GEC 101 Module 3
GEC 101 Module 3
GEC 101:
UNDERSTANDING
THE SELF
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Learning Outcomes
Students should be able to meet the following intended learning outcomes:
Identify different Filipino identities;
Intended
Learning Reflect on one’s selfhood concerning one’s national identity;
Outcomes Better understand one’s self considering common Filipino values and traits; and
Describe various positive and negative Filipino values.
At the end of the lesson, students should be able to:
Take pride in being a Filipino by identifying common Filipino values and traits;
Targets/ Determine the stages and development of Filipino value formation;
Objectives
Acquaint one’s self on how to be a good Filipino; and
Construct an acrostic to demonstrate one’s sense of being a Filipino.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Technically, according to the Philippine Constitution, Filipino citizens are “…those whose
fathers or mothers are citizens of the Philippines…”
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Close Family Ties. Filipinos maintain a tight relationship with their family
regardless of whether the children are old enough and already have families of
their own. They are also fond of family reunions during birthdays, holidays, fiestas
year-round. Some Filipino families even opt to live in a big house where everyone
can stay together.
Cheerful Personality. Filipinos have the habit of smiling and laughing a lot. They
smile when they are happy, sad, or sometimes even when they are angry. Smiling
has been a coping strategy for many Filipinos especially during trying times and
calamities. They tend to smile and wave at the camera despite being interviewed
after a fire or flooding incident. They always try to maintain a positive outlook in
life, which makes them resilient and able to manage almost everything with a
simple smile.
Self–sacrifice. Filipinos go out of their way to extend their help to friends, families,
and loved ones. They wish comfort and better lives for their loved ones and would
even go to the extent of working abroad hundreds of miles away from their families
to earn more money and save up for them. There are also times when the eldest
among the children of the family would give up school to work and provide for the
rest of the family and educate his or her siblings.
Bayanihan. The Bayanihan spirit is giving without expecting something in return.
Filipinos are always ready to share and to help friends and loved ones who are in
need. It may not always be a monetary form, but the time and effort they give also
count as a form of help for them. In calamities, this is especially showcased by
Filipinos.
Euphemism. A Filipino way of substituting a word or phrase that is thought to be
offensive with a mild or acceptable one in order not to offend or hurt another
person.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Ningas–kugon. Ningas is a Filipino term for a flame and Kugon is Cogon grass that
easily burns out after it is put into flames. Ningas - Kugon refers to the attitude of
eagerly starting things, but quickly losing eagerness soon after experiencing
difficulty just as fast as the fire has ignited. Laziness is a common problem among
Filipinos that is why Filipinos are regarded as “Juan Tamad” or “Lazy Juan.”
Pride. Most Filipinos hold on to their pride as if this is more precious than keeping
a good relationship with family and loved ones. When two parties are not on good
terms, they find it hard to apologize and wait until the other party asks for an
apology first.
Crab Mentality. A toxic trait among Filipinos where one resents the achievement of
another, instead of feeling happy for that person. Just like crabs in a container, they
pull each other down and ruin each other’s reputation rather than bringing them
up, which results in no progress.
Filipino Time. Filipinos have this common attitude of arriving late at
commitments, dinner, and parties especially if they are meeting someone close to
them. They tend not to observe punctuality altogether.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Learning Outcomes
Students should be able to meet the following intended learning outcomes:
Gain appreciation of the importance of emotions in human life;
Intended
Learning Understand the functions and meanings of emotion in two areas of life:
Outcomes intrapersonal and interpersonal; and
Explain the primary emotional responses of the self to achieve emotional maturity.
At the end of the lesson, students should be able to:
Develop a wise appreciation and use of emotions especially when it comes to
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
EMOTIONAL SELF-AWARENESS
Emotional Self-Awareness is the ability to understand your own feelings and
emotions and their effects on your performance. You know what you are feeling
and why, and how it helps or hurts what you are trying to do. You sense how others
see you and so align your self-image with a larger reality.
