Biology, asked by Sivayya8041, 8 months ago

Asses the value of positive role model on one's behaviour

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Answered by Anonymous
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How do you assess the value of positive role models on one's behavior?

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Role models are not just something for children, unless you believe that adults have no aspirations and challenges and are incapable of learning from others.

But unlike children, adults have more self-awareness and greater ability to respond to social complexity. An adult does not have to find one role model, attribute almost mythical powers to them, and seek to be like them in every way. Perhaps that is the natural attitude of a child to parents, but adults can pick and choose their influences, admiring and learning from different people for the particular strengths and abilities that matter, while allowing them their foibles, imperfections, and weaknesses.

Furthermore, the best role models for adults are chosen from among their own friends and nearby social acquaintances, real people rather than the artificial and stylized images of media characters and celebrities.

How do you assess the value of positive role models on your behavior?

You know you’re better at some things than they are, but the reverse is also true. When you are around them, you may have a feeling of admiration, or simply recognize that they have similar concerns and struggles to your own, but handle them more skillfully, or in a different way that you like, perhaps with more spirit and style.

You can assess not just what they did, but the ways in which they did it, along with a sense that in some way it was a result of “who they are”. You have an inkling of the possibility of yourself being changed for the better, facing the world in a different way. You notice that you like it, because it opens up new possibilities or supports aspirations that may have been on hold for a long time. And at the same time, you assess these possibilities as “real” and achievable, something more than fantasies.

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