- - respect for oneself, seeing positive qualities in oneself and, in connection with this, the unwillingness of the individual to be humiliated, to do something. shameful. A possible manifestation is a raised (not lowered) head. May be combined with indignation. The image of the feeling ... ... Encyclopedic Dictionary of Psychology and Pedagogy

    Self-esteem- a very interesting thing, which is replaced by some other concepts that have lost their relevance due to the exposure of their emptiness: freedom, right, etc., for example: People are born free and equal in this formula, human right is expressed, by no means ... ... Theoretical aspects and basics environmental problem: interpreter of words and idiomatic expressions

    feelings, cf. 1. The ability of a living being to perceive external impressions, to feel, to experience something. Sense of sight, hearing, smell, touch, taste. Sense organs. “Matter is that which, acting on our sense organs, produces sensation…”… Dictionary Ushakov

    Ex., number of synonyms: 2 pride (48) feeling dignity(5) ASIS Synonym Dictionary. V.N. Trishin ... Synonym dictionary

    Ex., s., use. max. often Morphology: (no) what? feelings for what? feel (see) what? feeling what? feeling about what? about feeling; pl. what? feelings, (no) what? feelings for what? feelings, (see) what? feelings what? feelings about what? about feelings 1. ... ... Dictionary of Dmitriev

    FEELING, a, cf. 1. The ability to feel, experience, perceive external influences, as well as such a sensation itself. External senses (sight, hearing, touch, smell, taste). Sense organs. H. pain. Sixth hour (flair, intuition). 2. (pl. in one meaning ... Explanatory dictionary of Ozhegov

    BUT; cf. 1. The ability of a living being to perceive psychophysical sensations, to respond to external stimuli. Sense organs (sight, hearing, smell, touch, taste). Hunger. H. pain. H. chills. Experience hours of fear. Ch. Orientation in birds ... encyclopedic Dictionary

    FEELING NEW- a positive moral quality. the opposite of inertia, characterizing the ability of a person to correctly understand the needs of further development of the region, to pose and solve actual problems of life (production, science, art, ... ... Ethics Dictionary

    feeling- a; cf. 1) The ability of a living being to perceive psychophysical sensations, to respond to external stimuli. Sense organs (sight, hearing, smell, touch, taste) Sense of hunger. Chu / vstvo pain. Chu/vstvo chills. To experience a feeling of fear... Dictionary of many expressions

    Pride- self-esteem, self-worth, self-respect; a sense of accomplishment from something... Terms of psychology

Books

  • About shame. To die, but not to say Barber Boris. A new look at shame - unexpected, amazing, based on latest research in the field of neurophysiology and psychology. A book that helps deal with the destructive...
  • The psychological meaning of labor Textbook for the course Psychology of labor and engineering psychology 3rd edition, corrected and supplemented, N. Pryazhnikov. The manual presents the basic concepts of labor psychology, engineering psychology and professional self-determination. Traditionally considered psychological issues of work and development ...

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Self-esteem is the self-perception (and related behavior) of a person who highly values ​​their social rights and their social value.

In translated works "self-esteem", "" and "healthy I-concept" are used as synonyms, although there are certain differences in the content of these concepts. If a person understands self-esteem first of all with himself, self-esteem speaks rather about the proper attitude towards a person from the people around him.

A person with self-esteem requires proper behavior both from himself and from others. He demands neatness and calmness from himself, does not stoop to dishonorable acts, while allowing himself greater freedom than a mass personality, he has good manners, elements of royalty.

In the film Office Romance, Alisa Freindlikh enters the organization transformed in the morning, in a new dress and goes to her office, full of self-esteem.

Today this is called "self-esteem", although in fact it is more accurately called an attitude and appropriate behavior. You know how you can and should behave yourself - and how people around you can and should behave in relation to you. When people have received a good upbringing, they know it very well. This is how you behave!

Is self-esteem and academic achievement linked? There are no reliable data here. Many researchers are convinced that self-esteem helps to study better, that self-esteem and self-respect are the armor that can protect children from poor academic performance (or from addiction to drugs and delinquency). However, other researchers do not exclude that the situation is diametrically opposite, and believe that academic success leads to high self-esteem, and poor academic performance lowers self-esteem.

Quite often, children compensate for their lack of self-esteem by striving for good grades, but this does not mean that all excellent students have internal problems.

Self-esteem is not given to a person from birth and is not directly related to the results of activity. More often, a sense of self-worth is acquired on the basis of copying samples, comes as a result of conscious or not suggestions from others or as a result of training (education) by parents who accustom the child to appropriate behavior.

"A person who respects himself behaves in such and such a way" - and they demand such behavior from the child. Whether or not they effectively instill this style of behavior in a child is another matter.