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St. Peter’s College of Toril, Inc.

Toril, Davao City Per Dev: Mrs. Eva


College Department
A.Y 2022-2023

Course Activity Worksheet # 1

Course Code PER DEV


Course Title UNDERSTANDING THE SELF
Time Frame Week 1
Topic Meet and Greet; My Home, My School
Intended Learning At the end of the lesson, the students must be have:
Outcome 1. Identified the program and your institution’s vision-mission
(ILO) statements and objectives;
2. Explained the reasons why there is change of class schedule during this time ;
3. Expressed self-understanding and self-acceptance through writing.
Teaching and  Independent reading
Learning Activities  Knowing yourself
(TLAs)
Assessment Tasks  Activity worksheet completion
 Writing personal story
Assessment Tasks Rubrics for other related tasks:
5-Clear expression of ideas, smooth organization and consistency and correct grammar.
Effectively gives example.
4-Clear expression of ideas, good organization and consistency. Few grammatical error .
Gives example or situation to explain one’s thought.
3-Good expression of ideas, occasional lack of organization and some inconsistency.
2-Roughly stated ideas, poor organization and some inconsistency with incorrect
grammar.
1-Ideas are not clear, cluttered organization, consistency is lacking throughout.

October Core Value: Civic Mindedness


Rosary Month/UN Good example, peace, cooperation, justice
Prepared by: Marichu D. Eva, MA

Introduction

This course worksheet is introduced to the students to know the importance of orientation
to be familiar to the different rules, policies, obligations and responsibilities. The students need to
know and familiar about the vision-mission of the school and the important details related to it. This
will also guide the students to mingle with each other especially on normal class situation to know
their role in school and at home and also knowing themselves by sharing their talents and skills in
order to enhance or develop it.

Learning Content
My home, my school. Our home is a place where everything will comfort us. Some houses
are well constructed , some not so, but that does not mean that we do not have good relationship if
our house is not well constructed. It would depend on the dwellers how they make their home, a
sweet happy one with good relationship with each family member. Thus, our family members will
give us comfort and joy if all members will take their responsibility being a good member of a
family.

My Home, my School. What is all about? Why are you in this subject?

College life is said to be the most challenging and exciting phase of your life. It is an entirely new
adventure that everyone looks forward to. It is a world different from your primary as well as junior
and senior high schools. Since you are in your freshmen yea, everything – including this subject – is
new to you. Ask yourself this questions:

»What is "Understanding the Self?

Is it important in the curriculum?

How will it help me as a student and as a person?

You belong to this college/university so it is important to know and learn how to interact with your
fellow students

fellow students. Learn to live together in peace and harmony with yourself and whole school
community.

Activity 1: Sharing Oneself

Share yourself with others by providing the following information:

»your name

your positive attribute or characteristic that begins withthe first letter of your surname (e.g, Santos
"sweet

»the school where you came from your reason for studying in this institution

»your feeling to be in this class

Activity 2: ZIP-ZAP-ZOP Game

1. The class should seat in a circle.

2. The IT chants ZIP, ZAP, ZOP, ZIP, ZAP, ZOP.. and stops and points to someone.

3. If the IT stops at ZIP, the chosen person will say the name of the person to the right and a word to
describe him/her.

If the IT stops at ZAP, the chosen person will say the name ot the person to the left and a word to
describe him/her if the IT stops at ZOP, the and start participants will change place the game again.

4. If a participant fails to becomes respond after 3 seconds, he the IT. seconds, e/she
5. The game ends after 15-20 minutes. Process the experience afterwards.

a. Whose names in the classroom do you remember the most? Why?

b. How many person remembered you? Who are they?

C. How did you feel when your classmates remember your name? Why?

Activity 3: The Boat is Sinking

Mill around singing "Row, row, row your boat." The game master will say: "The boat is
sinking; rescue boats form (any number) Participants should group themselves according to the
number stated by the game master. Those who cannot find their rescue boats are eliminated. Play
the game for 20 minutes and then sit on the

floor to process the experience.

1. Cognitive Processing

a. Who have you met?

b. Who attracted your attention?

c. What did you notice about some participants?

2. Affective Processing

a. How did you feel being in contact with people you were

not acquainted with till now?

b. How did you feel when you were being eliminated?

c. How do you feel now?

Activity 4: Your Role in the Community

In college, each of you is expected to do something for the whole community. You are now a
freshman student. Can you identify the things that you expect to do for the community?

It may be a good to start to sing your alma mater song. Then. You can add more things in the list you
already made.

