JEFFREY S.
MANZANO, BS Psych
                       THEORIES OF PERSONALITY                                                           Maybe you read something unpleasant about an actor in the film. Or you may feel more
                                                                                                         content because your grades are improving.
                George Kelly
                                                                                                    2) Individuality Corollary
                                                                                                         Individual differences in interpreting events.
    “It occurred to me that what seemed true of myself was probably no                                   People differ from one another in how they perceive or interpret
           less true of others. If I initiated my actions, so did they.”                                 an event. Because of construing events differently, people form
                                                                                                         different constructs. Our constructs do not so much reflect the
                                                                                                         objective reality of an event as they constitute the unique
◘    Each person creates a set of cognitive constructs about the                                         interpretation each of us places on it.
     environment. By that he meant that we interpret and organize the
     events and social relationships of our lives in a system or pattern.
                                                                                                    3) Organization Corollary
◘    On the basis of this pattern, we make predictions about ourselves
     and about other people and events, and we use these predictions to                                  Relationships among constructs.
     formulate our responses and guide our actions.                                                      We arrange our constructs in patterns, according to our view
◘    Therefore, to understand personality, we must first understand our                                   of their similarities and differences. People who hold similar
     patterns, the ways we organize or construct our world.                                              constructs may still differ from one another if they organize
◘    According to Kelly, our interpretation of events is more important than                             those constructs in different patterns. Typically, we organize
     the events themselves.                                                                              our constructs into a hierarchy, with some constructs
◘    People as a scientist.                                                                              subordinate to others.
◘    He proposed that the way to understand someone’s personality is to                                  For example, the construct good may include among its subordinates the constructs
     examine his or her personal constructs.                                                             “intelligent” and “moral”. Thus, if we meet someone who fits our idea of a good person,
◘    At best, Kelly’s theory could be considered a precursor to                                          we anticipate that he or she will also have the attributes of intelligence and high moral
     contemporary cognitive psychology.                                                                  standards.
                                                                                                    4) Dichotomy Corollary
        PERSONAL CONSTRUCT THEORY                                                                        Two mutually exclusive alternatives.
                                                                                                         Constructs are bipolar; This is necessary if we are to anticipate
 People perceive and organize their world of experiences the same                                       future events correctly. Just as we note similarities among
  way scientists do, by formulating hypotheses about the environment                                     people or events, we must also account for dissimilarities.
  and testing them against the reality of daily life.
                                                                                                         For example, Honesty vs. Dishonesty. . If we did not make this distinction—if we assumed
 This personal interpreting, explaining, or construing of experience
                                                                                                         that all people are honest—then forming a construct about honesty would not help us
  represents our unique view of events, the pattern within which we
  place them.                                                                                            anticipate or predict anything about people we might meet in the future. A person can
                                                                                                         be expected to be honest only in contrast to someone who is expected to be dishonest.
 CONSTRUCT: a person’s unique way of looking at life, an
  intellectual hypothesis devised to explain or interpret events.
 CONSTRUCTIVE ALTERNAVISM: the view that                                                           5) Choice Corollary
  we are not controlled by our constructs but are free to revise or                                      Freedom of choice
  replace them with other alternatives.                                                                  We choose the alternative for each construct that works best
 Kelly’s personal construct theory is presented in a scientific format,                                  for us, the one that allows us to predict the outcome of
  organized into a fundamental postulate and 11 corollaries. The                                         anticipated events (a choice between security and adventure).
  fundamental postulate states that: “our psychological processes
  are directed by the ways in which we anticipate events.”                                          6) Range Corollary
                                                                                                         The range of convenience.
                                                                                                         Our constructs may apply to many situations or people, or
                                                                                                         they may be limited to a single person or situation.
          THE ELEVEN COROLLARIES OF
                                                                                                         Consider the construct tall versus short, which obviously has a limited range of
                  PERSONAL                                                                               convenience or applicability. It can be useful with respect to buildings, trees, or
              CONSTRUCT THEORY                                                                           basketball players, but it is of no value in describing a pizza or the weather.
