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Test Bank & Instructor’s Manual for Theories of Personality, 11th Edition by Duane P. Schultz

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Test Bank & Instructor’s Manual for Theories of Personality, 11th Edition by Duane P. Schultz Test Bank & Instructor’s Manual for Theories of Personality, 11th Edition by Duane P. Schultz Chapter 1—Personality: What It Is and Why You Should Care MULTIPLE CHOICE 1. We research theories of personality to: a. establish one of them as superior amongst all. b. describe their use for real-world problems. c. show how personality theories are superior to any other theories. d. generalize that all people are the same across cultures. ANS: B PTS: 1 A-HEAD: Take a Look at the Word REF: 2 FEEDBACK: We discuss research conducted on these theories of personality to describe their use for real-world problems of diagnosis and therapy. It's important to recognize that personality theorists from the last century rarely considered the importance of ethnic and cultural differences. 2. Which of the following is true about personality? a. Personality is a characteristic exhibited by only a few people. b. Personality can limit or expand the choices one has in life. c. Personality is characterized by most psychologists as either terrific or terrible. d. Personality remains constant in all circumstances. ANS: B PTS: 1 A-HEAD: Take a Look at the Word REF: 2 FEEDBACK: Your personality can limit or expand your options and choices in life, prevent you from sharing certain experiences, or enable you to take full advantage of them. It restricts, constrains, and holds back some people and opens up the world of new opportunities to others. 3. Which of the following statements can be used to sum up personality? a. Personality is how we perceive ourselves and also how others perceive us. b. Personality shows that we are deterministic, mechanical, and do not change throughout our lives. c. Personality is entirely the reflection of fantasies and past recollections of repressed memories. d. Personality is entirely based on how we were treated during our childhood years. ANS: A PTS: 1 A-HEAD: Take a Look at the Word REF: 4 FEEDBACK: One psychologist suggested that we can get a very good idea of the meaning of personality if we examine our intentions—what we mean—whenever we use the word I. Our personality can also be defined in terms of the impression we make on others—that is, what we appear to be. 4. Around 1500, the Latin word persona was used to refer to: a. a person's mechanistic behavior. c. a mask used by actors in a play. b. predictable and automatic responses. d. a robe worn by noblemen. ANS: C

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Test Bank & Instructor’s Manual for Theories of Personality, 11th Edition by Duane P. Schultz


Chapter 1—Personality: What It Is and Why You Should Care


MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. We research theories of personality to:
a. establish one of them as superior amongst all.
b. describe their use for real-world problems.
c. show how personality theories are superior to any other theories.
d. generalize that all people are the same across cultures.
ANS: B
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: Take a Look at the Word
REF: 2
FEEDBACK: We discuss research conducted on these theories of personality to describe their use for
real-world problems of diagnosis and therapy. It's important to recognize that personality theorists
from the last century rarely considered the importance of ethnic and cultural differences.

2. Which of the following is true about personality?
a. Personality is a characteristic exhibited by only a few people.
b. Personality can limit or expand the choices one has in life.
c. Personality is characterized by most psychologists as either terrific or terrible.
d. Personality remains constant in all circumstances.
ANS: B
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: Take a Look at the Word
REF: 2
FEEDBACK: Your personality can limit or expand your options and choices in life, prevent you from
sharing certain experiences, or enable you to take full advantage of them. It restricts, constrains, and
holds back some people and opens up the world of new opportunities to others.

3. Which of the following statements can be used to sum up personality?
a. Personality is how we perceive ourselves and also how others perceive us.
b. Personality shows that we are deterministic, mechanical, and do not change throughout
our lives.
c. Personality is entirely the reflection of fantasies and past recollections of repressed
memories.
d. Personality is entirely based on how we were treated during our childhood years.
ANS: A
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: Take a Look at the Word
REF: 4
FEEDBACK: One psychologist suggested that we can get a very good idea of the meaning of
personality if we examine our intentions—what we mean—whenever we use the word I. Our
personality can also be defined in terms of the impression we make on others—that is, what we appear
to be.

4. Around 1500, the Latin word persona was used to refer to:
a. a person's mechanistic behavior. c. a mask used by actors in a play.
b. predictable and automatic responses. d. a robe worn by noblemen.
ANS: C

, PTS: 1
A-HEAD: Take a Look at the Word
REF: 4
FEEDBACK: The word personality goes back to about the year 1500 and derives from the Latin word
persona, which refers to a mask used by actors in a play. It's easy to see how persona came to refer to
our outward appearance, the public face we display to the people around us.

5. Identify a true statement about an individual's personality.
a. It can be stable and predictable. c. It is based on personal traits and behavior.
b. It is generally resistant to sudden changes. d. All of these are correct.
ANS: D
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: Take a Look at the Word
REF: 5
FEEDBACK: We assume that personality is relatively stable and predictable. Sometimes our
personality can vary with the situation. Yet although it is not rigid, it is generally resistant to sudden
changes.

6. The personality of an individual is .
a. completely based on self-perception c. a unique cluster of characteristics
b. unstable and unpredictable d. determined at birth and stays unchanged
ANS: C
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: Take a Look at the Word
REF: 6
FEEDBACK: Personality is an enduring and unique cluster of characteristics that may change in
response to different situations. We see similarities among people, yet we sense that each of us
possesses special properties that distinguish us from all others.

