability to learn, retain information, and apply knowledge to real-world experiences. If one is able to increase efficacious learning, they are better equipped for personal development.

Early education Edit

Education offers children the opportunity to begin personal development at a young age. The curriculum taught at school must be carefully planned and managed in order to successfully promote personal development.[49] Providing an environment for children that allows for quality social relationships to be made and clearly communicated objectives and aims is key to their development. If early education fails to meet these qualifications, it can greatly stunt development in children, hindering their success in education as well as society. They can fall behind in development compared to peers of the same age group.[49]

Higher education Edit

During the 1960s a large increase in the number of students on American campuses[50] led to research on the personal development needs of undergraduate students. Arthur Chickering defined seven vectors of personal development[51] for young adults during their undergraduate years:

  1. Developing competence
  2. Managing emotions
  3. Achieving autonomy and interdependence
  4. Developing mature interpersonal relationships
  5. Establishing personal identity
  6. Developing purpose
  7. Developing integrity

In the UK, personal development took a central place in university policy in 1997 when the Dearing Report[52][53] declared that universities should go beyond academic teaching to provide students with personal development.[54] In 2001 a Quality Assessment Agency for UK universities produced guidelines[55] for universities to enhance personal development as:

  • a structured and supported process undertaken by an individual to reflect upon their own learning, performance and/or achievement and to plan for their personal, educational and career development;
  • objectives related explicitly to student development; to improve the capacity of students to understand what and how they are learning, and to review, plan and take responsibility for their own learning

In the 1990s, business schools began to set up specific personal-development programs for leadership and career orientation and in 1998 the European Foundation for Management Development set up the EQUIS accreditation system which specified that personal development must form part of the learning process through internships, working on team projects and going abroad for work or exchange programs.[56][citation needed]

The first personal development certification required for business school graduation originated in 2002 as a partnership between Metizo, a personal-development consulting firm, and the Euromed Management School[57] in Marseilles: students must not only complete assignments but also demonstrate self-awareness and achievement of personal-development competencies.[58]

As an academic department, personal development as a specific discipline is often associated with business schools.[59] As an area of research, personal development draws on links to other academic disciplines:

  • Education for questions of learning and assessment
  • Psychology for motivation and personality
  • Sociology for identity and social networks
  • Economics for human capital and economic value
  • Philosophy for ethics and self-reflection

Developmental activities Edit

Personal Development can include gaining self-awareness of the course of one’s lifespan. It includes multiple definitions but is different from self knowledge. Self-awareness is more in depth and explores the conscious and unconscious aspects of ourselves. We are able to gain self-awareness through socializing and communicating according to the social behaviorism view. Self-awareness can also be a positive intrapersonal experience where one is able to reflect during a moment of action or past actions. Becoming more self aware can help us to increase our emotional intelligence, leadership skills, and performance. [60]

The workplace Edit

Abraham Maslow (1908–1970), proposed a hierarchy of needs with self actualization at the top, defined as "the desire to become more and more what one is, to become everything that one is capable of becoming". In other words, self actualization is the ambition to become a better version of oneself, to become everything one is capable of being.[61]

Since Maslow himself believed that only a small minority of people self-actualize—he estimated one percent[62]—his hierarchy of needs had the consequence that organizations came to regard self-actualization or personal development as occurring at the top of the organizational pyramid, while openness and job security in the workplace would fulfill the needs of the mass of employees.[63][64]

As organizations and labor markets became more global, responsibility for development shifted from the company to the individual.[clarification needed] In 1999 management thinker Peter Drucker wrote in the Harvard Business Review:

We live in an age of unprecedented opportunity: if you've got ambition and smarts, you can rise to the top of your chosen profession, regardless of where you started out. But with opportunity comes responsibility. Companies today aren't managing their employees' careers; knowledge workers must, effectively, be their own chief executive officers. It's up to you to carve out your place, to know when to change course, and to keep yourself engaged and productive during a work life that may span some 50 years.[65][page needed]

Management professors Sumantra Ghoshal of the London Business School and Christopher Bartlett of the Harvard Business School wrote in 1997 that companies must manage people individually and establish a new work contract.[66] On the one hand, the company must allegedly recognize that personal development creates economic value: "market performance flows not from the omnipotent wisdom of top managers but from the initiative, creativity and skills of all employees".[67] On the other hand, employees should recognize that their work includes personal development and "embrace the invigorating force of continuous learning and personal development".[68]

The 1997 publication of Ghoshal's and Bartlett's Individualized Corporation corresponded to a change in career development from a system of predefined paths defined by companies, to a strategy defined by the individual and matched to the needs of organizations in an open landscape of possibilities.[69][non-primary source needed] Another contribution to the study of career development came with the recognition that women's careers show specific personal needs and different development paths from men. The 2007 study of women's careers by Sylvia Ann Hewlett Off-Ramps and On-Ramps[70] had a major impact on the way companies view careers.[71][72] Further work on the career as a personal development process came from study by Herminia Ibarra in her Working Identity on the relationship with career change and identity change,[73] indicating that priorities of work and lifestyle continually develop through life.

Personal development programs in companies fall into two categories: the provision of employee benefits and the fostering of development strategies.

Employee surveys may help organizations find out personal-development needs, preferences and problems, and they use the results to design benefits programs.[74] Typical programs in this category include:[74]

As an investment, personal development programs have the goal of increasing human capital or improving productivity, innovation or quality. Proponents actually see such programs not as a cost but as an investment with results linked to an organization's strategic development goals.[75] Employees gain access to these investment-oriented programs by selection according to the value and future potential of the employee, usually defined in a talent management architecture including populations such as new hires, perceived high-potential employees, perceived key employees, sales staff, research staff and perceived future leaders.[74] Organizations may also offer other (non-investment-oriented) programs to many or even all employees. Personal development also forms an element in management tools such as personal development planning, assessing one's level of ability using a competency grid, or getting feedback from a 360 questionnaire filled in by colleagues at different levels in the organization.[74]

A common criticism[76] surrounding personal development programs is that they are often treated as an arbitrary performance management tool to pay lip service to, but ultimately ignored. As such, many companies have decided to replace personal development programs with SMART Personal Development Objectives, which are regularly reviewed and updated. Personal Development Objectives help employees achieve career goals and improve overall performance.