      1) Construction Corollary                                                                     7) Experience Corollary
           Similarities among repeated events.                                                           Exposure to new experiences
           No life event or experience could be reproduced exactly as it                                 We continually test our constructs against life’s experiences to
           occurred the first time. An event can be repeated, but it will not                             make sure they remain useful. Constructs that worked for us at
           be experienced in precisely the same way.                                                     age 16 may be useless,or even harmful,at age 40. In the
                                                                                                         intervening years,our experiences will have led us to revise our
           For example, if you watch a movie today that you first saw last month, your experience
                                                                                                         construct system. Therefore, we must reconstrue our
           of it will be different the second time. Your mood may not be the same, and during the
                                                                                                         experiences and constructs accordingly.
           elapsed month you were exposed to events that affected your attitudes and emotions.
                                                                                                                          JEFFREY S. MANZANO, BS Psych
8) Modulation Corollary                                                                                  QUESTIONS ABOUT HUMAN NATURE
     Adapting to new experiences
     We may modify our constructs as a function of new
     experiences.
     For example, if a bigoted person applies the construct high intelligence versus low
     intelligence in a fixed or impermeable way to people of a certain ethnic minority group,
     believing that all members of this group have low intelligence, then new experiences will
     not penetrate or alter this belief. The prejudiced person will not modify that construct,
     no matter how many highly intelligent people of that ethnic group he or she meets. The
     construct is a barrier to learning and to new ideas.
9) Fragmentation Corollary
     Competition among constructs.
     Kelly believed that within our construct system some individual
     constructs might be incompatible, even though they coexist                                   ◘ Kelly’s personality theory presents an optimistic, even
     within the overall pattern.We may sometimes have                                               flattering, image of human nature.
     contradictory or inconsistent subordinate constructs within our                              ◘ He believed we are the authors, not the victims, of our
     overall construct system. According to Kelly, this is the process
                                                                                                    destiny.
     by which we tolerate subordinate inconsistencies without
     damaging our overall construct system.
                                                                                                  ◘ His view endows us with free will and we are able to
                                                                                                    change when necessary by revising old constructs and
     Consider the following situation. A man meets a woman in a psychology class and decides
                                                                                                    forming new ones.
     that he is attracted to her. She is also a psychology major, and her interests seem
     similar to his. She fits the friend alternative of the construct friend versus enemy.        ◘ Our direction is clearly toward the future because we
     Thus, she is someone to be liked and respected. He sees her the next day at a political        formulate constructs to predict or anticipate events.
     rally and is disappointed to find her loudly expressing conservative views that are the      ◘ Kelly did not accept historical determinism. We need
     opposite of his own liberal opinions. Now she also fits the opposite alternative of the        no push from internal drives or needs because we are
     construct. She has become the enemy.                                                           motivated by the fact of being alive.
                                                                                                  ◘ He noted that we are not totally determined by
10) Commonality Corollary
                                                                                                    environmental influences. We live by constructs based
     Similarities among people in interpreting events.
     Although our individual constructs are unique to us, people in                                 on our interpretation of events.
     compatible groups or cultures may hold similar constructs.                                   ◘ Our goal is to establish a construct system that
     Consider a group of people with the same cultural norms and ideals. Their anticipations
                                                                                                    enables us to predict events.
     and expectations of one another will have much in common and they will construe many of
     their experiences in the same way. People from the same culture may show a resemblance
     in their behaviors and characteristics even though they are exposed to different life
     events.
11) Sociality Corollary
     Interpersonal relationships.
     We try to understand how other people think and predict what
     they will do, and we modify our behavior accordingly.
     Construing another person’s constructs is something we do routinely. Think about driving
     a car. We stake our lives on being able to anticipate what the other drivers on the road
     will do. It is only when we can predict with some certainty what drivers, friends, bosses,
     or teachers will do that we can adjust our behaviors to theirs. And while we are adapting
     to them, they are doing the same to us.