(Note: These are just simple kinds of games that normally can be done in a normal time and
situation. But since our environment is different this time, these games are just bases or examples
where you can express your role in the game being played.)
Name: Course/Year: Date:

Instructor: Mrs. Marichu D. Eva Subject: Per Dev Week /Module No. 1

Learning Activities

Activity 1

Answer the following questions as quickly as you can:

1. What do you mean by understanding the self?


_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________

2. Is this important in the curriculum? Why? Why not?


__________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________

3. How will it help you as a student and as a person?

______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________

Activity 2

Answer these questions briefly:

1. your name ________________________________________________________

2. your positive attribute or characteristic that begins with the first letter of your name

(example.. Santos ‘sweet’) __________________________________________________

3. the school where you came from

____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________

4. your reason for studying in this institution

____________________________________________________________________

5. your feelings to be with family members, with classmates and experiencing home study or online
study.
Activity 3

1. What is the game that you play during childhood? (game you like most) Why?

___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________

2. Did you enjoy playing during childhood? Why? Why not?

__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________

3. From the games ‘Zip-Zap-Zop’ and ‘The Boat is Sinking’ did you remember playing this?

Were you happy? Why, why not?

_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________

Activity 4

1. In college, each of you is expected to do something for the whole community. You are now a
freshman
student. Can you identify the things that you expect to do for the community?
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________

2. Did you remember your Alma Mater song? What is /are the lines you like most? Why
_________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________

3. What is your role as a son/daughter, a student, and in the community?

5. Assessment:

A. Describe your feelings during your first day of school as you entered in college.

___________________________________________________

Assignment:

Draw your ideal community and compare it with the community where you belong. Write a
short reflection about your community.
St. Peter’s College of Toril, Inc Per Dev: Mrs. Eva

Toril, Davao City


College Department
A.Y 2022-2023

Course Activity Worksheet # 2

Course Code PER DEV


Course Title UNDERSTANDING THE SELF
Time Frame Week 2
Topic Concept and Nature of Self; Who am I?
Intended Learning At the end of the lesson, the students must be have:
Outcome 1. Explained the nature, concept and meaning of the self;
(ILO) 2. Describe the nature of the self from your own point of view ;
3. Discussed the concept and presentation of the self from various disciplines
and perspective as well as pleasant and wholesome attitude to oneself.
Teaching and  Independent reading
Learning Activities  Sing familiar song
(TLAs)
Assessment Tasks  Activity worksheet completion
 Writing exercises
Assessment Rubrics Rubrics for other related tasks:
5-Clear expression of ideas, smooth organization and consistency and correct
grammar.
Effectively gives example.
4-Clear expression of ideas, good organization and consistency. Few grammatical error
.
Gives example or situation to explain one’s thought.
3-Good expression of ideas, occasional lack of organization and some inconsistency.
2-Roughly stated ideas, poor organization and some inconsistency with incorrect
grammar.
1-Ideas are not clear, cluttered organization, consistency is lacking throughout.

October Core Value: Civic –Mindedness


Rosary Month/UN Solidarity, unity, kindness, love for the poor
Prepared by: Marichu D. Eva, MA

Introduction

This course activity worksheet will give the students a wider perspective on how to know
themselves deeper. With the question, Who am I? This will give them an idea hoe deeper, how
better do they know themselves. They are asked to look at the mirror to see themselves, who are
they and how they identify their self individually. More often each one hardly discovered
themselves but they are given the open space hoe they look better and identify their skills, talents
and capabilities in order to use these capabilities and share with others.
Learning Content

There are different philosophical view of self. According to Socrates, he is principally


concerned with man. He considers man from the point of view of his inner life. The famous line of
Socrates, ‘Know Yourself’ tells each man to bring his inner self to light. A bas man is not virtuous
through ignorance; the man who does not follow the good fails to do so because he does not
recognize it.

According to Plato, ‘The Ideal Self, the Perfect Self’. He said, man was omniscient or all-
knowing before he came to be born into this world. With his separation from the paradise of truth
and knowledge he had. However, by constant remembering through contemplation and doing good,
he can regain his former perfections. Man who is now an exile earth has a guiding star, a model or a
divine exemplar which he must follow to reach and attain his destiny. In practical terms, this means
that the man in this life should imitate his former self; more specifically, he should live a life of
virtue, in which true human perfection exists. Happiness, which is the fruit of virtue, is attained by
the constant imitation of the divine exemplar of virtue, embodied in man’s former perfect self.