Criticism Edit

Scholars have targeted self-help claims as misleading and incorrect. In 2005, Steve Salerno portrayed the American self-help movement—he uses the acronym "SHAM": the "Self-Help and Actualization Movement"—not only as ineffective in achieving its goals but also as socially harmful, and that self-help customers keep investing more money in these services regardless of their effectiveness.[77] Others similarly point out that with self-help books "supply increases the demand ... The more people read them, the more they think they need them ... more like an addiction than an alliance".[78]

Self-help writers have been described as working "in the area of the ideological, the imagined, the narrativized. ... although a veneer of scientism permeates the[ir] work, there is also an underlying armature of moralizing".[79]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Personal Development | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary". dictionary.cambridge.org. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  2. ^ Bob Aubrey (2010), Managing Your Aspirations: Developing Personal Enterprise in the Global Workplace. McGraw-Hill, ISBN 978-0071311786, p. 9.
  3. ^ Clegg, Sue; Bradley, Sally (2013). "Models of Personal Development Planning: practice and processes". British Educational Research Journal. 32 (1): 57–76. doi:10.1080/01411920500402003. ISSN 0141-1926.
  4. ^ Gough, David; Kiwan, Dina; Suttcliffe, Katy; Simpson, Donald; Houghton, Nicholas (2006). "A systematic map and synthesis review of the effectiveness of personal development planning for improving student learning". EPPI-Centre. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ Anderson, Brittney K.; Meyer, John P.; Vaters, Chelsea; Espinoza, Jose A. (2020-08-01). "Measuring Personal Growth and Development in Context: Evidence of Validity in Educational and Work Settings". Journal of Happiness Studies. 21 (6): 2141–2167. doi:10.1007/s10902-019-00176-w. hdl:20.500.11937/76647. ISSN 1573-7780. S2CID 203449127.
  6. ^ a b Phenix, Philip H. (1982). "Promoting Personal Development through Teaching". Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education. 84 (2): 301–316. doi:10.1177/016146818208400206. ISSN 0161-4681. S2CID 140791247.
  7. ^ Bob Aubrey, Measure of Man: leading human development McGraw-Hill 2016 ISBN 978-9814660648, p. 15
  8. ^ Some sources recognize personal development as an "industry": see, for example: Cullen, John G. (2009). "How to sell your soul and still get into Heaven: Steven Covey's epiphany-inducing technology of effective selfhood" (PDF). Human Relations. Sage Publications. 62 (8): 1231–1254. doi:10.1177/0018726709334493. ISSN 0018-7267. S2CID 145181366. The growth of the personal development industry and its gurus continues to be resisted across a number of genres. And: Grant, Anthony M.; Blythe O'Hara (November 2006). "The self-presentation of commercial Australian life coaching schools: Cause for concern?" (PDF). International Coaching Psychology Review. Leicester: The British Psychological Society. 1 (2): 21–33 [29]. doi:10.53841/bpsicpr.2006.1.2.21. ISSN 1750-2764. S2CID 79131666. Retrieved 2010-04-28. ... much of the commercial life coaching and personal development industry is grounded more on hyperbole and rhetoric than solid behavioural science (Grant, 2001) ... And: Grant, Anthony M.; Michael J. Cavanagh (December 2007). "Evidence-based coaching: Flourishing or languishing?". Australian Psychologist. Australian Psychological Society. 42 (4): 239–254. doi:10.1080/00050060701648175. ISSN 1742-9544. To flourish, coaching psychology needs to remain clearly differentiated from the frequently sensationalistic and pseudoscientific facets of the personal development industry while at the same time engaging in the development of the wider coaching industry.
  9. ^ "Differences Between B2C & B2B in Business Systems". Small Business - Chron.com. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  10. ^ "Marketing Is Everything". Harvard Business Review. 1991-01-01. ISSN 0017-8012. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  11. ^ "Personal Development Market Size Report, 2020–2027". www.grandviewresearch.com. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  12. ^ Foucault, Michel, ed. (1986). Care of the Self. Vol. 2. Random House. Translated from the French Le Souci de Soi editions Gallimard 1984. Part Two of Foucault's book describes the technique of caring for the soul falling in the category of epimeleia from the Greek to the classic Roman period and on into the early stages of the age of Christianity.
  13. ^ van der Kooij, Jacomijn C.; de Ruyter, Doret J.; Miedema, Siebren (2015-07-03). "The influence of moral education on the personal worldview of students". Journal of Moral Education. 44 (3): 346–363. doi:10.1080/03057240.2015.1048790. ISSN 0305-7240. S2CID 17075284.
  14. ^ For example: Singhvi, L. M. (2003). "Jainism". In Palmer, Martin (ed.). Faith in Conservation: New Approaches to Religions and the Environment. World Bank Directions in Development. Washington, DC: World Bank Publications. pp. 107–108. ISBN 978-0821355596. Retrieved 20 September 2020. Jains believe that to attain the higher stages of personal development, lay people must adhere to the three jewels (rarna-traya), namely, enlightened worldview, true knowledge, and conduct based on enlightened worldview and true knowledge.
  15. ^ For example: Hershock, Peter D. (2005). "The Buddhist Roots of Chan". Chan Buddhism. Dimensions of Asian spirituality. Vol. 2. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0824828356. Retrieved 20 September 2020. The Theravada takes the arhat, or 'saint,' to be the ideal of personal development—a Buddhist practitioner who has realized the cessation of all entangling forms of thought and action, and who has stopped making any karma that would continue to spin the wheel of birth and death.
  16. ^ For example: Mansukhani, Gobind Singh (1968). Introduction to Sikhism: 100 Basic Questions and Answers on Sikh Religion and History (2 ed.). India Book House. p. 60. Retrieved 20 September 2020. What are the stages in spiritual development, according to Sikhism? Spiritual attainment is a matter of personal development.
  17. ^ For example:Scheid, Daniel P. (2016). "Hindu Traditions: Dharmic Ecology". The Cosmic Common Good: Religious Grounds for Ecological Ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 128. ISBN 978-0199359431. Retrieved 20 September 2020. Dharma encompasses a theory of virtue and personal development, as well as stipulating detailed ethical rules and the religious obligations one must fulfil.
  18. ^ Ventegodt, Søren; Joav Merrick; Niels Jørgen Andersen (Oct 2003). "Quality of Life Theory III. Maslow Revisited". The Scientific World Journal. Finland: Corpus Alienum Oy. 3 (3): 1050–1057. doi:10.1100/tsw.2003.84. ISSN 1537-744X. PMC 5974881. PMID 14570995. In ancient India people talked about reaching the level of existence called 'sat-sit-ananda': beingness, wisdom and happiness as one.
  19. ^ Oliver, Paul (2014). "Yoga, mysticism and spiritual consciousness". Hinduism and the 1960s: The Rise of a Counter-Culture. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 132. ISBN 978-1472530783. Retrieved 20 September 2020. Young people of [the 1960s] ... sought philosophies and world views which emphasized the internal life and the search for personal development. This perhaps explains the attraction of Indian religious experience at the time in the sense that it focused less on adherence to scriptures and formal teachings and more on the personal spiritual search of the individual.
  20. ^ Mahmood, Arshad; Arshad, Mohd Anuar; Ahmed, Adeel; Akhtar, Sohail; Khan, Shahid (2018-06-04). "Spiritual intelligence research within human resource development: a thematic review". Management Research Review. 41 (8): 987–1006. doi:10.1108/mrr-03-2017-0073. ISSN 2040-8269. S2CID 158831200.
  21. ^ Murad, Khurram (2006). Self Development. Pataudi House, Daryagunj, New Delhi: Adam Publishers & Distributors. pp. 8–10. ISBN 8174354824.
  22. ^ Nicomachean Ethics, translated by W.D.Ross, Basic Works of Aristotle, section 1142. Online in "The Internet Classics Archive of MIT": http://classics.mit.edu//Aristotle/nicomachaen.html
  23. ^ Martha Nussbaum, The Fragility of Goodness, Cambridge University Press, discusses why the English word happiness does not describe Aristotle's concept of eudaimonia, pages 1–6.
  24. ^ Nobel Prize winner Amartya Sen identifies economic development with Aristotle's concepts of individual development in his co-authored book written with Aristotle scholar Nussbaum: Nussbaum, Martha; Sen, Amartya, eds. (1993). The Quality of Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0198283959. And in his general book published a year after receiving the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1998: Sen, Amartya (1999). Development as Freedom. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  25. ^ Daniel Seligman explicitly identifies the goals of positive psychology with Aristotle's idea of the "Good Life" and eudaimonia in Seligman, Martin E. P. (2002). Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment.New York: Free Press. ISBN 0743222970 (Paperback edition, Free Press, 2004, ISBN 0743222989).
