Week Six Flashcards

1
Q

carl rogers

A
  • Born in Chicago, Illinois.
  • Conservative family background.
  • Schooled in a strict, religious environment.
  • Started to study agriculture, then religion.
  • Bachelor in 1924, Religious Seminary, Teachers college at Columbia University, PhD in Clinical Psychology in 1931.
  • Began professional career in child psychology.
  • 1930 Director of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.
  • Professor of clinical psychology at Ohio State University in 1940.
  • Published results of his research inClient-Centred Therapy (1951).
  • Psychotherapy and Personality Changein 1954.
  • 1963 joined the staff of Western Behavioural Sciences Institute.
  • In 1968, Carl Rogers and staff created Centre for Studies of the Person.
  • Last years: Applied person-centred approach to Peace Movement and Conflict resolution in hotspots like Northern Ireland, South Africa and Brazil, Europe and US.
  • Lived La Jolla, California until his death in 1987.
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2
Q

humanistic psychology

A
  • Abraham Maslow (1908 - 1970) is instrumental in the development of humanistic psychology.
  • Humanism arose in the late 1950s as a “third force” in psychology- beyond psychodynamic and behavioural approaches.
  • Arose in response to thebehaviourist and psychoanalytic schools of thought.
  • The belief that people are innately good.
  • Focused on their potential rather than focussing on the problem.
  • Belief that morality, ethical values, and good intentions are the strongest driving forces in life.
  • Humanism incorporates a variety of therapeutic techniques, including Rogerian person-centred therapy. Influenced Roger’s ideas.
  • Empathises goal of self-actualization.
  • Humanism and PC therapy focus on packing a growth based environment for the client.
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3
Q

major themes in person-centred therapy

A
  • Based on humanistic values; positive view of human nature.
  • Non-directive reflective approach.
    • No specific skills need to be used
    • Is a process instead
  • Providing an enriching therapeutic environment.
  • A process of self actualization; a journey towards wholeness.
  • People are viewed as coming in with an incongruence
    • Between who they are and who they want to be.
    • These factors allow the client to explore their feelings and their belief systems.
    • PC therapy allows the client to think about their own strengths.
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4
Q

central constructs and ideas in rogerian therapy

A
  • Immediacy: bringing the past and future into the present – here and now focus.
  • The client’s self-actualisation tendency.
  • The client starts to recognise their own potential and move towards it.
  • Starts to develop a healthy self-esteem through self-acceptance.
  • Starts to shift from external to internal valuing system.
    • The opinions of others begin to have less influence and the person is more concerned with their own opinions.
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5
Q

therapeutic process

A
  • Providing sufficient and necessary conditions to change:
    • Empathy.
    • Unconditional positive regard (Respect).
    • Congruence (Genuineness).
    • Client develops self-awareness about their own incongruence.
      Client experiences immediacy and authenticity in the therapeutic relationship
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6
Q

empathy

A
  • Ability to deeply grasp the subjective world of another person – understanding of the client with the client.
  • Process:
    • Therapist share the client’s subjective world by drawing from their own experiences that may be similar to the client’s feelings.
      ○ We will never truly know how another person feels.
      § Nonetheless, we can still display empathy.
      ○ Therapist needs to be able to grasp the clients experience but also understand that their experiences are not exactly the same.
      § Draw on the experience rather than saying that it is exactly the same.
      § Draw upon the feeling rather than tell the client your experience.
      § Do not say that you have experienced it before but instead apply what was felt in that moment to the client’s experience.
      □ Do not self disclose.
  • Purpose in Therapy:
    • Attend to and value their experiences.
    • Process experiences.
    • Change perception on previous experiences.
    • Increase confidence in making choices and pursuing action.
      ○ Being able to distance the client from the issue allows them to better consider it objectively and make and reflect on decisions.
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7
Q

