Fr. 126.00

Self-Regulation Theory - How Optimal Adjustment Maximizes Gain

English · Hardback

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Description

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The author's Self-Regulation Theory explains how people optimize their adjustments in order to maximize their gains toward getting what they want from their environments. It describes the reciprocal effects of human adjustment and environmental change. The interaction among what regulators expect, how they choose, and what they do affects and is affected by optimal and suboptimal environmental contingencies. Although Self-Regulation Theory is consistent with current behavioral, cognitive, and cognitive-behavioral models of adjustment, it goes beyond them by describing the problem-solving and solution-doing mechanisms that lead to optimal adjustments and maximal gains. This permits the theory to predict precise relationships between self-regulated gain towards goal attainment and the consequences of goal attainment.

Although the conclusions do not contradict generally accepted views, they challenge current perspectives on how to define and analyze the problem of adaptation. By separating the mechanism of self-regulation from the environmental effect it produces, we can examine the unique contribution of the self-regulating system to its own success or failure. Also, by defining environmental optimalities from the perspective of the regulator, we can assess how the same menu of environmental opportunities changes from being suboptimal to optimal as a function of the regulator's success in adjusting.

List of contents










Contents
Tables and Figures
Introduction
The Problem of Adaptation
The Nature of Problem Solving
The Theory of Self-Regulation
Self-Regulated Thinking
Self-Regulated Doing
Maximum Gain
Self-Determined Gain
Innovative Gain
Appendix
Bibliography
Index


About the author

DENNIS E. MITHAUG is Professor and Chair, Department of Special Education, at Teachers College/Columbia University. He is the author of Self-Determined Kids: Raising Satisfied and Successful Children (1991), Prevocational Training for Retarded Students (1981), and Vocational Training for Mentally Retarded Adults (1980), and other books and journal articles.

Product details

Authors Dennis Mithaug, Dennis E. Mithaug
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Age Recommendation ages 7 to 17
Product format Hardback
Released 28.02.1993
 
EAN 9780275944223
ISBN 978-0-275-94422-3
No. of pages 256
Weight 595 g
Subjects Guides > Spirituality > Esoterics

PSYCHOLOGY / Personality, The self, ego, identity, personality, Psychology: the self, ego, identity, personality, Behavioural theory (Behaviourism), Behaviourism, Behavioural theory, PSYCHOLOGY / Psychotherapy / Behaviorism, Business: Management

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