Assignment 1
Unique No:
Due 2025
,IOP2606
ASSESSMENT 01
Semester 02
Question 1 — Cognitive & Social-Cognitive Theories, and Occupation-Oriented
Personality Theories (15 marks)
A. Cognitive Theories of Personality
Definition and central concept:
Cognitive approaches explain personality in terms of mental processes that influence
how individuals perceive, interpret, and react to their environment. These theories
emphasise internal cognitive structures—such as beliefs, schemas, and mental
representations—that create consistency in behaviour. Variations in personality are
linked to differences in how people process and organise information.
Main contributors and theoretical elements:
Schemas and cognitive styles: Individuals develop relatively stable mental
frameworks (schemas) that shape their interpretation of experiences and guide
responses.
George Kelly’s Personal Construct Theory: Kelly proposed that people rely on
personal constructs, often bipolar (e.g., competent–incompetent), to predict and
evaluate events. Personality, therefore, reflects the unique system of constructs
an individual uses.
Aaron Beck’s Cognitive Models: Beck highlighted how negative schemas can
lead to enduring maladaptive patterns of thinking, an idea initially developed for
therapy but applicable in personality studies.
Attributional styles: How people explain events (e.g., internal vs. external
causes) influences consistent behaviour across different situations.
Illustrative examples:
, Two employees receiving the same performance feedback may react differently:
one with a positive, growth-oriented schema views it as constructive and makes
improvements, while another with a defensive schema perceives it as criticism
and withdraws.
A manager with an analytical cognitive style may break tasks into components
and delegate accordingly, while one with a holistic style focuses on group
dynamics and relationships.
Workplace applications:
Training and development programmes can reshape unhelpful schemas through
cognitive restructuring, improving resilience and productivity.
Recruitment and placement decisions may consider cognitive preferences (e.g.,
analytic vs. holistic thinking) to ensure person–job fit.
Performance management can be enhanced by understanding that employees
interpret feedback differently depending on their cognitive frameworks.
Strengths and limitations:
Strengths: Offers strong explanatory power for consistent behavioural tendencies
and provides practical strategies for workplace interventions such as coaching.
Limitations: Tends to underplay the role of biological and temperamental factors,
and abstract constructs like schemas can be difficult to measure empirically.
B. Social-Cognitive Theories of Personality
Definition and central concept:
Social-cognitive perspectives argue that personality develops from the continuous
interaction between cognitive processes, behaviour, and the social environment, a
concept known as reciprocal determinism. Rather than being fixed traits, personality