Group Singing

Find the following songs on the internet and make the class sing them. Also reflect on the
songs' the lyrics. Then, answer questions that follow.
Sino Ako by Jamie Rivera
Who am I by Casting Crowns

Questions:
1. Who are you?
2. How would you describe yourself?
3. Do you love yourself? Why or why not?
4. What are you most grateful for in life?
5 What are the biggest and most important things you
have learned in life so far?

Activity 1: Self-examination
Look at yourself in the mirror and answer the following questions.
1. How can you describe yourself based on your own
perspective or point of view?

"I am _____________________

2. What aspect of yourself do you feel good about? Why?

3. What aspect of yourself do you believe you have to improve? Why?

The Philosophical

View of Self

Socrates: Know Yourself


"Know yourself," tells each man to bring his inner sels.
who does n

Socrates is principally concerned with man. He considers man from the point of view of his inner life.
The famous line ‘Know yourself’ tells each man to bring his inner self to the light. A bad man is not
virtuous through 1gnorance; the man who does not follow the good fails to do so because he does
not recognize it.

The core of Socratic ethics is the concept of virtue and knowledge. Virtue is the deepest and
most basic propensity be learned, man. Knowing one's own virtue is necessary and can be learned.
Since s the source virtue is innate in the mind and self-knowledge is the source of all wisdom, an
individual may gain possession of oneself and one's own master through knowledge.

Plato: The Ideal Self, the Perfect Self


According to Plato, man was omniscient or all-knowing before he came to be born into this
world. With his separation from the paradise of truth and knowledge and his long exile on earth, he
forgot most of the knowledge he had. However, by constant remembering through contemplation
and doing good, he can regain his former perfections.
Man who is now an exile on earth has a guiding star, a mode, or a divine exemplar which he
must follow to reach and attain his destiny. In practical terms, this means that man in this life imitate
his should former self; more specifically, he should live a life virtue in which o true human perfection
exists. Happiness, Which is the fruit of virtue, is attained by the constant imitation or f the divine
exemplar of virtue, embodied in man's former perfect self.

Immanuel Kant: Respect for Self


Man is the only creature who governs and directs himself and his actions, who sets up ends
for himself and his purpose, freely orders means for the attainment of his aims. Every man is thus an
end in himself and should never be treated merely as a means-as per the order of the Creator and
the natural order of things. This rule is a plain dictum of reason and justice: Respect others as you
would respect yourself. A person should not be used
as a tool, instrument, or device to accomplish another's private ends. Thus, all men are persons
gifted with the same basic rights and should treat each other as equals.

René Descartes: "I think, therefore I am


Descartes states that the self is a thinking entity distinct from the body. His first famous
principle was "Cogito, ergo sum, which means "I think, therefore I am." Although the mind and the
body are independent from each other and serve their own function, man must use his own mind
and thinking abilities to investigate,
analyze, experiment, and develop himself.

John Locke: Personal Identity


John Locke holds that personal identity (the self) is a matter of psychological continuity. For
him, personal identity is founded on consciousness (memory), and not on the substance of either
the soul or the body. Personal identity is the concept about oneself that evolves over the course of
an individual's life. It may include aspects of life that man has no control over, such as where he
grew up or the color of his skin, as well as the choices he makes, like how he spends his time and
what he believes.
David Hume: The Self is the Bundle Theory of Mind
Hume is skeptical about the existence of the self, specifically, on whether there is a simple,
unified self that exists over time. For him, man has no "clear and intelligible" idea of the self. He
posits that no single impression of the self exists; rather. the self is just the thing to which all
perceptions of a man is ascribed. Moreover, even if there were such an impression of the self, it
would have to remain constant over time to constitute identity . However man’s impressions vary
and always change. Even attempts to have impressions of the self must fail for all these attempts
are really just occasions for one to notice perceptions. Put simply a person can never observe
oneself without some other perceptions. Thus Hume asserts that what we call the ‘self’ is really just
a bundle or collection of different perceptions which succeed each other with an inconceivable
rapidity.

The Christian or Biblical View of Self


The Holy Bible
‘God created man in His image; in the divine image He created him; male and female He created
them. God blessed them saying ‘Be fertile and multiply, fill the earth and subdue it. Have dominion
over the fish of the sea, the birds in the air and all the living things that move on the earth,’

Augustine: Love and Justice as the Foundation of the Individual Self

St. Augustine believes that a virtuous life is a dynamism of love. It is a constant following of
and turning towards love while a wicked life is a constant turning away from love. Loving God means
loving one's fellowmen; and loving one's fellowmen denotes never doing any harm to another or, as
the golden principle of justice states, doing unto others as you would have them do unto you.

