Humanistic Approach Flashcards
1
Q
What is Humanistic Psychology?
A
- Approach that rejects the deterministic outlook of the behaviourist and psychodynamic approaches.
- Views Human beings as self determining and free to make choices.
2
Q
Assumptions - Idiographic
A
- Must focus on conscious experience and personal responsibility and not behaviour.
- Recognises how we perceive and understand the world around us is unique to everyone.
- All different - differences within each group.
- Ideographic - to see individual person and their experiences as unique.
3
Q
Assumptions - Free Will
A
- We are autonomous and not constrained by internal or external forces.
- We have conscious control.
- Not to say we can choose all behaviour as we are constrained by our biology and societal forces
4
Q
Assumptions - Holism
A
- No point in looking at just one aspect of an individual.
- If only look at one aspect we may miss what is actually affecting behaviour.
- Do not agree with focusing on childhood in therapy.
5
Q
Assumptions - Subjective
A
- Rejects scientific methods.
- Seek to understand personal experiences that make us unique.
- Methods allow us to explain our own point of view. - Thoughts and feelings.
6
Q
Self Actualisation
A
- Capacity for healthy personal growth toward reaching our full potential.
- Can’t be tested.
- Not permanent
- Ultimate feeling of well-being and satisfaction.
- Innate drive but we don’t all achieve it.
- Research has shown that their is a link between an individual’s level of self actualisation and their psychological health.
7
Q
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
A
- Pyramid
- In the hierarchy, it shows how humans can become fulfilled by achieving certain needs. If not met can not reach self actualisation.
- If all 5 needs to not remain in place then an individual can move out of the state until the meeds are once again met.
8
Q
The Hierarchy of Needs
A
- Bottom=Physiological (food, water, shelter, clothes)
- Safety (Security of body, employment, health, property)
- Love/Belonging (Friends, Family, intimacy)
- Esteem (Confidence, achievement, respect)
- Top=Self Actualisation (morality, creativity, spontaeity, acceptance.
9
Q
Rogers theory of personality development
A
- Focuses on the selves and identifies how these need to integrate to achieve self-actualisation.
- Self-concept - how we perceive ourselves. Self you feel you are. Can often be distorted.
- Ideal Self - who we want to be. Aiming towards. Who we wish we were.
- Real self - person actually is, subjective as everyone perceives people differently.
10
Q
What is Congruence?
A
- When self-concept and ideal self are similar to each other.
- Very difficult to achieve.
- Must be achieved to reach self-actualization.
- If selves are incongruent then personal growth is not possible.
11
Q
Conditions of worth
A
- Reason why me might not self actualise.
- Significant others can help or hinder our personal growth.
- Love and acceptance can be given either conditionally or unconditionally
- UPR- when others love and accept us without judgement and without placing conditions of what they want us to be.
- CPR - when love and acceptance comes at a price. Cannot be ourselves or acceptance is wirhdrawn. Only feel a sense of self acceptance if they meet the expectations.
12
Q
Influence on Counselling Psychology
A
- Rogers took ideas of humanistic theory and applied it to therapeutic settings.
- Developed client-centered therapy.
- Emotional problems adults face such as low self esteem stem from the gap between their actual and ideal self - often established in childhood as a result of cpr from parents.
- Therapy involves providing unconditional positive regard the client did not get as a child.
13
Q
Role of Therapist in client centered therapy
A
- To provide genuineness - honesty
- Empathy - seeing world from clients view point.
- Unconditional Positive Regard - interacting without judgement and placing no demands on the client
- Non directive therapy - therapists do not tell client the solution to their problems.
- Ultimate aim is for client to close the gap on their actual and ideal selves and gain congruence so that they are able to steer their life towards growth and self actualisation.
- Outcome is change.
14
Q
Evaluation - Free Will
A
- Takes a positive view of the human condition and brings human back to psychology.
- Humans are free and seek to do good to achieve our potential.
- Freud’s approach haves us believing we are doomed to despair and destruction. This approach believes we have individual freedom and control.
- Strength - offers a more optimistic and refreshing alternative to other deterministic approaches.
15
Q
However - Free Will
A
- Contradicts itself.
- Rogers say we have an innate tendency to achieve our full potential. Means we have no choice.
- Maslow’s Hierarchy insists that deficiency needs must be met before growth needs. Suggests our behaviour is determined by forces we cannot change.
- Within humanistic counselling there is the acceptance that we are controlled by social forces and relationships with significant others.