It is an important skill for leadership at any level, as well as in many aspects of
life.
The purpose of developing Emotional Self-Awareness is that it allows us to
understand how our bodily sensations and our emotions impact ourselves,
others, and our environment.
EMOTION
Emotion is a mind and body’s integrated response to a stimulus of some kind. It
provides the energy and motivation that lets us meet our goals and our needs, and
improve our performance in negative situations.
According to Aristotle, “Emotions are all those feelings that so change men as to
affect their judgments, and that are also attended by pain or pleasure, such
are anger, pity, fear, and the like, with their opposites.”
According to William James, “Our feelings follow our bodily reactions to
external situations.” (e.g.: You feel sad because you are crying; You feel scared
because you are shaking.)
According to emotion psychologist Paul Eckman, “Facial expressions are
culturally universal; facial expressions can help regulate our emotions.”
Paul Eckman identified six basic emotions that he suggested were universally
experienced in all human cultures: happiness, sadness, disgust, fear, surprise,
and anger.
He later expanded his list of basic emotions to include such things as pride, shame,
embarrassment, and excitement.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
6. Emotions motivate future behaviors. Because emotions prepare our bodies for
immediate action, influence thoughts, and can be felt, they are important
motivators of future behavior. Many of us strive to experience feelings of
satisfaction, joy, pride, or triumph in our accomplishments and achievements. At
the same time, we also work very hard to avoid strong negative feelings. Emotions,
therefore, not only influence immediate actions but also serve as an important
motivational basis for future behaviors.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Life presents many situations every day, and you should not view them in BLACK
and WHITE TERMS - those you can control versus those you cannot. Look for the
shaded of GREY - the elements you can control. When you know what’s going to
happen in a situation, your nervous system can gear up to handle it.
5. Redefine the problem. Your attitude to stress can affect your health more than the
stress itself can. If the problem is out of your control, recognize that and redefine
the problem to determine which parts you can avoid or handle.
7. Reach out to a friend or family member. Find someone you can be a vent
buddy.
8. Exercise regularly.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
2. Give time to ask yourself how you feel every day. Just spending 5-10 minutes
sitting down, and questioning your feelings, can make a big difference in how well
connected you are to your emotional self.
3. Don’t try to rationalize away every emotion. Oftentimes people who aren’t
connected with their emotional self feel a constant need to “rationalize” their
emotions. There needs to be a reason, a purpose, or an explanation behind every
feeling they ever have. While it can be useful to analyze our emotions sometimes,
it’s also nice to just let yourself experience emotion without needing to find some
underlying reason behind it. Not every emotion is going to be explainable. Often,
emotions express a special kind of “knowledge” about ourselves and our world that
can’t be translated verbally. You need to sometimes accept emotions as a language
of your own.
4. Talk to other people about how you feel. Emotions can be difficult to share with
others, but they are still good to talk about regularly. Talking more about your
feelings allows you to be honest about your emotional self, and allows others to
offer insight that you may have not considered.
5. Find ways to express emotions creatively. This can include any activities such as
music, writing, photography, painting, film-making, dancing, or whatever you are
passionate about. Often, art gives you a way to communicate your feelings in a way
other than just words. It allows you to connect more with the physical and visceral
experience of your emotional self. Having creative outlets also gives you a chance to
digest your emotions at a unique and personal level that can’t usually be achieved
through only introspection and conversation.
6. Mirror other people’s faces and body language. When you connect with your
emotional self (especially in a social setting), your face and body language should
match the emotion you’re expressing. For a lot of people, this is natural, but for
others, they may have more difficulty letting their emotions express themselves
spontaneously.
