Adult Development of Positive Personality Traits Through Character Formation Mentoring

Positive psychologists have published hundreds of empirical studies correlating positive personality traits with improved outcomes in mental health, physical health, academic and career success, resilience, relationships, and personal happiness. But there remains a dearth of research on the emergenc...

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Main Author: Colborn, Robert Mark
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: ScholarWorks 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/2442
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3545&context=dissertations
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spelling ndltd-waldenu.edu-oai-scholarworks.waldenu.edu-dissertations-35452019-10-30T01:22:42Z Adult Development of Positive Personality Traits Through Character Formation Mentoring Colborn, Robert Mark Positive psychologists have published hundreds of empirical studies correlating positive personality traits with improved outcomes in mental health, physical health, academic and career success, resilience, relationships, and personal happiness. But there remains a dearth of research on the emergence and development of positive personality traits. This grounded theory, qualitative research sought to discover whether positive personality traits can be developed in adult mentoring relationships. Sixteen participants responded in structured interviews about the benefits of their mentoring experiences, and in addition to performing coding analysis as described by Strauss and Corbin (1990), the researcher also compared the answers to Peterson and Seligman's taxonomy of positive traits (2004). Unprompted participant responses overwhelmingly asserted increase of positive traits, as well as five other benefit categories. Improved traits appeared across a wide range of mentee characteristics, and situations, including negative ones, as long as mentors communicated unconditional positive regard and possessed desirable competencies. Social considerations of this research include the possibility that, in combination with therapies to address negative aspects of a client situation, therapists using intentional positive trait development could support recovery, resilience, hope, wisdom, thriving, and all of the benefits positive psychology has correlated to the presence of positive personality traits. Future studies building on this research may include a longitudinal study to understand what situations and character types are most conducive for positive trait development, as well as questions regarding which traits appear in which mentoring situations. 2016-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/2442 https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3545&context=dissertations Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies en ScholarWorks character development humanist psychology mentoring positive psychology positive trait Cognitive Psychology Counseling Psychology Psychology
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic character
development
humanist psychology
mentoring
positive psychology
positive trait
Cognitive Psychology
Counseling Psychology
Psychology
spellingShingle character
development
humanist psychology
mentoring
positive psychology
positive trait
Cognitive Psychology
Counseling Psychology
Psychology
Colborn, Robert Mark
Adult Development of Positive Personality Traits Through Character Formation Mentoring
description Positive psychologists have published hundreds of empirical studies correlating positive personality traits with improved outcomes in mental health, physical health, academic and career success, resilience, relationships, and personal happiness. But there remains a dearth of research on the emergence and development of positive personality traits. This grounded theory, qualitative research sought to discover whether positive personality traits can be developed in adult mentoring relationships. Sixteen participants responded in structured interviews about the benefits of their mentoring experiences, and in addition to performing coding analysis as described by Strauss and Corbin (1990), the researcher also compared the answers to Peterson and Seligman's taxonomy of positive traits (2004). Unprompted participant responses overwhelmingly asserted increase of positive traits, as well as five other benefit categories. Improved traits appeared across a wide range of mentee characteristics, and situations, including negative ones, as long as mentors communicated unconditional positive regard and possessed desirable competencies. Social considerations of this research include the possibility that, in combination with therapies to address negative aspects of a client situation, therapists using intentional positive trait development could support recovery, resilience, hope, wisdom, thriving, and all of the benefits positive psychology has correlated to the presence of positive personality traits. Future studies building on this research may include a longitudinal study to understand what situations and character types are most conducive for positive trait development, as well as questions regarding which traits appear in which mentoring situations.
author Colborn, Robert Mark
author_facet Colborn, Robert Mark
author_sort Colborn, Robert Mark
title Adult Development of Positive Personality Traits Through Character Formation Mentoring
title_short Adult Development of Positive Personality Traits Through Character Formation Mentoring
title_full Adult Development of Positive Personality Traits Through Character Formation Mentoring
title_fullStr Adult Development of Positive Personality Traits Through Character Formation Mentoring
title_full_unstemmed Adult Development of Positive Personality Traits Through Character Formation Mentoring
title_sort adult development of positive personality traits through character formation mentoring
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2016
url https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/2442
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3545&context=dissertations
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