Kokurina I. G., Solina E. I. (2014). Representations of happiness and life satisfaction in the group of educated and socially active young people. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 7(1), 83-95.
The paper examines the differences in the social representations of happiness among
optimists and pessimists in the group of socially active, educated young members of the
international youth organization Association Internationale des Etudiants en Sciences
Economiques et Commerciales . To assess the degree of optimism and pessimism we
used the Satisfaction With Life Scale (SWLS) developed by E. Diener, while social
representation, divided into the nucleus and peripheral zones, were examined using
Verges’ technique within the framework of the concept of social mindsets offered by
S. Moskovichi.
It has been shown that, irrespective of the optimism or pessimism of the participants,
the nucleus of their representations of happiness contains such a value as love. However,
only in optimists’ representations is this value combined in the nucleus with the values
of family and friendship. In the pessimists’ nucleus zone of the representation of happiness,
love is presented as an independent value, primarily associated with striking
emotional experiences, which has aspects of psychological addiction. Considerable differences
between optimists and pessimists have also been found in the peripheral zone
of the representation of happiness. Only optimists have such associations as “knowledge”,
“children”, and “faith” in their peripheral area. In our opinion, the major scale of
differences between optimists and pessimists is formed by the factor of sociocentricity
and egocentricity.
Keywords:
life satisfaction, optimism, pessimism, social representations of happiness, socially active educated young people, social and economic crisis
Results of research on social anxiety in orphaned children are presented in this article.
The goal of this study was to identify the relationship between depressive states, anxiety
states, characteristics of the situation at school, and fear of social evaluation in orphaned
children. The differences in these parameters between orphaned children and children
living with their families were also studied. The sample consisted of 123 teenagers. The
main group comprised 57 orphans from an orphanage near the Moscow region, aged 10
to 16 years old. The control group comprised 66 students from a general school, aged 10
to 15 years old, and all living with their families. Differences were found in the parameters
studied. The orphans were characterized by higher levels of social and general anxiety.
On the one hand, they strove for the attention and approval of adults, but, on the other
hand, they were more worried than their peers who lived with their families about the
impression they made on others. They were afraid of receiving a negative evaluation.
Filippova E. V., Pivnenko T. V. (2014). Psychological boundaries of “I” in the role play of peer-unaccepted children. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 7(1), 62-72.
This article examines the psychological peculiarities of children who are not accepted by
their peers in the course of play. Problems in peer communication are analyzed in respect
to the violation of “I” psychological boundaries. The phenomenology of the psychological
boundaries of “I” and their violation in the course of play are investigated. New data
are provided on the peculiarities of play (mainly its subject matter, including also specific
plots, roles, and the organization of play space) in children who are not accepted by
their peers; differences between children with low sociometric status and children from
a control group were ascertained. Projective methods and observations of children’s play
and communicative behavior in different situations were used. The sample included 140
children from 5 to 6 years old, 70 of whom were not accepted by their peers. Additionally
80 mothers (40 of them mothers of children who were not accepted by their peers)
participated in the research. The link between the peculiarities of the children’s play, their
peer relations, and violations of the psychological boundaries of “I” is described. The
work provides elaboration of the notions of play developed within the framework of L.
Vygotsky’s cultural-historical approach.