7. Use movies, TV, books, and music that elicits strong emotions. In this way,
these forms of entertainment can broaden our emotional flexibility – they give us a
chance to experience a more “full range of human emotions” that isn’t always
available to us.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Learning Outcomes
Students should be able to meet the following intended learning outcomes:
Differentiate behaviors that make for acceptable social relationships from those
Intended
Learning behaviors that are not acceptable;
Outcomes Identify the different elements or phenomena that affects the social self; and
Analyze one’s behavior to achieve harmonious relationships with others.
At the end of the lesson, students should be able to:
Describe the different ways by which society shapes the self;
Be familiar with the different stages of group development and the major processes
Targets/ happen on each stage;
Objectives
Explain how the self can be influenced by the different institutions in society; and
Reflect on one’s self considering one’s social relationships and interactions with
others.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
SOCIAL SELF
It is a multifaceted analysis of the self-concept based on the social nature of the self. The
emphasis is on self-esteem along with self-centrality, self-complexity, social interest,
identification, power, marginality, openness, and majority identification.
Social Psychology
Social psychology is a branch of psychology that studies individuals as they
interact with others.
It is a broad field which goal is to understand and explain how thoughts, feelings,
perceptions, and behaviors are influenced by the presence of, or interactions
with others. (Plotnik and Kouyoumdjian, 2007)
Study of the effect of social factors on individual behavior, attitudes,
perceptions, and motives. It is a study of group and intergroup phenomena.
(Gerrig and Zimbardo, 2002)
Person Perception
It refers to forming impressions and making judgments about another person’s likability after
seeing or meeting him/her.
Social Norms
Norms are patterns or traits characterized as typical or usual for a group.
An individual’s mathematics score may be considered above the norm if it is more
than the average score or below the norm if it is less than the average.
Many years ago, mothers stay at home to an acre for their children; women wear only
dresses and skirts in attending church services, etc.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
The fact that belongingness is a need means that human beings must establish and
maintain a minimum quantity of enduring relationships.
In contrast, spending time alone, away from others, can be a rejuvenating,
pleasurable experience.
Together as a Group
In social situations where people work and do things together for a purpose, two things may
happen.
1. Social facilitation – the performance of each member of the group is improved
2. Social loafing – working or being with a group may also reduce individual effort
Task Cohesion refers to the degree to which members of a group work together to
achieve common goals.
Teamwork refers to the combined activities of two or more individuals who coordinate
their efforts to make or do something. In many cases, each individual performs a portion
of the task, which, when combined with others yields a total group product.
Social Categorization
It refers to the perceptual classification of people, including the self, into categories.
Social Identification
It refers to accepting the group as an extension of the self, and therefore basing one’s
self-definition on the group’s qualities and characteristics.
Conformity
It refers to yielding to group pressure to act as everyone does, even when no direct
request has been made (Lahey, 2009). It is the tendency to behave like others in the
group do.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Social Roles
It refers to the part or position of a person in a society. It also specifies behavior
expected to be exhibited by an individual in practicing his/her role.
“Every person is capable of loving. Without love, people become lonely and social relationships
suffer. There are many ways of showing love, and they could vary in form and in-depth. People
who freely share and give love, and are loved in return, are happy people.”
Attitudes are beliefs that predispose people to act and feel in certain ways towards people,
objects, or ideas. They can either :
Positive Attitude is reflected in a happy, pleasant, optimistic disposition.
Negative Attitude is associated with pessimism or a general feeling of dislike.
Stereotypes are generalizations in which the same traits or characteristics are assumed to
be possessed by all members of a group.
Prejudice is an unfair, biased, or intolerant attitude or opinion towards the members
of a group. (Ex.: Overweight women are not as smart as women of normal weight.)
Discrimination is the specific unfair behavior or treatment towards the members of
a group. (Ex: An employer refusing to hire women because of their gender.)
Racism is the discrimination against people based on their skin color or
ethnic heritage.
Sexism is discrimination against people because of their gender.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Learning Outcomes
Students should be able to meet the following intended learning outcomes:
Discuss the concept of online identity and the ‘self’ in cyberspace;
Intended
Learning Explain how an individual build his/her online identity;
Outcomes Evaluate the impacts of online interactions on the self; and
Establish boundaries of the online self.