  26. ^ Marshall, Chris. Hack your brain: Rapid way to change.
  27. ^ Confucius, Great Learning, translated by James Legge. Provided online in The Internet Classics Archive of MIT.
  28. ^ a b Heinz Ansbacher and Rowena R Ansbacher (1964), Individual Psychology of Alfred Adler, Basic Books, 1956. See especially chapter 3 on Finalism and Fiction and chapter 7 on the Style of Life.
  29. ^ Lockwood, N. R. (2003). Work/life balance. Challenges and Solutions, SHRM Research, USA, 2-10.
  30. ^ Jung saw individuation as a process of psychological differentiation, having for its goal the development of the individual personality. C.G. Jung. Psychological Types. Collected Works, Vol. 6., par. 757.
  31. ^ Daniel Levinson, Seasons of a Man's Life, Ballantine Press, 1978, pp. 91–92.
  32. ^ Albert Bandura (1997). Self-efficacy: The exercise of control. New York: Freeman.
  33. ^ Albert Bandura, Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control, W.H. Freeman and Company, New York, 1998, p. 184.
  34. ^ Sze, David (17 June 2015). "The Father of Positive Psychology and His Two Theories of Happiness". Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  35. ^ "Who is Martin Seligman and What Does He Do?". 20 September 2016.
  36. ^ Martin Seligman, "Building Human Strength: Psychology's Forgotten Mission", Vol. 29, No. 1, January 1998
  37. ^ Lopez, Shane J.; Pedrotti, Jennifer Teramoto; Snyder, C. R. (2018-08-06). Positive Psychology: The Scientific and Practical Explorations of Human Strengths. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-1-5443-4175-0.
  38. ^ "APA.org".
  39. ^ Parke, Ross D. (2020). "Social Development". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Psychology. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190236557.013.520. ISBN 978-0-19-023655-7.
  40. ^ The St. Petersburg—USA Orphanage Research Team (2008). "I. Theoretical, Empirical, and Practical Rationale". Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development. 73 (3): vii-295. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5834.2008.00483.x. PMC 2702123. PMID 19121007.
  41. ^ "Self-Understanding and Self-Regulation in Middle Childhood". Development During Middle Childhood: The Years From Six to Twelve. National Academies Press (US). 1984.
  42. ^ Bargh, J. A.; Morsella, E. (2008). "The Unconscious Mind". Perspectives on Psychological Science. 3 (1): 73–79. doi:10.1111/j.1745-6916.2008.00064.x. PMC 2440575. PMID 18584056.
  43. ^ Glen o. Gabbard, M. D. (2014). Psychodynamic Psychiatry in Clinical Practice, Fifth Edition. American Psychiatric Pub. ISBN 978-1585624430.
  44. ^ "The distancing of emotion in psychotherapy".
  45. ^ a b c "What Is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy?".
  46. ^ Goodfriend, W., & Arriaga, X. B. (2018). Cognitive reframing of intimate partner aggression: Social and contextual influences. International journal of environmental research and public health, 15(11), 2464.
  47. ^ Levy, Hannah C.; Stevens, Kimberly T.; Tolin, David F. (2021-07-23). "Research Review: A meta‐analysis of relapse rates in cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety and related disorders in youth". Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 63 (3): 252–260. doi:10.1111/jcpp.13486. ISSN 0021-9630. PMID 34296755. S2CID 236198764.
  48. ^ "Educational Psychology Promotes Teaching and Learning".
  49. ^ a b Tattum, D., & Tattum, E. (2017). Social education and personal development. Routledge.
  50. ^ See for example the figures for Cuba: "Educación Superior". Cuban Statistics and Related Publications. Centro de Estudios de Población y Desarrollo de la Oficina Nacional de Estadísticas. Retrieved 2009-07-17.
  51. ^ Arthur Chickering, Education and Identity (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1969); second edition updated with Linda Reisser, published in 1993 by Jossey-Bass.
  52. ^ The Dearing Report of 1997: see the Leeds University website: http://www.leeds.ac.uk/educol/ncihe/
  53. ^ Chalkley, Brian (March 1998). "Arena Symposium: Dearing and Geography". Journal of Geography in Higher Education. 22 (1): 55–60. doi:10.1080/03098269886029. ISSN 0309-8265.
  54. ^ Dearing, Ron. "Higher Education in the Learning Society". Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  55. ^ These definitions and guidelines appear on the UK Academy of Higher Education website: . Archived from the original on 2008-12-20. Retrieved 2008-12-20.
  56. ^ Hedmo, Sahlin-Andersson & Wedlin, Tina, Kerstin & Linda. "The Emergence of a European Regulatory Field of Management Education – Standardizing Through Accreditation, Ranking and Guidelines". Stockholm Center for Organizational Research: Stockholm University. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.198.3080. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  57. ^ The components of Euromed Management School's personal development programs appear on the school's website: . Archived from the original on 2009-02-18. Retrieved 2009-02-18.
  58. ^ Hokayem, Jihad El; Kairouz, Akl (2014-03-20). "Euro-med: Public Management and Good Local Governance". Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences. Challenges and Innovations in Management and Leadership. 124: 528–535. doi:10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.02.516. ISSN 1877-0428.
  59. ^ Wang, Liz; Calvano, Lisa (2018-07-04). "Understanding how service learning pedagogy impacts student learning objectives". Journal of Education for Business. 93 (5): 204–212. doi:10.1080/08832323.2018.1444574. ISSN 0883-2323. S2CID 196115077.
  60. ^ Carden, Julia; Jones, Rebecca J.; Passmore, Jonathan (2021). "Defining Self-Awareness in the Context of Adult Development: A Systematic Literature Review". Journal of Management Education (published 2022). 46 (1): 140–177. doi:10.1177/1052562921990065. S2CID 233838278 – via Business Source Primer.
  61. ^ Abraham Maslow, "A Theory of Human Motivation", originally published in the 1943 Psychological Review, number 50, page 838.
  62. ^ Maslow, A. H. (1996). Higher motivation and the new psychology. In E. Hoffman (Ed.), Future visions: The unpublished papers of Abraham Maslow. Thousands Oaks, CA: Sage, p. 89.
  63. ^ "Elements of Change: Personal Development" (PDF). Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  64. ^ Mittelman, Willard (January 1991). "Maslow's Study of Self-Actualization: A Reinterpretation". Journal of Humanistic Psychology. 31 (1): 114–135. doi:10.1177/0022167891311010. ISSN 0022-1678. S2CID 144849415.
  65. ^ Peter F. Drucker, "Managing Oneself", Best of HBR 1999.
  66. ^ Ghoshal, Sumantra; Bartlett, Christopher A. (1997) The Individualized Corporation: A Fundamentally New Approach to Management, HarperCollins, p. 286.
  67. ^ Maister, David H. (2012), "Creating Value through People", Business Performance Excellence, Bloomsbury Information Ltd, pp. 209–214, doi:10.5040/9781472920430.0032, ISBN 978-1-4729-2043-0, retrieved 2022-01-22
  68. ^ Pandit, Shrinivas (2005). Exemplary CEOs: Insights on Organisational Transformation. Tata McGraw-Hill. p. 238. ISBN 0070588120.
  69. ^ Ghosal, Sumantra; Bartlett, Christopher A. (1997). The Individualized Corporation. New York: Harper Business.
  70. ^ Hewlett, Sylvia Ann (2007), Off-Ramps and On-Ramps, Harvard Business School Press. This book shows how women have started to change the traditional career path and how companies adapt to career/lifestyle issues for men as well as for women.
  71. ^ Quast, Lisa. "Career Off-Ramps are Taking an Increasing Toll on Women's Careers". Forbes. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  72. ^ Maister, David H. (2012), "Creating Value through People", Business Performance Excellence, Bloomsbury Information Ltd, pp. 209–214, doi:10.5040/9781472920430.0032, ISBN 978-1-4729-2043-0, retrieved 2022-03-27
  73. ^ Ibarra, Herminia (2003). "2". Working identity : unconventional strategies for reinventing your career. Boston: Harvard Business School Press. pp. 199. ISBN 978-1578517787. Ibarra discusses career-change based on a process moving from possible selves to "anchoring" a new professional identity.
  74. ^ a b c d DeBellis, Pete. "Surveying Employee Preferences for Rewards: A Primer" (PDF). Deloitte Consulting LLP. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  75. ^ Kegan, Robert (2016). An everyone culture becoming a deliberately developmental organization. Harvard Business Review Press. ISBN 978-1625278623. OCLC 941800420.
  76. ^ "What Are Personal Development Objectives? | Clear Review". Clear Review. 2016-12-12. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
  77. ^ Taha, Alam. "Self Help Industry Have A New Competitor – Introducing Peace Quarters". Online PR Media. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  78. ^ Tank, Aytekin (23 July 2019). "Your obsession with self-help books could be hurting your productivity". Fast Company. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  79. ^ Lennart J. Davis (2012). "Essence of sex: addiction as disability". In Robert McRuer, Anna Mollow (ed.). Sex and Disability. Duke University Press. p. 324. ISBN 978-0822351542.

