quiet-the-power-of-introverts-in-a-world-that-cant-stop-talking-susan-cain
926/92911. Don’t seat quiet kids in “high interaction”areas: James McCroskey, “QuietChildren in the Classroom: On Helping NotHurting,” Communication Education 29(1980).12. being popular isn’t necessary: Rubin, TheFriendship Factor: “Research findings do notsuggest that popularity is the golden routeto all manner of good things. There simplyis not much evidence that it guarantees socialor academic success in adolescence,young adulthood, or later life.… If yourchild finds one other child to befriend, andthe pair clearly have fun together and enjoyeach other’s company and are supportivecompanions, good for him. Stop worrying.Not every child needs to be part of a big,happy gang. Not every child needs manyfriends; for some, one or two will do.”13. intense engagement in and commitmentto an activity: I. McGregor and BrianLittle, “Personal Projects, Happiness, and
927/929Meaning: On Doing Well and Being Yourself,”Journal of Personality and Social Psychology74, no. 2 (1998): 494–512.14. the psychologist Dan McAdams: Jack J.Bauer, Dan P. McAdams, and Jennifer L.Pals, “Narrative Identity and EudaimonicWell-Being,” Journal of Happiness Studies 9(2008): 81–104.A NOTE ON THE WORDS INTROVERT ANDEXTROVERT1. the anthropologist C. A. Valentine: C. A.Valentine, “Men of Anger and Men ofShame: Lakalai Ethnopsychology and ItsImplications for Sociological Theory,” Ethnologyno. 2 (1963): 441–77. I first learnedabout this article from David Winter’s excellenttextbook, Personality: Analysis andInterpretation of Lives (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1996).
- Page 875 and 876: 875/929Psychotherapy and the Highly
- Page 877 and 878: 877/92942. As Jung speculated almos
- Page 879 and 880: 879/929CHAPTER 7: WHY DID WALL STRE
- Page 881 and 882: 881/929areas that have something to
- Page 883 and 884: 883/929Makes You the Way You Are. S
- Page 885 and 886: 885/929“How Emotions Facilitate a
- Page 887 and 888: 887/929Polymorphism at the Serotoni
- Page 889 and 890: 889/929Barrionuevo, “Vincent Kami
- Page 891 and 892: on the dopamine-driven reward syste
- Page 893 and 894: 893/929Type Indicator (Palo Alto, C
- Page 895 and 896: 895/929Personality Traits (Cambridg
- Page 897 and 898: 897/92951. all introverts are const
- Page 899 and 900: 899/929features predict happiness m
- Page 901 and 902: 901/9292. article called “The New
- Page 903 and 904: 903/92911. Another study asked Asia
- Page 905 and 906: 905/929Time,” Child Development 7
- Page 907 and 908: 907/929National Center for Educatio
- Page 909 and 910: Personality Dispositions,” Annual
- Page 911 and 912: may fluctuate over time, but you pr
- Page 913 and 914: 913/929Psychology,” Psychological
- Page 915 and 916: 915/929Selves and Well Beings,” i
- Page 917 and 918: 917/929Stability” measures freedo
- Page 919 and 920: 919/929Argumentative Discussions,
- Page 921 and 922: 921/929Nonverbal Decoding,” Journ
- Page 923 and 924: 923/929(Cambridge, MA: HarvardUnive
- Page 925: 925/929Neuroscientist Reveals How t
- Page 929: @Created by PDF to ePub
927/929
Meaning: On Doing Well and Being Yourself,”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
74, no. 2 (1998): 494–512.
14. the psychologist Dan McAdams: Jack J.
Bauer, Dan P. McAdams, and Jennifer L.
Pals, “Narrative Identity and Eudaimonic
Well-Being,” Journal of Happiness Studies 9
(2008): 81–104.
A NOTE ON THE WORDS INTROVERT AND
EXTROVERT
1. the anthropologist C. A. Valentine: C. A.
Valentine, “Men of Anger and Men of
Shame: Lakalai Ethnopsychology and Its
Implications for Sociological Theory,” Ethnology
no. 2 (1963): 441–77. I first learned
about this article from David Winter’s excellent
textbook, Personality: Analysis and
Interpretation of Lives (New York: McGraw-
Hill, 1996).