The Psychological View of Self


Sigmund Freud: The Psychoanalytic Theory of Self
Freud's asserts that the human psyche (personality) is structured into three parts (tripartite) These
structures – the id, the ego and the superego –all develop at different stages in a person's life.
Although each part comprises
unique features form a contributes to an individual's behavior, they interact to form the whole.

Parts of Personality
1. ld (internal desires). Also called internal drives or instinctive drives, it consist of the body's
primitive biological drives and urges which are concerned only with achieving pleasure and self-
satisfaction. Id lives completely in the unconscious.

2. Ego (reality). It is the "T part of the individual that gives him/ her the sense of his/her own
identity. The ego is the rational part of the personality.

3. Superego (conscience). It is the part of the personality concerned with morals, precepts,
standards, and ideas. The superego is also the critical faculty of the personality.

Freudian Stages of Psychosexual Development


Freud also argues that the development of an individual can be divided into distinct stages
characterized by sexual drives. As a person grows, certain areas become sources of pleasure,
frustration or both.
1. Oral. From birth to the end of the first year, the mouth becomes the part of the body through
which gratification is secured.
2. Anal (expulsive phase). From the age of 2 to 3 years, derives the feelings of pleasure or pain from
defecating. lt
covers the toilet-training period.

3. Phallic. From the age of 3 to 6 years, the child gets curious about his/her genitals and becomes
attached to the parent of the opposite sex. The attraction of a boy to his mother is called Oedipus
complex, while that of a girl to her father is called Electra complex.

4. Latency. From the age of 10 to 12 years, sexual motivations presumably recede in importance as
the child becomes preoccupied with developing skills and other activities.

5. Genital. After puberty, the deepest feelings of pleasure presumably come from heterosexual
relations.

Erik Erikson: The Psychosocial Stages of Self-development


Erikson was primarily concerned with how both psychological and social factors affect the
development of individuals. He has formulated eight major stages of development, each posing a
unique developmental task and simultaneously presenting the individual with a crisis that he/she
must overcome (Table 1). As defined by Erikson, a crisis is not "a threat of catastrophe but a turning
point, a crucial period of increased vulnerability and heightened potential" (Erikson, 1968, p. 96).
Accordingly, individuals develop a healthy personality by mastering "life's outer
and inner dangers."

References:

Dalisay, brawner G and Arcega, Analiza F. 2018. Understanding the Self. C and E Publishing, Inc.
Manila Philippines
Macayan, Veran et al. 2018. Understanding the Self. C and e Publishing, Inc. Manila Philippines
Alata, Pastor et al 2018. Understanding the Self. Rex Book Store. Nicanor Reyes Street, Manila
Philippines
Name: Course/Year: Date:

Instructor: Mrs. Marichu D. Eva Subject: Per Dev Week No. 2

Learning Content

Activity 1

Answer the following questions.

1. Sing the song ‘Sino Ako’ by Jamie Rivera and ‘ Who am I’ by Casting Crowns. What is the meaning
of the
Song? Can you relate it to yourself?
____________________________________________________________________

2. Who are you? How would you describe yourself?


____________________________________________________________________

3. Do you love yourself? Why? Why not?


_________________________________________________________________

4. What are you most grateful for in life?


________________________________________________________________

5. What are the biggest and most important things you have learned in life so far?
_________________________________________________________________

Activity 2
Answer the following questions.
1. How can you describe yourself based on your point of view?
___________________________________________________________

2. What aspect in yourself do you feel good about? Why?


___________________________________________________________

3. What aspect of yourself do you believe you have to improve? Why?


___________________________________________________________

Activity 3
1. Why do we say, the self as a crown of creation?
____________________________________________________________

2. Describe the parts of personality.


___________________________________________________________
3. What is your interpretation on the psychological stages of self –development?

Assessment

Answer the following items.

1. True/False. Write T on the blank if the idea is correct and F if it is false. Philosophical View of
Self.
___1. Socrates – know yourself.
___2. The ideal self, the perfect self – Plato.
___3. Respect for self – Immanuel Kant.
___4. Rene Descartes – I think, therefore , I am.
___5. Personal Identity – John Locke.
___6. David Hume – The self is the bundle theory of mind.
___7. ‘God created man in His image’ – Genesis 1:24-28.
___8. St. Augustine – Love, justice as the foundation of the individual self.
___9. The psychoanalytic theory of self – Sigmund Freud.
___10. The psychosocial stages of self-development- Erik Erikson.

Assignment:

Write a brief statement on these.

1. Me as I see myself. _________________________________________

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