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    Humanistic Approach

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    personality and explain the basic aspects of humanistic theory that are incompatible with biological explanations of personality. Abraham Maslow developed the Hierarchy of Needs theory that remains valid today for understanding human motivation‚ management training‚ and personal development. We are all motivated by needs. Our most basic needs are natural‚ having evolved over tens of thousands of years. Abraham Maslow ’s Hierarchy of Needs helps to explain how these needs motivate us all. Maslow

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    Lead person centered practice unit 517 Learning outcome1 Learning outcome-based work differs from task-based approach to care by using person-cantered principles to assess‚ plan‚ deliver and monitor care services 1. It is too risky. Service providers cannot condone poor or unwise decisions. Chase Heys uses person cantered plans with its respite service users when the service user is being booked in the care staff complete a person cantered plan with them to get a general picture of the person

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    Eclectic Approach

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    A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF THE ECLECTIC APPROACH BY: Tavane Brooks-Barrett WHAT IS THE ECLECTC APPROACH?  The eclectic approach is the label given to a teacher’s use of techniques and activities from a range of teaching approaches and methodologies.  HISTORY OF THE ECLECTIC APPROACH  The eclectic approach was proposed as a reaction to the profusion of teaching methods in the 1970’s and 1980’s.  Eclecticism was first recorded to have been practiced by a group of ancient Greek and Roman philosophers who

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    Behaviourism Approach

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    Behaviourism approach‚ this approach has assumptions of that we’re all born a “tabula Rosa”- a blank state‚ it also says that we learn through 2 types of “conditioning” • Classical conditioning • Operant conditioning Classical conditioning is a basic form of learning in which simple responses are associated with new stimuli. An experiment that shows classical conditioning is the Little Albert Experiment (Phobias). This experiment was to show that you can change a person not fearing anything into

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    cognitive approach

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    Cognitive approach The cognitive approach focuses on the way information is processed by humans. It looks at how we as individuals treat information and how it leads to responses. Cognitive psychologists study internal processes such as attention‚ language‚ memory‚ thinking and perception. The main assumption of this approach is that in when information is received it is then processed by the brain and this processing directs how we as individuals behave or justify why we behave the way we

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    The Communicative Approach was founded by Robert Langs.. Psychoanalysis has turned reality on its head: We are taught to think of ourselves as distorters and misperceivers‚ unreliable slaves to our inner fantasies - especially when we are patients in therapy. But the communicative approach has shown that it is more accurate and compelling to see ourselves as highly reliable perceivers‚ with the understanding that our most valid perceptions are experienced unconsciously and encoded in the stories

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    Psychodynamic Approach

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    Psychology Task 1 The psychodynamic approach includes all the theories in psychology that see human functioning based upon the interaction of drives and forces within the person‚ particularly unconscious‚ and between the different structures of the personality. Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) developed a collection of theories which have formed the basis of the psychodynamic approach to psychology. On the other hand behaviourism refers to a psychological approach which places emphasis on scientific as

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    (2010)‚ believes that having a right based policy approach will support all children and young people across wales to achieve health and well-being. An important element in effectively promoting well-being is to promote resilience of all children and young people to enable them to deal with adverse events and difficult circumstances and be able to identify the children that are at a greater risk of developing physiological problems

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    Comparative Approach

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    2.1 Introduction The nature of the comparative approach At a basic level the comparative approach is simply one of making comparisons‚ something we do constantly in our everyday lives. Thinking‚ and learning‚ by making comparisons is a very natural and intuitive process for us. We use comparisons extensively in our daily thinking and interactions with people and various objects. However‚ making comparisons is not necessarily easy or without its pitfalls.

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    Dagmar Approach

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    DAGMAR is Defining Advertising Goals for Measured Advertising Results. It is basically an approach to advertising planning and a precise method for selecting and quantifying goals and for using those goals to measure performance. Russel H. Colley (1961) pioneered this approach where to establish an explicit link between ad goals and ad results‚ Colley distinguished 52 advertising goals that might be used with respect to a single advertisement‚ a year’s campaign for a product or a company’s entire

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