Chapter 6: Carl Rogers: Person-Centered Theory & Therapy Flashcards
Actualizing/Formative Tendency
The capacity for persons, when unfettered by social and familial obstacles, to develop into positive, creative, flexible, and altruistic beings
Carl Rogers’ Birthplace
Illinois
Rogers’ Family Constellation
Fourth of Six children
Rogers’ Parents
Rigid Fundamentalist Christians; described as absolute masters of repressive control;
Rogers’ Peking Trip
Changed Rogers in Different Ways:
Rejected his parents’ conservative religious ideology
Decided to marry his childhood sweetheart
Decided to pursue graduate studies at the liberal Union Thological Seminary in new York City
Rogers’ Academic Attainment
Graduated with a Clinical Psychology degree from Columbia University Teachers College
Rogers’ First Clinical Position
At Rochester Child Guidance Center (Adlerian); Trained in diagnostic-prescriptive-analytic approach;
Elements of Otto Rank’s Practice incorporated into Roger’s Approach
Clients have creative powes.
Therapy should help clients accept their personal uniqueness and self-reliance
Client is the central figure in the therapy process; therapist only helps clients access their powers of self-creation.
Therapists shouldn’t seek to educate clients.
Therapist shouldn’t foster dependency with clients by becoming love objects.
Therapy works when clients are able to experience the present within the therapy setting.
John Dewey’s Philosophy
Not perfection as a final goal but the ever-enduring process of perfecting, maturing, refining is the aim in living.
Developmental Periods of Roger’s practice of Person-Centered Theory and Principles
Nondirective Counseling - began in the 1940’s, characterized by his growing aversion to directive, traditional therapy methods
Client-Centered Therapy - 1950’s when Rogers changed the name; changed focus to an honoring the client’s ability to lead the therapy process
Becoming a Person - 1960’s Rogers began to focus on self-development; his work was strongly assoicated with the human potential movement; Person-centered principles were applied to many new situations, including encounter groups and the teacher-student relationship
Worldwide Issues - 1970’s and 1980’s Rogers was more concerned with worldwide issues; began dedicating much of his work to improving interracial relations and bringing about world peace.
Core features of Rogers’ theoretical propositions
Self-Theory
Phenomenology and the Valuing of Experience
Learning and Growth Potential
Conditions of Worth
Self-Theory
Every person exists within an ever-changing world in which he or she is the center; self as a structure in process, capable of both stability and change;
Organism
Locus of all psychological experience; entire realm of an individual’s experience; self is the me portion of the organism
Incongruence
The distinction between organism and self leaves open the possibility that an individual’s self can be inconsistent with its overall psychological experience; potential discrepancy
Congruence
When the self’s experiences and perceptions are consistent with the organism’s total experience; leads to adjustment, maturity, and a fully functioning individual
Phenomenology and the Valuing of Experience
Premium is placed on direct personal experience; Emotions are valued and crucial informational sources, experiencing is considered a more direct way of accurately knowing oneself and the world.
Learning and Growth Potential
Rogers believed in the inherent actualizing or formative tendency in humans; Capacity to learn on a moment-to-moment basis and have a formative tendency to move toward greater order, complexty and interrelatedness
Conditions of Worth
Learned Needs: Need for Positive Regard
The Need for Self-Regard
Need for Positive Regard
To be prized and loved
Conditions of Worth
Approved and disapproved feelings and actions;
Subception
Perception without awareness
Rogers’ Personality Theory
It is a theory of self, of experience, of striving for maintenance and enhancement of the self, and of learned needs for positive regard. It is also a theory of discrepancy, because it is the discrepancy between self and organismic experience, between what the caretakers value and what the organism values, that creates psychopathology
Rogers’ Psychopathology
Psychological problems are neither faulty beliefs or perceptions nor inadequate or inappropriate behavior per se. As humans confront challenges in life, they will periodically misperceive, operate on mistaken beliefs, and behave inadequately. Dysfunctionality occurs if we fail to learn from feedback and therefore remain stuck in our misperceptions or inadequate behavior. Dysfunctionality is really a failure to learn and change
Failure to Learn From Experience
Best characterizes person-centered psychopathology;