unconditional positive regard

A
  • The therapist’s deep and genuine caring for the client as a person.
  • Therapist may not approve of some of the client’s actions but the therapist does approve of the client.
  • ”I’ll accept you as you are.” rather than, “I’ll accept you when…”.
  • The person-centred counsellor therefore maintains a positive attitude to the client, even if feeling otherwise about the client’s actions.
  • Can be best achieved through empathic understanding of the client.
  • If you accept the client as they are they are more likely to disclose more and engage more in the therapeutic process.
  • This regard will change and fluctuate however should never be dislike for the client as this is note effective.
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8
Q

genuineness/congruence

A
  • The therapist does not have a façade, compared with psychoanalysis.
  • Open expression of thoughts, feelings and reactions are evident in relationship with client. Times when this is used requires reflection and clinical judgement by the therapist.
    • However, need to reflect and see whether this will be appropriate and beneficial for the process.
  • Therapist’s internal and external experiences are one in the same (integrated), so the therapist is authentic.
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9
Q

therapeutic goals

A
  • Develop a safe and trusting therapeutic environment.
  • Develop good rapport.
  • Client defines and clarify their own goals.
  • Self-exploration and self-reflection.
  • Develop from external valuing to internal valuing.
  • Help to reduce the façade and increase authentic living.
  • Develop towards more harmony between ideal self and real self.
  • Develop healthy self-esteem.
  • Move towards “Self Actualisation”.
    Evidence that the therapists attitude itself is enough to effect change from the client
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10
Q

maslow’s heirarchy of needs

A
to achieve self-actualisation be need: 
- biological needs 
secutiry and stability 
belonging and love
esteem 
  • Biological needs- water, food etc.
  • Security and stability- financial stability and stability of shelter etc. making sure that violent people are not living with them.
  • Belonging and love- feeling values
  • Esteem- needs to feel accepted and valued by others.
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11
Q

self actualisation

A

Rogers sees a self-actualised, fully functioning person as a person who:
- Is open to experience, is non defensive.
- Emphasizes fully living in the moment “ here and now”.
- Trusts in oneself.
- Has the ability to freely make choices and takes responsibility for their own choices, highly self-directed.
- Embraces a life of creativity and adaptation, including an abandonment of conformity.
- Has the ability to behave reliably and make constructive choices.
- Lives a full, rich life including the full spectrum of human emotions.
○ Relates closely to therapy.
§ Their actual self might not want to engage in unpleasant emotions however their real self needs to engage in these emotions because it s apart of human life.

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12
Q

congruency and self actualisation

A

A person needs to have full hierarchy of needs before they can engage in greater congruency (where self-image is similar to the idea self, more of an overlap).

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13
Q

motivational interviewing

A
  • Miller & Rollnick (1980)
  • Person Centered therapy with a ‘twist’
  • More practical skills.
      • More directive.- there are actual skills and processes used.
      • Cooperative style eliciting behaviour change.
      • Activates client’s motivation for change.
      • Explores ambivalence towards change. Accepts this state of being.
      • Stresses client responsibility and independent choice for change.
      • Strengths-based approach.
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14
Q

basic principles of MI

A
  • Miller and Rollnick (2002)
  • Motivation comes from 2 things.
    • Person needs to see progress
    • Needs to feel confidence.
    • Seeks to experience the world through client’s perspective.
    • Explores discrepancies and ambivalence in relation to change.
    • Normalizes client’s reluctance to change; respectful view of resistance.
    • Supports client’s self-efficacy in goaling.
    • Strengthens client’s commitment to change and develops change plans.
  • Important to still use the general skills of therapy.
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15
Q

the process of change in counselling

A
pre-contemplation - nurturing patient 
contemplation- socratic teacher 
preparation - experienced coach 
action - consultant 
maintenance
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16
Q

wider impacts of person-centred therapy

A
  • Used in the training of therapists and those in the ‘helping professions’. Common factors.
  • Self-help groups.
  • In the encounter movement, marriage enrichment and group dynamics.
  • In crisis intervention, grief counselling and pastoral care.
  • Peace movement: To promote international and cross cultural relations.