personal, development, confused, with, personality, development, self, improvement, consists, activities, that, develop, person, capabilities, potential, build, human, capital, facilitate, employability, enhance, quality, life, facilitate, realization, dreams,. Not to be confused with personality development Personal development or self improvement consists of activities that develop a person s capabilities and potential build human capital facilitate employability enhance quality of life and facilitate the realization of dreams and aspirations 1 Personal development may take place over the course of an individual s entire lifespan and is not limited to one stage of a person s life It can include official and informal actions for developing others in roles such as teacher guide counselor manager coach or mentor and it is not restricted to self help When personal development takes place in the context of institutions it refers to the methods programs tools techniques and assessment systems offered to support positive adult development at the individual level in organizations 2 need quotation to verify Contents 1 Overview 2 As an industry 2 1 Business to consumer market 2 2 Business to business market 3 Origins 3 1 South Asian traditions 3 2 Islamic personal development 3 3 Aristotle and the Western tradition 3 4 Confucius and the East Asian tradition 4 Contexts 4 1 Psychology 4 1 1 Social psychology 4 1 2 Psychodynamic psychology 4 1 3 Cognitive Behavioral Psychology 4 1 4 Educational psychology 4 2 Early education 4 3 Higher education 4 4 Developmental activities 4 5 The workplace 4 6 Criticism 5 See also 6 ReferencesOverview EditMain article Education Among other things personal development may include the following activities 3 4 5 Social entrepreneurship or civic engagement Participating in festivals conferences or conventions Improving self awareness Improving self knowledge Improving skills and or learning new ones Building or renewing identity self esteem Developing strengths or talents Improving a career Identifying or improving potential Building employability or alternatively human capital Enhancing lifestyle and or the quality of life and time management Improving health Improving wealth or social status Fulfilling aspirations Initiating a life enterprise Defining and executing personal development plans PDPs Improving social relations or emotional intelligence Spiritual identity development and recognitionPersonal development can also include developing other people s skills and personalities 6 This can happen through roles such as those of a teacher or mentor either through a personal competency such as the alleged skill of certain managers in developing the potential of employees or through a professional service such as providing training assessment or coaching 6 Beyond improving oneself and developing others personal development labels a field of practice and research As a field of practice personal development includes personal development methods learning programs assessment systems tools and techniques As a field of research personal development topics appear in psychology journals education research management journals and books and human development economics Any sort of development whether economic political biological organizational or personal requires a framework if one wishes to know whether a change has actually occurred 7 need quotation to verify In the case of personal development an individual often functions as the primary judge of improvement or of regression but the validation of objective improvement requires assessment using standard criteria Personal development frameworks may include Goals or benchmarks that define the end points Strategies or plans for reaching goals Measurement and assessment of progress levels or stages that define milestones along a development path A feedback system to provide information on changesAs an industry EditPersonal development as an industry 8 has several business relationship formats of operating The main ways are business to consumer and business to business 9 However there have been two new ways emerge consumer to business and consumer to consumer 10 The personal development market had a global market size of 38 28 billion dollars in 2019 11 Business to consumer market Edit A wide array of personal development products are available to individuals Examples include self help books education technology neuroenhancement and experiential learning instructor led training motivational speeches seminars social or spiritual retreats Domains Higher education cognitive training Personal finance including fintech Weight loss physical fitness nutrition and beauty enhancement Large group awareness training Sensory deprivation Time management Yoga Martial arts Initiation ceremonies Meditation Asceticism General methods of personal development also include Life coaching or counseling Recommendation systems Nootropics such as caffeinated drinks Brain computer interface Virtual assistantBusiness to business market Edit Some consulting firms such as DDI and FranklinCovey specialize in personal development but as of 2009 update generalist firms operating in the fields of human resources recruitment and organizational strategy such as Hewitt Watson Wyatt Worldwide Hay Group McKinsey Boston Consulting Group and Korn Ferry have entered what they perceive as a growing market not to mention smaller firms and self employed professionals who provide consulting training and coaching non primary source needed Origins EditMajor religions such as the age old Abrahamic and Indian religions as well as 20th century New Age philosophies have variously used practices such as prayer music dance singing chanting poetry writing sports and martial arts Michel Foucault describes in Care of the Self 12 the techniques of epimelia used in ancient Greece and Rome which included dieting exercise sexual abstinence contemplation prayer and confession some of which also became practices within different branches of Christianity Wushu and T ai chi ch uan utilize traditional Chinese techniques including breathing and energy exercises meditation martial arts as well as practices linked to traditional Chinese medicine such as dieting massage and acupuncture Two individual ancient philosophical traditions those of Aristotle Western tradition and Confucius Eastern tradition stand out 13 and contribute to the worldwide view of personal development in the 21st century Elsewhere anonymous or named founders of schools of self development appear endemic note the traditions of the Indian sub continent in this regard 14 15 16 17 South Asian traditions Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2016 Some ancient Indians aspired to beingness wisdom and happiness 18 Paul Oliver suggests that the popularity of Indian traditions for a personal developer may lie in their relative lack of prescriptive doctrine 19 Islamic personal development Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2020 Khurram Murad describes that personal development in Islam is to work towards eternal life in Jannuh There are many avenues in the journey to paradise such as devoted practicing of the laws of the Quran and Sunnah such as optimized service towards the self and others Sincere worship of Allah is the foundation for self discovery and self development 20 Allah has provided ways to help those striving towards eternal life including staying away from things of the world These worldly things can distract those away from the path to paradise It does not mean worldly success is inherently disruptive but can become so when spiritual beliefs do not align with the Sunnah In the end paradise will bring satisfaction to those working on their personal development because of the pleasure that comes from Allah 21 Aristotle and the Western tradition Edit The Greek philosopher Aristotle 384 BCE 322 BCE wrote Nicomachean Ethics in which he defined personal development as a category of phronesis or practical wisdom where the practice of virtues arete leads to eudaimonia 22 commonly translated as happiness but more accurately understood as human flourishing or living well 23 Aristotle continues to influence the Western concept of personal development to