M2. Lesson 2: Person Centered Theory Flashcards
What is the formative tendency?
The formative tendency states that all matter, both organic and inorganic, tends to evolve from simple to more complex forms.
What is the actualization tendency?
Humans and other animals possess an actualization tendency: that is, the predisposition to move toward completion or fulfillment.
What is self-actualization (according to Carl Rogers)?
Self-actualization develops after people evolve a self-system and refers to the tendency to move toward becoming a fully functional person.
How does the concept of barriers to psychological growth work?
An individual becomes a person by making contact with a caregiver whose positive regard for that individual fosters positive self-regard. Barriers to psychological growth exist when a person experiences conditions of worth, incongruence, defensiveness, and disorganization. Conditions of worth and external evaluation lead to vulnerability, anxiety, and threat and prevent people from experiencing unconditional positive regard.
When does incongruence develop?
Incongruence develops when the organismic self and the perceived self do not match.
What happens when the organismic and perceived self become incongruent?
When the organismic self and perceived self are incongruent, people will become defensive and use distortion and denial as attempts to reduce incongruence.
What happens when distortion and denial are insufficient to block out the incongruence?
People become disorganized whenever distortion and denial are insufficient to block out incongruence.
What happens to vulnerable people?
Vulnerable people are unaware of their incongruence and are likely to become anxious, threatened, and defensive.
What happens when vulnerable people come in contact with a therapist?
When vulnerable people come in contact with a therapist who is congruent and who has unconditional positive regard and empathy, the process of personality change begins.
What does the process of therapeutic personality change consist of?
This process of therapeutic personality change ranges from extreme defensiveness, or an unwillingness to talk about self, to a final stage in which clients become their own therapists and are able to continue psychological growth outside the therapeutic setting.
What are the basic outcomes of client-centered counseling?
The basic outcomes of client-centered counseling are congruent clients who are open to experiences and who have no need to be defensive. Theoretically, successful clients will become persons of tomorrow, or fully functioning persons.
What was Carl Rogers the founder of?
The founder of client-centered therapy
What kind of psychology professional was Rogers?
Unlike Freud, who was primarily a theorist and secondarily a therapist, Rogers was a consummate therapist but only a reluctant theorist (Rogers, 1959).
What was Carl Rogers more concerned with?
He was more concerned with helping people than with discovering why they behaved as they did. He was more likely to ask “How can I help this person grow and develop?” than to ponder the question “What caused this person to develop in this manner?”
What did Rogers have in common with other theorists?
Like many personality theorists, Rogers built his theory on the scaffold provided by experiences as a therapist.