At the end of the lesson, students should be able to:
Compare real identity versus online identity;
Recognize the positive and negative effects of social media and online interactions
Targets/ on the self;
Objectives
Describe the different changes emerging from our current digital age;
Describe the influence of the internet on sexuality and gender; and
Discuss the proper way of demonstrating our values and attitudes online.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
DIGITAL SELF
The digital self is the persona you use when you’re online. Some people maintain one or
more online identities that are distinct from their “real-world” selves; others have a single
online self that’s more or less the same as the one they inhabit in the real world.
Online Identity
Online Identity is the sum of all our characteristics and our interactions in the online
world. Meanwhile, Persona is the partial identity we create that represents one’s self in a
specific situation. “Your online identity is not the same as your real-world identity because the
character you represent online differs from the characteristics you represent in the physical
world.”
Fear Of Missing Out (FOMO) is the feeling of vulnerability that leads the user to
compulsively check the news feeds and continually add tweets and postings to appear active
and interesting.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Online interactions cannot reveal our true feelings and can decrease people’s
happiness levels
The extra effort involved in face-to-face interactions can be spared in online interactions that
are founded on minimal or constrained social cues; most of these signals can be summed up in
emoticons or punctuation. Hence, it is easier to hide our emotions behind an email, a
Facebook post, or a tweet.
We can control our self-presentation on online interactions and this may be both
beneficial and harmful to the individual
Compared with face-to-face presentations, online interactions enable us to self-censor to a
greater extent and manage our online identities more strategically which provides a greater
opportunity to misrepresent ourselves.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Needed Extended Self Updates due to Sharing: Shared Sense Of (Cyber) Space
The overlap between digital aggregate extended self among those seeking access rather than
ownership.
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Cruelty, harassment, and bullying are closely tied with questions of online identities like:
how we choose to express ourselves; how we establish positive community norms; and how we
stand up against behavior that’s offensive, demeaning, or upsetting?
“Think before you click. If people do not know you personally and if they cannot see as
you type, what you post online can be taken out of context if you are not careful in the
way your message is delivered.”
Learning Resources
Brawner, D and Arcega, A. (2018). Understanding the self. C & E Publishing, Inc.
Alata E, et al. (2018). Understanding the self. REX Book Store
Villafuerte S, et al. (2018) Understanding the Self. C & E Publishing, Inc.
Mead, GH (1972) Mind, and Self and Society from the Standpoint of a Social Behaviorist. The University
of Chicago Press.
Feldman, R. (2008) Understanding Psychology 8th ed. McGraw Hill. Module 34: Understanding Human
Sexual response. 369-375; Module 35: Diversity of Sexual Behavior. 379-385; Module 36: Sexual
Difficulties, 389-391
Wolfson (2010). The Chemistry and Chimera of Desire. http://www.healthline.com/health/what-is-
desire
Dittmer, H. (1992). The individual Centered Approach. Material Possessions as Parts of the extended
Self. Pp. 41-64 and Possessions as symbolic Expressions of Identity. Pp 95-121 in the Social Psychology
of Material Possessions: To Have is To Be? St. Martin’s Press.
Frankl, V. (1959) Man’s Search for Meaning: An Introduction to Logotherapy. Especially Part 2: Basic
Concepts of Logotherapy. 149-210.
Gibbs et AL. (2006). Self-presentation in Online Personals: The Role of Anticipated future interactions,
self-disclosures and perceived success in internet dating Communications Research. 33.2.152-172.
Seligman, Martin (2011). Flourish a visionary new understanding of happiness and well-being. Free
Press / NY 10020
LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Level I Institutionally Accredited
Prepared by:
Modified/Revised by:
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LSPU SELF-PACED LEARNING MODULE (SLM 3): GEC 101: Understanding The Self