PSYCHOLOGICAL FEATURES OF SELF-REGULATION
OF HEADS OF PENITENTIARY INSTITUTIONS OF THE STATE PENITENTIARY SERVICE OF UKRAINE

Author (s): Miroshnуchenko O. M.

Work place:

Miroshnуchenko O. M.,

PhD in Psychology, Associate Professor,

Head of the Department of Psychology,

Academy of the State penitentiary service, Chernihiv, Ukraine;

ORCID: 0000-0002-8624-9397

Language: Ukrainian

Scientific Herald of Sivershchyna. Series: Education. Social and Behavioural Sciences 2020. № 2(5): 105–120

https://doi.org/10.32755/sjeducation.2020.02.105

Summary

The article addresses the problem of a current trend in foreign and domestic psychological science which is self-regulation among professionals working under extreme conditions. Self regulation in risk situations plays a crucial role in making decisions and choosing strategies of behavior under conditions of uncertainty, which is not only a rational process implemented by cognitive mechanisms but also an emotional process including people’s attitudes toward a situation. A set of extreme professions includes service of managers in the penitentiary service, which is associated with emotionally intense social activity and involves a constant presence of pronounced negative stressors. Studying the problem of self-regulation related to the interaction of managers with the socium of extreme nature focuses on answering the key question: What psychological and situational factors contribute to a sufficient level of self-regulation for successful activities under stress conditions? To analyze the system of self-regulation among managers in the penitentiary service we conducted a research using 6 standardized psychodiagnostic technique: Behaviour Self-Regulation Style (V. I. Morosanova, E. M. Konoz); Burnout Assessment, adapted by A. A. Rukavishnikov; Personal Aggressiveness and Propensity to Conflicts (E. P. Ilyin and P. A. Kovalev); Rapid Evaluation of Management Potential (N. P. Fetiskin, V. V. Kozlov, G. M. Manuylov); Evaluation of Communicative and Organizational Aptitudes (V. V. Sinyavsky and B. A. Fedorishin); Orientation Styles of Professional Communication (N. P. Fetiskin, V. V. Kozlov, G. M. Manuylov). The principal assumption in this research was that the structure of individual features of self-regulation (a self-regulation style) and its levels was determined by one’s personal characteristics and professional-environmental factors. The study objectives were: to identify the relationship between the level of self-regulation, overall mental state, and management potential in managers involved in extreme activity (working in the penitentiary service); to reveal psychological factors for optimization of managerial competencies under extreme conditions of professional activity; and to identify main difficulties and competence deficiencies for subsequent corrective and psychotherapeutic interventions. The research conducted enabled us: to study in details the peculiarities of self-regulation, overall mental state, and management potential among managers in the penitentiary system; and to determine which system components require intentional development in order to mitigate deficiencies and to increase the effectiveness of managers.

Key words: self-regulation; manager; professional competence; extreme profession; penitentiary service.

References

  1. Afanasieva, N. Ye. (2017), “Psychological counseling of specialists of extreme profile at the stage of adaptation to professional activity”, Psychological Journal: a collection of scientific papers / in Maksymenka S.D. (Ed.), № 4 (8), Issue 8, Kostiuk G.S. Institute of Psychology of the National Academy of Pedagogical Sciences of Ukraine, pp. 5–16.
  2. Konopkin, O. A. (2011), Psychological mechanisms of activity regulation, 2nd ed., Lenand, Moscow.
  3. Leontiev, D. A. (2011), Personal Potential. Structure and Diagnostics, Sense, Moscow.
  4. Kuhl, J. (1987), “Action Control: The maintenance of motivational states”. In: Kuhl, J. & Halisch, F. (Eds.), Motivation, Intention, and Volition. Heidelberg: Springer-Verl, Berlin, pp. 279–291. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-70967-8_19
  5. Deci, E. L. and Ryan, R. M. (2000), “The “what” and “why” of goal pursuits: Human needs and the self-determination of behavior”, Psychological Inquiry, Issue 11, pp. 227–268. https://doi.org/10.1207/S15327965PLI1104_01
  6. Baumeister, R. F., Vohs, K. D. and Tice, D. M. (2007), “The strength model of self-control”, Current Directions in Psychological Science, Issue 16, pp. 396–403. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8721.2007.00534.x
  7. Morosanova, V. I. (2004), Questionnaire “Style on self-regulation of behavior” (SMPM): Management, Kogito-Tsentr, Moscow.
  8. Morosanova, V. I. (2001), Individual style of self-regulation: Phenomenon, structure and functions of individual styles of self-regulation of a person, Science, Moscow.
  9. Kobozev, Yu. (2011), “The Assessment of the Intensity of Professional Stress and Its Effect on the Coping Behavior and the Mechanisms of Psychological Defense of Internal Law Enforcement Executives”, Psychopedagogy in law enforcement, Issue 2, pp. 45–49.
  10. Fetiskin, N. P., Kozlov, V. V. and Manuylov, G. M. (2002), Socio-psychological diagnosis of personality development and small groups, Institute of Psychotherapy, Moscow.

[collapse]

Full text .pdf

©2024. Penitentiary academy of Ukraine