7. Which of the following is true of people using social networking sites, such as Facebook?
a. They tend to portray an idealized self-image of themselves.
b. They feel they are able to express their true selves.
c. They have a tendency to present themselves as much more emotionally stable.
d. All of these are correct.
ANS: D
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: Personality and the Social Media
REF: 6
FEEDBACK: Increasingly, many of us display another face, not in person, but through the Internet on
social networking Web sites such as Facebook. Some research suggests that most people are honest
about their online faces. A recent large-scale study in Germany found that many people have a
tendency to present themselves online as being much more emotionally stable than they really are
(Blumer & Doring, 2012).

8. Research that was conducted in diverse countries, such as the Netherlands, Serbia, Hong Kong, and
Korea, suggests that those who have a high level of social network use are than those who use it
less.
a. more introverted
b. less irritable
c. less anxious
d. more emotionally stable

, ANS: A
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: Personality and the Social Media
REF: 7
FEEDBACK: Psychologists have found that the use of online social networking sites like Facebook
can both shape and reflect our personalities. Studies conducted in such diverse countries as the
Netherlands, Serbia, Hong Kong, and Korea have demonstrated that those who reported excessive use
of social media tend to be more lonely, introverted, and low in self-esteem than those who use it less.

9. Which of the following is true of the personality differences among cell phone users as discovered by
research?
a. Those who were less conscientious spent more time texting than those who were more
conscientious.
b. Individuals with a weak sense of self-identity spent much more time making calls than
individuals who scored higher on that personality characteristic.
c. Those who were shy spent less time texting when compared to those who were
extraverted.
d. Introverts spent much more time changing their ring tones and wallpapers than extraverts.
ANS: A
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: Personality and the Social Media
REF: 8
FEEDBACK: Studies found that those who were more neurotic and less conscientious and shy spent
more time texting on their phones than those who were less neurotic and more conscientious. Research
involving teenagers and adults in Australia found that extraverts and those with a strong sense of
self-identity spent much more time making calls and changing their ring tones and wallpaper than
those scoring lower on these personality characteristics.

10. In the past, were more likely to be used in research on personality theory.
a. White women c. White men
b. Latino men d. Black men
ANS: C
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: The Role of Race and Gender in Shaping Personality
REF: 8
FEEDBACK: In the field of personality theory, virtually all the patients and subjects the earlier
theories were based on were White. Also, the majority of the patients and subjects were men. Yet, the
personality theorists confidently offered theories that were supposed to be valid for all people,
regardless of gender, race, or ethnic origin.

11. Which of the following is true of the assumptions made by early personality theorists?
a. Personality theories were valid for all people, regardless of gender and race.
b. Siblings growing up together had highly identical personality types.
c. Social and environmental forces do not have any effect on shaping personality.
d. A person's ethnic background largely influences his or her personality.
ANS: A
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: The Role of Race and Gender in Shaping Personality
REF: 8
FEEDBACK: The personality theorists confidently offered theories that were supposed to be valid for
all people, regardless of gender, race, or ethnic origin. Although the theorists accepted, to some degree,
the importance of social and environmental forces in shaping personality, they tended to ignore or

, minimize the influence of gender and ethnic background.

12. Girls and boys are usually reared according to:
a. the norms of the neighborhood where they were raised.
b. the explicit wishes of the grandparents.
c. books on parenting.
d. traditional stereotypes.
ANS: D
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: The Role of Race and Gender in Shaping Personality
REF: 9
FEEDBACK: We know that boys and girls are usually reared according to traditional gender
stereotypes, and this upbringing also influences personality in different ways. Research has
documented many differences between men and women on specific personality factors.

13. The research conducted by Barrett, Lane, Sechrest, and Schwartz (2000) suggests that:
a. men are more concerned with what people think of them than women do.
b. women exhibit greater emotional complexity than men.
c. women are more resistant to emotional disorders than men.
d. men are more likely to suffer from anxiety than women.
ANS: B
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: The Role of Race and Gender in Shaping Personality
REF: 9
FEEDBACK: One large-scale study of the intensity of emotional awareness and expression compared
male and female college undergraduates at two American universities and male and female students at
medical schools in the United States and in Germany. The results showed that women from both
countries displayed greater emotional complexity and intensity than did men (Barrett, Lane, Sechrest,
& Schwartz, 2000).

14. Which of the following statements is true of research on the effect of culture in shaping personality?
a. European Americans displayed a far greater number of negative emotions than did the
Asian Americans.
b. Recent Chinese immigrants to Canada scored significantly higher in extraversion than
those who have been living for past ten or more years.
c. Brain wave activity in response to a particular visual stimulus has been found to be the
same among people from all cultures.
d. In general, people from Western cultures are more optimistic than people from Eastern
cultures.
ANS: D
PTS: 1
A-HEAD: The Role of Culture in Shaping Personality
REF: 9
FEEDBACK: Western people in general, and Americans, in particular, also exhibit greater optimism
and view themselves and their future more positively. They even consider their sports teams, cities,
and friends to be superior, when compared to those of Asian cultures (Endo, Heine, & Lehman, 2000).

15. The concept of karma:
a. may be seen as a deterministic view of human nature by Buddhists.
b. emphasizes free choice and action.
c. encourages an active, rebellious personality type.
d. has shaped the beliefs of many Islamic communities.

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