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    A Critique of the Person-Centred Therapy Introduction In this essay I intend to give an insight primarily to who “Carl Rogers” was and what he stood for. I intend to explore the principles of Person-Centred Therapy and demonstrate various concepts within this approach. I shall touch on the seven stages one goes through whilst attending therapy and how this may benefit both the Client and the Therapist‚ followed by the three primary core conditions plus Spirituality- the fourth condition of

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    Consider applications to education (16 marks) AO2 Piaget believed in the progress of a child’s cognitive development through schooling and has an individualist approach in the way in which the child is an active participant and is responsible for their own learning. According to Piaget‚ cognitive development occurs as the result of maturation. You cannot teach a child certain activities before they are biologically ready‚ for example trying to reach a pre-operationalized child to perform abstract

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    empirical evidence Discuss which factors determine whether abstraction or hyperspecificity is observed 4 memory II Abstraction & generalisation Hyperspecificity Break Encoding specificity Transfer-appropriate processing (brief sketch) Abstraction vs. hyperspecificity 5 Abstraction Another principle that is more encompassing than localised theories Abstraction and generalisation A famous study by Sachs (1967) Presented people with a paragraph like the following: 6 Sachs (1967):

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    Rogers (1977)‚ views human nature as phenomenological‚ meaning that humans structure themselves according to their own perceptions of reality. The humanistic approach to psychotherapy focuses on the client striving for self-actualisation. Person-centred therapy aims for the client to achieve independence and integration by concentrating on their own growth‚ allowing wider understanding of their own problems (Rogers‚ 1977). The promotion of a growth-focused environment is vital for a client as stated

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    Humanistic is a term in psychology relating to an approach which studies the person as a whole and the uniqueness of each individual. The main goals of this counselling approach are to find out how individuals perceive themselves here and now and to recognise their strengths‚ growth‚ self-direction and responsibilities. This approach is optimistic and attempts to help individuals by offering a non-judgemental‚ understanding experience. Unlike other therapies the client is responsible for improving

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    Running head: BIOLOGICAL AND HUMANISTIC APPROACHES TO PERSONALITY Mileva Repasky PSYC 250 Jean M. Porter University of Phoenix Personality can be defined as “the complex of all the attributes-behavioral‚ temperamental‚ emotional and mental-that characterizes a unique individual.” (Princeton University‚ n.d.) Personality has been studied and explained for a long time and is linked directly to Maslow’s humanistic and biological theories. This paper seeks to describe the biological

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    class I wrote friendly‚ creative‚ emotional‚ helpful‚ and nice. I believe these can all be put into a similar cluster. These are things that for the most part I think are positive aspects of myself and what I like to think are a part of being a humanistic type of person. As we discussed more I created a sixth word‚ which was survivor (just as Saba mentioned during our discussion). This sixth word was relieving for me because as hard as it is to say I have survived a lot of trauma in my own past.

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    Humanistic perspective is used to help other individuals develop empathy. Unlike sympathy‚ empathy requires the individual to listen the other persons opinion this includes to be in tune with their feelings and respect for their personality and what they believe in. However‚ this approach is not the easiest‚ not every individual can understand someone’s behaviour. However‚ if respect is given to the service user or service provider this includes the understanding of the issue it’s can make the service

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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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    COGNITIVE

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    What is a categorical syllogism? How well can people judge the validity of categorical syllogisms‚ and what is the difference between validity and truth in syllogistic reasoning? A syllogism in which the premises and conclusion describe the relationship between two categories by using statements that beginning with all‚ no or some. Quality of a syllogism whose conclusion follows logically from the premises. if the two premises of a valid syllogism are true‚ the syllogism’s conclusion must be true

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