Student-Centered Student-centered learning is viewed as a progressive approach to teaching. The focus in student-centered learning is to make students more aware of the material they are learning and why it is important. Teachers want to make students more active in the classroom‚ by encouraging them to interact with one another. The teacher measures achievement based on individual student performance‚ instead of comparing each person to their peers. Teachers practicing student-centered learning
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1.1 Person centered practice is providing care and needs which centers on the client. Its a way of caring for person as an individual and putting them and their families at the heart of all decisions. They are recognized as individuals with their own personality‚ likes and dislikes who has individual beliefs and preferences. Person centered practice put value to the independence‚ privacy‚ partnership‚ choice‚ dignity‚ respect and rights of the client 1.2 There are several different approaches or
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The major typical ethical issues for sales people and sales managers – review the types‚ causes and make suggestions on how to address. Ethical conflict is defined as occurring when an individual feels pressure to take actions that are inconsistent with what he or she feels to be right (Correlates p. 343) Whilst analysis of ethical conflict and the various ethical issues is relevant in many aspects of business‚ it is particularly important in the area of personal selling and sales management
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2489 words Evaluate the claim that Person-Centred Therapy offers the therapist all that he/she will need to treat clients. ‘Person-centred therapy’ is a description given to the humanistic approach to counselling originally developed by Carl Rogers in the mid-twentieth century. In order to evaluate the claim that this approach offers everything a therapist needs to treat any client‚ it is necessary to understand both the content of Rogers’ ideas and also their context: where they came from‚ how
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Multicultural Counseling After reading the many articles on the notion of diagnosis and counseling with multicultural/ethnic patients‚ it has come to my attention that this focus is solely based on stereotypical attitudes. Sure‚ it can be said that it is important for a therapist to have a background of the patient’s heritage and culture‚ but doesn’t this necessarily mean that the outlook of the therapist will be put in a box by doing so? I think multicultural competency is a ridiculous way to
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Definition and Research Two Emerging Issues In Multicultural Psychology Sandi Pilcher PSY/535 April 4‚ 2011 Gaston Weisz Definition and Research Two Emerging Issues in Multicultural Psychology This paper is a description of how the emerging issues of definitions and research will impact society. Also included in this work is an explanation of how these issues will affect the interaction among culturally diverse groups. Society may have a variety of meanings for words‚ depending
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Running Head: MULTICULTURAL COUNSELING WITH HISPANIC FAMILIES Multicultural Counseling Success with Hispanic Families Dawn With Artz University Mike Smith‚ Ph.D. December 16‚ 2009 Abstract There are many characteristics and commonalities among immigrants coming into the United States such as language‚ values‚ tradition‚ religion‚ and culture. They come to the United States from many different countries and yet American culture puts them into one large melting pot and
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The lesson reviewed was “Sexism: From Identification to Activism‚” a very proactive lesson that dug into the issue of sexism‚ and how the students lives where affected by the topic. The lesson begins by introducing a quote about sexism that goes over the forms in which it can be expressed. From there the lesson plan has the students begin to explore how sexism shapes language‚ the government‚ and behavior. The students are asked to share their beliefs on sexism and how it affects their lives via
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Explain the historical development of one major therapeutic model‚ including the people influential in its development Person centred counselling came around in the 1940-1950’s by a psychologist called Carl Rogers‚ Rogers and Abraham Maslow held meetings to discuss the future of the humanistic approach‚ they later went on to establish the American association for humanistic psychology. Person centred counselling came about due to their only being two other therapeutic models‚ psychoanalysis and behaviourism
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Psychotherapeutic counselling; Year 2 Essay 1 2‚406 words P.Reeve; City College‚ Norwich 08/06/2014 “Evaluate the claim that Person-Centred Therapy offers the therapist all that he/she will need to treat clients”. For the purpose of this essay‚ I will attempt to evaluate the theory that Person-Centred Therapy offers the therapist all they need to treat clients. Therapists will have many different approaches and theories for their interventions‚ but will arguably
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