this day update particularly in the economics of human development 24 and in positive psychology 25 26 Confucius and the East Asian tradition Edit In Chinese tradition Confucius around 551 BCE 479 BCE founded an ongoing philosophy His ideas continue to influence family values education and personnel management in China and East Asia In his Great Learning Confucius wrote The ancients who wished to illustrate illustrious virtue throughout the kingdom first ordered well their own states Wishing to order well their states they first regulated their families Wishing to regulate their families they first cultivated their persons Wishing to cultivate their persons they first rectified their hearts Wishing to rectify their hearts they first sought to be sincere in their thoughts Wishing to be sincere in their thoughts they first extended to the utmost their knowledge Such extension of knowledge lay in the investigation of things 27 Contexts EditPsychology Edit Psychology became linked to personal development in the early 20th century starting with the research efforts of Alfred Adler 1870 1937 and Carl Jung 1875 1961 Adler refused to limit psychology to analysis alone He made the important point that aspirations focus on looking forward and do not limit themselves to unconscious drives or to childhood experiences 28 He also originated the concepts of lifestyle 1929 he defined lifestyle as an individual s characteristic approach to life in facing problems and of self image 28 as a concept that influenced management under the heading of work life balance also known as the equilibrium between a person s career and personal life 29 Carl Gustav Jung made contributions to personal development with his concept of individuation which he saw as the drive of the individual to achieve the wholeness and balance of the Self 30 Daniel Levinson 1920 1994 developed Jung s early concept of life stages and included a sociological perspective Levinson proposed that personal development comes under the influence throughout life of aspirations which he called the Dream Whatever the nature of his Dream a young man has the developmental task of giving it greater definition and finding ways to live it out It makes a great difference in his growth whether his initial life structure is consonant with and infused by the Dream or opposed to it If the Dream remains unconnected to his life it may simply die and with it his sense of aliveness and purpose 31 Research on success in reaching goals as undertaken by Albert Bandura 1925 2021 suggested that self efficacy 32 best explains why people with the same level of knowledge and skills get very different results Having self efficacy leads to an increased likelihood of success According to Bandura self confidence functions as a powerful predictor of success because 33 It causes you to expect to succeed It allows you take risks and set challenging goals It helps you keep trying if at first you do not succeed It helps you control emotions and fears when life may throw more difficult things your wayIn 1998 Martin Seligman won election to a one year term as President of the American Psychological Association and proposed a new focus on healthy individuals 34 35 rather than on pathology he created the positive psychology current We have discovered that there is a set of human strengths that are the most likely buffers against mental illness courage optimism interpersonal skill work ethic hope honesty and perseverance Much of the task of prevention will be to create a science of human strength whose mission will be to foster these virtues in young people 36 full citation needed Martin E P Seligman Positive Psychology The Scientific and Practical Explorations of Human Strengths Part 1 Chapter 1 37 Social psychology Edit Social psychology 38 heavily emphasizes and focuses on human behavior and how individuals interact with others in society 39 Infants develop socially by creating trusting and dependent relationships with others namely parental figures They learn how to act and treat other people based on the example of parental figures and other adults they interact with often 40 Toddlers further develop social skills Additionally they begin to gain a desire for autonomy and grow more and more independent as they grow older The balance of social involvement and autonomy varies per person but normally autonomous behavior increases with age Some studies suggest that selfishness begins to diminish and prosocial behaviors increase between the ages of six years old to twelve years old 41 Additionally the years of adulthood are times of development self actualization relational and occupational development loss and coping skills development etc affected by those around us parents co workers romantic partners and children Social psychology draws from many other psychological theories and principles yet views them through a lens of social interaction Psychodynamic psychology Edit The psychodynamic view of personal development varies from other perspectives Namely that the development of our traits personalities and thinking patterns are predominantly subconscious 42 Psychodynamic theory suggests these subconscious changes which emerge as external actions are formed from suppressed sexual and aggressive urges and other internalized conflicts 43 Sigmund Freud and other notable psychodynamic theorists postulate that these repressed cognitions form during childhood and adolescence Conscious development would then be digging up these repressed memories and feelings Once repressed memories and emotions are discovered an individual can sift through them and receive healthy closure 44 Much if not all of conscious development occurs with the aid of a trained psychodynamic therapist Cognitive Behavioral Psychology Edit Cognitive behavioral views on personal development follow traditional patterns of personal development behavior modification cognitive reframing and successive approximation being some of the more notable techniques 45 An individual is seen as in control of their actions and their thoughts though self mastery is required With behavior modification individuals will develop personal skills and traits by altering their behavior independent of their emotions 45 For example a person may feel intense anger but would still behave in a positive manner They are able to suppress their emotions and act in a more socially acceptable way The accumulation of these efforts would change the person into a more patient individual Cognitive reframing plays an instrumental role in personal development 46 Cognitive behavioral psychologists believe that how we view events is more important than the event itself Thus if one can view negative events in beneficial ways they can progress and develop with fewer setbacks 47 Successive approximation or shaping most closely aligns with personal development Successive approximation is when one desires a final result but takes incremental steps to achieve the result Normally each successful step towards the final goal is rewarded until the goal is achieved Personal development if it is to be long lasting is achieved incrementally 45 Educational psychology Edit Educational psychology focuses on the human learning experience learning and teaching methods aptitude testing and so on 48 Educational psychology seeks to further personal development by increasing one s ability to learn retain information and apply knowledge to real world experiences If one is able to increase efficacious learning they are better equipped for personal development Early education Edit Education offers children the opportunity to begin personal development at a young age The curriculum taught at school must be carefully planned and managed in order to successfully promote personal development 49 Providing an environment for children that allows for quality social relationships to be made and clearly communicated objectives and aims is key to their development If early education fails to meet these qualifications it can greatly stunt development in children hindering their success in education as well as society They can fall behind in development compared to peers of the same age group 49 Higher education Edit During the 1960s a large increase in the number of students on American campuses 50 led to research on the personal development needs of undergraduate students Arthur Chickering defined seven vectors of personal development 51 for young adults during their undergraduate years Developing competence Managing emotions Achieving autonomy and interdependence Developing mature interpersonal relationships Establishing personal identity Developing purpose Developing integrityIn the UK personal development took a central place in university policy in 1997 when the Dearing Report 52 53 declared that universities should go beyond academic teaching to provide students with personal development 54 In 2001 a Quality Assessment Agency for UK universities produced guidelines 55 for universities to enhance personal development as a structured and supported process undertaken by an individual to reflect upon their own learning performance and or achievement and to plan for their personal educational and career development objectives related explicitly to student development to improve the capacity of students to understand what and how they are learning and to review plan and take responsibility for their own learningIn the 1990s business schools began to set up specific personal development programs for leadership and career orientation and in 1998 the European Foundation for Management Development set up the EQUIS accreditation system which specified that personal development must form part of the learning process through internships working on team projects and going abroad for work or exchange programs 56 citation needed The first personal development certification required for business school graduation originated in 2002 as a partnership between Metizo a personal development consulting firm and the Euromed Management School 57 in Marseilles students must not only complete assignments but also demonstrate self awareness and achievement of personal development competencies 58 As an academic department personal development as a specific discipline is often associated with business schools 59 As an area of research personal development draws on links to other academic disciplines Education for questions of learning and assessment Psychology for motivation and personality Sociology for identity and social networks Economics for human capital and economic value Philosophy for ethics and self reflectionDevelopmental activities Edit Personal Development can include gaining self awareness of the course of one s lifespan It includes multiple definitions but is different from self knowledge Self awareness is more in depth and explores the conscious and unconscious aspects of ourselves We are able to gain self awareness through socializing and communicating according to the social behaviorism view Self awareness can also be a positive intrapersonal experience where one is able to reflect during a moment of action or past actions Becoming more self aware can help us to increase our emotional intelligence leadership skills and performance 60 The workplace Edit Abraham Maslow 1908 1970 proposed a hierarchy of needs with self actualization at the top defined as the desire to become more and more what one is to become everything that one is capable of becoming In other words self actualization is the ambition to become a better version of oneself to become everything one is capable of being 61 Since Maslow himself believed that only a small minority of people self actualize he estimated one percent 62 his hierarchy of needs had the consequence that organizations came to regard self actualization or personal development as occurring at the top of the organizational pyramid while openness and job security in the workplace would fulfill the needs of the mass of employees 63 64 As organizations and labor markets became more global responsibility for development shifted from the company to the individual clarification needed In 1999 management thinker Peter Drucker wrote in the Harvard Business Review We live in an age of unprecedented opportunity if you ve got ambition and smarts you can rise to the top of your chosen profession regardless of where you started out But with opportunity comes responsibility Companies today aren t managing their employees careers knowledge workers must effectively be their own chief executive officers It s up to you to carve out your place to know when to change course and to keep yourself engaged and productive during a work life that may span some 50 years 65 page needed Management professors Sumantra Ghoshal of the London Business School and Christopher Bartlett of the Harvard Business School wrote in 1997 that companies must manage people individually and establish a new work contract 66 On the one hand the company must allegedly recognize that personal development creates economic value market performance flows not from the omnipotent wisdom of top managers but from the initiative creativity and skills of all employees 67 On the other hand employees should recognize that their work includes personal development and embrace the invigorating force of continuous learning and personal development 68 The 1997 publication of Ghoshal s and Bartlett s Individualized Corporation corresponded to a change in career development from a system of predefined paths defined by companies to a strategy defined by the individual and matched to the needs of organizations in an open landscape of possibilities 69 non primary source needed Another contribution to the study of career development came with the recognition that women s careers show specific personal needs and different development paths from men The 2007 study of women s careers by Sylvia Ann Hewlett Off Ramps and On Ramps 70 had a major impact on the way companies view careers 71 72 Further work on the career as a personal development process came from study by Herminia Ibarra in her Working Identity on the relationship with career change and identity change 73 indicating that priorities of work and lifestyle continually develop through life Personal development programs in companies fall into two categories the provision of employee benefits and the fostering of development strategies Employee surveys may help organizations find out personal development needs preferences and problems and they use the results to design benefits programs 74 Typical programs in this category include 74 Work life balance Time management Stress management Health programs CounselingAs an investment personal development programs have the goal of increasing human capital or improving productivity innovation or quality Proponents actually see such programs not as a cost but as an investment with results linked to an organization s strategic development goals 75 Employees gain access to these investment oriented programs by selection according to the value and future potential of the employee usually defined in a talent management architecture including populations such as new hires perceived high potential employees perceived key employees sales staff research staff and perceived future leaders 74 Organizations may also offer other non investment oriented programs to many or even all employees Personal development also forms an element in management tools such as personal development planning assessing one s level of ability using a competency grid or getting feedback from a 360 questionnaire filled in by colleagues at different levels in the organization 74 A common criticism 76 surrounding personal development programs is that they are often treated as an arbitrary performance management tool to pay lip service to but ultimately ignored As such many companies have decided to replace personal development programs with SMART Personal Development Objectives which are regularly reviewed and updated Personal Development Objectives help employees achieve career goals and improve overall performance Criticism Edit Scholars have targeted self help claims as misleading and incorrect In 2005 Steve Salerno portrayed the American self help movement he uses the acronym SHAM the Self Help and Actualization Movement not only as ineffective in achieving its goals but also as socially harmful and that self help customers keep investing more money in these services regardless of their effectiveness 77 Others similarly point out that with self help books supply increases the demand The more people read them the more they think they need them more like an addiction than an alliance 78 Self help writers have been described as working in the area of the ideological the imagined the narrativized although a veneer of scientism permeates the ir work there is also an underlying armature of moralizing 79 See also EditCoaching End of history illusion Holland Codes Human Potential Movement Know thyself Life planning Life skills Micropsychoanalysis Self discovery Training and developmentReferences Edit Personal Development definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary dictionary cambridge org Retrieved 2020 12 10 Bob Aubrey 2010 Managing Your Aspirations Developing Personal Enterprise in the Global Workplace McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0071311786 p 9 Clegg Sue Bradley Sally 2013 Models of Personal Development Planning practice and processes British Educational Research Journal 32 1 57 76 doi 10 1080 01411920500402003 ISSN 0141 1926 Gough David Kiwan Dina Suttcliffe Katy Simpson Donald Houghton Nicholas 2006 A systematic map and synthesis review of the effectiveness of personal development planning for improving student learning EPPI Centre a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Anderson Brittney K Meyer John P Vaters Chelsea Espinoza Jose A 2020 08 01 Measuring Personal Growth and Development in Context Evidence of Validity in Educational and Work Settings Journal of Happiness Studies 21 6 2141 2167 doi 10 1007 s10902 019 00176 w hdl 20 500 11937 76647 ISSN 1573 7780 S2CID 203449127 a b Phenix Philip H 1982 Promoting Personal Development through Teaching Teachers College Record The Voice of Scholarship in Education 84 2 301 316 doi 10 1177 016146818208400206 ISSN 0161 4681 S2CID 140791247 Bob Aubrey Measure of Man leading human development McGraw Hill 2016 ISBN 978 9814660648 p 15 Some sources recognize personal development as an industry see for example Cullen John G 2009 How to sell your soul and still get into Heaven Steven Covey s epiphany inducing technology of effective selfhood PDF Human Relations Sage Publications 62 8 1231 1254 doi 10 1177 0018726709334493 ISSN 0018 7267 S2CID 145181366 The growth of the personal development industry and its gurus continues to be resisted across a number of genres And Grant Anthony M Blythe O Hara November 2006 The self presentation of commercial Australian life coaching schools Cause for concern PDF International Coaching Psychology Review Leicester The British Psychological Society 1 2 21 33 29 doi 10 53841 bpsicpr 2006 1 2 21 ISSN 1750 2764 S2CID 79131666 Retrieved 2010 04 28 much of the commercial life coaching and personal development industry is grounded more on hyperbole and rhetoric than solid behavioural science Grant 2001 And Grant Anthony M Michael J Cavanagh December 2007 Evidence based coaching Flourishing or languishing Australian Psychologist Australian Psychological Society 42 4 239 254 doi 10 1080 00050060701648175 ISSN 1742 9544 To flourish coaching psychology needs to remain clearly differentiated from the frequently sensationalistic and pseudoscientific facets of the personal development industry while at the same time engaging in the development of the wider coaching industry Differences Between B2C amp B2B in Business Systems Small Business Chron com Retrieved 2021 11 20 Marketing Is Everything Harvard Business Review 1991 01 01 ISSN 0017 8012 Retrieved 2020 12 10 Personal Development Market Size Report 2020 2027 www grandviewresearch com Retrieved 2020 12 10 Foucault Michel ed 1986 Care of the Self Vol 2 Random House Translated from the French Le Souci de Soi editions Gallimard 1984 Part Two of Foucault s book describes the technique of caring for the soul falling in the category of epimeleia from the Greek to the classic Roman period and on into the early stages of the age of Christianity van der Kooij Jacomijn C de Ruyter Doret J Miedema Siebren 2015 07 03 The influence of moral education on the personal worldview of students Journal of Moral Education 44 3 346 363 doi 10 1080 03057240 2015 1048790 ISSN 0305 7240 S2CID 17075284 For example Singhvi L M 2003 Jainism In Palmer Martin ed Faith in Conservation New Approaches to Religions and the Environment World Bank Directions in Development Washington DC World Bank Publications pp 107 108 ISBN 978 0821355596 Retrieved 20 September 2020 Jains believe that to attain the higher stages of personal development lay people must adhere to the three jewels rarna traya namely enlightened worldview true knowledge and conduct based on enlightened worldview and true knowledge For example Hershock Peter D 2005 The Buddhist Roots of Chan Chan Buddhism Dimensions of Asian spirituality Vol 2 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 26 ISBN 978 0824828356 Retrieved 20 September 2020 The Theravada takes the arhat or saint to be the ideal of personal development a Buddhist practitioner who has realized the cessation of all entangling forms of thought and action and who has stopped making any karma that would continue to spin the wheel of birth and death For example Mansukhani Gobind Singh 1968 Introduction to Sikhism 100 Basic Questions and Answers on Sikh Religion and History 2 ed India Book House p 60 Retrieved 20 September 2020 What are the stages in spiritual development according to Sikhism Spiritual attainment is a matter of personal development For example Scheid Daniel P 2016 Hindu Traditions Dharmic Ecology The Cosmic Common Good Religious Grounds for Ecological Ethics New York Oxford University Press p 128 ISBN 978 0199359431 Retrieved 20 September 2020 Dharma encompasses a theory of virtue and personal development as well as stipulating detailed ethical rules and the religious obligations one must fulfil Ventegodt Soren Joav Merrick Niels Jorgen Andersen Oct 2003 Quality of Life Theory III Maslow Revisited The Scientific World Journal Finland Corpus Alienum Oy 3 3 1050 1057 doi 10 1100 tsw 2003 84 ISSN 1537 744X PMC 5974881 PMID 14570995 In ancient India people talked about reaching the level of existence called sat sit ananda beingness wisdom and happiness as one Oliver Paul 2014 Yoga mysticism and spiritual consciousness Hinduism and the 1960s The Rise of a Counter Culture London Bloomsbury Publishing p 132 ISBN 978 1472530783 Retrieved 20 September 2020 Young people of the 1960s sought philosophies and world views which emphasized the internal life and the search for personal development This perhaps explains the attraction of Indian religious experience at the time in the sense that it focused less on adherence to scriptures and formal teachings and more on the personal spiritual search of the individual Mahmood Arshad Arshad Mohd Anuar Ahmed Adeel Akhtar Sohail Khan Shahid 2018 06 04 Spiritual intelligence research within human resource development a thematic review Management Research Review 41 8 987 1006 doi 10 1108 mrr 03 2017 0073 ISSN 2040 8269 S2CID 158831200 Murad Khurram 2006 Self Development Pataudi House Daryagunj New Delhi Adam Publishers amp Distributors pp 8 10 ISBN 8174354824 Nicomachean Ethics translated by W D Ross Basic Works of Aristotle section 1142 Online in The Internet Classics Archive of MIT http classics mit edu Aristotle nicomachaen html Martha Nussbaum The Fragility of Goodness Cambridge University Press discusses why the English word happiness does not describe Aristotle s concept of eudaimonia pages 1 6 Nobel Prize winner Amartya Sen identifies economic development with Aristotle s concepts of individual development in his co authored book written with Aristotle scholar Nussbaum Nussbaum Martha Sen Amartya eds 1993 The Quality of Life Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0198283959 And in his general book published a year after receiving the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1998 Sen Amartya 1999 Development as Freedom Oxford Oxford University Press Daniel Seligman explicitly identifies the goals of positive psychology with Aristotle s idea of the Good Life and eudaimonia in Seligman Martin E P 2002 Authentic Happiness Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment New York Free Press ISBN 0743222970 Paperback edition Free Press 2004 ISBN 0743222989 Marshall Chris Hack your brain Rapid way to change Confucius Great Learning translated by James Legge Provided online in The Internet Classics Archive of MIT a b Heinz Ansbacher and Rowena R Ansbacher 1964 Individual Psychology of Alfred Adler Basic Books 1956 See especially chapter 3 on Finalism and Fiction and chapter 7 on the Style of Life Lockwood N R 2003 Work life balance Challenges and Solutions SHRM Research USA 2 10 Jung saw individuation as a process of psychological differentiation having for its goal the development of the individual personality C G Jung Psychological Types Collected Works Vol 6 par 757 Daniel Levinson Seasons of a Man s Life Ballantine Press 1978 pp 91 92 Albert Bandura 1997 Self efficacy The exercise of control New York Freeman Albert Bandura Self Efficacy The Exercise of Control W H Freeman and Company New York 1998 p 184 Sze David 17 June 2015 The Father of Positive Psychology and His Two Theories of Happiness Retrieved 7 December 2019 Who is Martin Seligman and What Does He Do 20 September 2016 Martin Seligman Building Human Strength Psychology s Forgotten Mission Vol 29 No 1 January 1998 Lopez Shane J Pedrotti Jennifer Teramoto Snyder C R 2018 08 06 Positive Psychology The Scientific and Practical Explorations of Human Strengths SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1 5443 4175 0 APA org Parke Ross D 2020 Social Development Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Psychology doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190236557 013 520 ISBN 978 0 19 023655 7 The St Petersburg USA Orphanage Research Team 2008 I Theoretical Empirical and Practical Rationale Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development 73 3 vii 295 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5834 2008 00483 x PMC 2702123 PMID 19121007 Self Understanding and Self Regulation in Middle Childhood Development During Middle Childhood The Years From Six to Twelve National Academies Press US 1984 Bargh J A Morsella E 2008 The Unconscious Mind Perspectives on Psychological Science 3 1 73 79 doi 10 1111 j 1745 6916 2008 00064 x PMC 2440575 PMID 18584056 Glen o Gabbard M D 2014 Psychodynamic Psychiatry in Clinical Practice Fifth Edition American Psychiatric Pub ISBN 978 1585624430 The distancing of emotion in psychotherapy a b c What Is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Goodfriend W amp Arriaga X B 2018 Cognitive reframing of intimate partner aggression Social and contextual influences International journal of environmental research and public health 15 11 2464 Levy Hannah C Stevens Kimberly T Tolin David F 2021 07 23 Research Review A meta analysis of relapse rates in cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety and related disorders in youth Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 63 3 252 260 doi 10 1111 jcpp 13486 ISSN 0021 9630 PMID 34296755 S2CID 236198764 Educational Psychology Promotes Teaching and Learning a b Tattum D amp Tattum E 2017 Social education and personal development Routledge See for example the figures for Cuba Educacion Superior Cuban Statistics and Related Publications Centro de Estudios de Poblacion y Desarrollo de la Oficina Nacional de Estadisticas Retrieved 2009 07 17 Arthur Chickering Education and Identity San Francisco Jossey Bass 1969 second edition updated with Linda Reisser published in 1993 by Jossey Bass The Dearing Report of 1997 see the Leeds University website http www leeds ac uk educol ncihe Chalkley Brian March 1998 Arena Symposium Dearing and Geography Journal of Geography in Higher Education 22 1 55 60 doi 10 1080 03098269886029 ISSN 0309 8265 Dearing Ron Higher Education in the Learning Society Retrieved 12 December 2019 These definitions and guidelines appear on the UK Academy of Higher Education website Higher Education Academy Personal development planning PDP page Archived from the original on 2008 12 20 Retrieved 2008 12 20 Hedmo Sahlin Andersson amp Wedlin Tina Kerstin amp Linda The Emergence of a European Regulatory Field of Management Education Standardizing Through Accreditation Ranking and Guidelines Stockholm Center for Organizational Research Stockholm University CiteSeerX 10 1 1 198 3080 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The components of Euromed Management School s personal development programs appear on the school s website Euromed Management s teaching approach School of Management Archived from the original on 2009 02 18 Retrieved 2009 02 18 Hokayem Jihad El Kairouz Akl 2014 03 20 Euro med Public Management and Good Local Governance Procedia Social and Behavioral Sciences Challenges and Innovations in Management and Leadership 124 528 535 doi 10 1016 j sbspro 2014 02 516 ISSN 1877 0428 Wang Liz Calvano Lisa 2018 07 04 Understanding how service learning pedagogy impacts student learning objectives Journal of Education for Business 93 5 204 212 doi 10 1080 08832323 2018 1444574 ISSN 0883 2323 S2CID 196115077 Carden Julia Jones Rebecca J Passmore Jonathan 2021 Defining Self Awareness in the Context of Adult Development A Systematic Literature Review Journal of Management Education published 2022 46 1 140 177 doi 10 1177 1052562921990065 S2CID 233838278 via Business Source Primer Abraham Maslow A Theory of Human Motivation originally published in the 1943 Psychological Review number 50 page 838 Maslow A H 1996 Higher motivation and the new psychology In E Hoffman Ed Future visions The unpublished papers of Abraham Maslow Thousands Oaks CA Sage p 89 Elements of Change Personal Development PDF Retrieved 7 December 2019 Mittelman Willard January 1991 Maslow s Study of Self Actualization A Reinterpretation Journal of Humanistic Psychology 31 1 114 135 doi 10 1177 0022167891311010 ISSN 0022 1678 S2CID 144849415 Peter F Drucker Managing Oneself Best of HBR 1999 Ghoshal Sumantra Bartlett Christopher A 1997 The Individualized Corporation A Fundamentally New Approach to Management HarperCollins p 286 Maister David H 2012 Creating Value through People Business Performance Excellence Bloomsbury Information Ltd pp 209 214 doi 10 5040 9781472920430 0032 ISBN 978 1 4729 2043 0 retrieved 2022 01 22 Pandit Shrinivas 2005 Exemplary CEOs Insights on Organisational Transformation Tata McGraw Hill p 238 ISBN 0070588120 Ghosal Sumantra Bartlett Christopher A 1997 The Individualized Corporation New York Harper Business Hewlett Sylvia Ann 2007 Off Ramps and On Ramps Harvard Business School Press This book shows how women have started to change the traditional career path and how companies adapt to career lifestyle issues for men as well as for women Quast Lisa Career Off Ramps are Taking an Increasing Toll on Women s Careers Forbes Retrieved 7 December 2019 Maister David H 2012 Creating Value through People Business Performance Excellence Bloomsbury Information Ltd pp 209 214 doi 10 5040 9781472920430 0032 ISBN 978 1 4729 2043 0 retrieved 2022 03 27 Ibarra Herminia 2003 2 Working identity unconventional strategies for reinventing your career Boston Harvard Business School Press pp 199 ISBN 978 1578517787 Ibarra discusses career change based on a process moving from possible selves to anchoring a new professional identity a b c d DeBellis Pete Surveying Employee Preferences for Rewards A Primer PDF Deloitte Consulting LLP Retrieved 7 December 2019 Kegan Robert 2016 An everyone culture becoming a deliberately developmental organization Harvard Business Review Press ISBN 978 1625278623 OCLC 941800420 What Are Personal Development Objectives Clear Review Clear Review 2016 12 12 Retrieved 2017 11 10 Taha Alam Self Help Industry Have A New Competitor Introducing Peace Quarters Online PR Media Retrieved 12 December 2019 Tank Aytekin 23 July 2019 Your obsession with self help books could be hurting your productivity Fast Company Retrieved 12 December 2019 Lennart J Davis 2012 Essence of sex addiction as disability In Robert McRuer Anna Mollow ed Sex and Disability Duke University Press p 324 ISBN 978 0822351542 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Personal development Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Personal development amp oldid 1177863362, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.