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ROGERS PERSON CENTERED APPROACH:Humanistic, Actualizing tendency

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Personality Psychology ­ PSY 405
VU
Lesson 21
ROGERS PERSON CENTERED APPROACH
Client Centered Approach or
Client Centered Therapy
Self Theory of Personality
1- Phenomenological theory of personality is that a person's behavior is obtained through observation of
his internal frame of reference. why an individual thinks, feels, and behaves in a given way, it is necessary
to know how that person perceives and interprets the world.
2- Humanistic
Humanistic view puts the emphasis on the positive aspects of life, free choices and personal growth
experiences.
Example:
In order to understand the personality of my Pakistani students I have to study their frame of reference and
see how they think , feel and behave.
So I have to put myself in their position and understand their personality
(empathy).
3-Actualizing tendency
An innate need to survive, grow and enhance one's self.
4- Fully Functioning Person is Rogers' view of the Good Life
It is a term used by Rogers to designate individuals who are using their capacities and talents, realizing
their potentials.
1-Biographical Sketch
2-Actualizing tendency
3-Rogers phenomenological position
4-Concept of self
5-Need for positive regard
6-Conditions of worth
7-Unconditional positive regard
8-Experience of threat and process of defense
·
Threat
·
Anxiety
9-Defense mechanisms
10-Fully functioning person
Five characteristics:
1-Openness to experience
2-Experiential living
3-Organismic trusting
4-Experiential freedom
5-Creativity or psychological maturity
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Personality Psychology ­ PSY 405
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11-Rogers view of science and research
12-Measuring self concept
13-Personality organization
14-Client centered therapy
15-Psychotherapy and gardening
16-Student centered teaching
17-Summary
18-Evaluation
Roger's Person Centered Approach
A Phenomenological Theory of Personality
Phenomenology is the study of the individual's subjective experience, feelings, and private concepts as
well as his or her personal views of world and self. As a disciplined effort to explain why each of us
experiences and relates to the world as we do, phenomenological psychology today has one of its most
articulate spokesmen in Carl Rogers. For Rogers, behavior is utterly dependent upon how one perceives the
world-that is, behavior is the result of immediate events as they are perceived and interpreted by the
individual. Such an approach to personology emphasizes the self and its characteristics. Indeed, Rogers'
theory is often referred to as a self theory of personality because, for him, "the best vantage point for
understanding behavior is from the internal frame of reference of the individual himself" (Rogers, 1951, p.
494).
Biographical Sketch
Carl Ransom Rogers was born January 8, 1902, in Oak Park, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. He was the
fourth of six children five of whom were hoys. His father was a civil engineer and contractor who achieved
financial success in his profession, so the family was economically secure throughout Rogers' childhood
and early youth.
Rogers has written several books on counseling and personality, including Psychotherapy and Personality
Change (with R. Dymond, 1954), On Becoming a Person: A Therapist's View of Psychotherapy (1961),
Freedom to Learn: A View of What Education Might Become (1969), Carl Rogers on Encounter Groups
(1970), Becoming Partners: Marriage and Its Alternatives (1972), and Carl Rogers on Personal Power
(1977). His autobiography appears in A History of Psychology in Autobiography (Volume 5, 1967, pp.
341-384). Carl Rogers is unquestionably one of the most influential American psychologists.
On the basis of his clinical experience, Rogers has concluded that the inner-most core of human nature is
essentially purposive, forward-moving, constructive, realistic, and quite trustworthy. He regards the person
as an active force of energy oriented toward future goals and self-directed purposes, rather than a creature
pushed and pulled by forces beyond his or her control
Rogers contends that Christianity has nourished the belief that man is innately evil and sinful. Moreover, it
is his contention that this negative view of humanity has been reinforced by Freud, who presented a portrait
of the person with an id and an unconscious which would, if permitted expression, manifest itself in incest,
homicide, thievery, rape, and other horrendous acts. According to this view, humanity is basically and
fundamentally irrational, non-socialized, selfish, and destructive of self and others. Rogers (I957a) agrees
that people occasionally express a variety of bitter and murderous feelings, abnormal impulses, and bizarre
and antisocial actions. Thus, when people are functioning fully, when they are free to experience and to
satisfy their inner natures, they show themselves to be positive and rational creatures those can be trusted to
live in harmony with themselves and others. Aware that his view of human nature, may be considered to be
nothing more, than naive optimism.
In sum, Rogers has a profound (almost religious) sense of respect for human nature. He posits that the
human organism has a natural tendency to move in the direction of differentiation, self-responsibility,
cooperation, and maturity. The expression of this basic nature, according to Rogers, allows for the
continuation and enhancement of the individual and the species.
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Actualizing Tendency as Life's Master Motive
In line with his positive view of human nature, Rogers hypothesizes that all behavior is energized and
directed by a single, unitary motive which he calls the actualizing tendency
Certain definitive characteristics mark the actualizing tendency. First, it is rooted in the physiological
processes of the entire body (i.e., it is a biological fact, not a psychological tendency). At an organic level
this inborn tendency involves not only the maintenance of the organism by meeting deficiency needs (air,
food, water) but also the enhancement of the organism by providing for development and differentiation of
the body's organs and functions, its growth and continual regeneration. Of even greater significance for the
human personality is the motivating force which the actualizing tendency provides for increased autonomy
and self-reliance, for enlarging one's field of experience, and for being creative.
Additionally, Rogers maintains that the actualizing tendency is common to all forms of life, it is
characteristic not only of human beings, or only of animals, but of all living things. It is the essence of life.
Rogers' Phenomenological Position
It has already been noted that Rogers' theory is illustrative of the phenomenological approach to
personality. A phenomenological position holds that what is real to an individual (i.e., what reality is
thought, understood, or felt to be) is that which exists within that person's internal frame of reference, or
subjective world, including everything in his or her awareness at any point in time. It follows that an
individual's perceptions and experiences not only constitute that person's reality but also form the basis for
his or her actions; one responds to events in accordance with how one perceives and interprets them. For
example, a thirsty man stranded in the desert will run as eagerly to a pool of water that is a mirage as to a
real pool. Similarly, two people observing an identical set of circumstances may later recall two very
different outcomes, which is often the case with "eyewitness" accounts of unidentified flying objects,
traffic accidents, and other unexpected events.
One important implication of a phenomenological perspective for a theory of personality is that the best
understanding of a person's behavior is obtained through observation of his or her internal frame of
reference. To explain why an individual thinks, feels, and behaves in a given way, it is necessary to know
how that person perceives and interprets the world. Subjective experience is thus the key to understanding
behavior. This means that the most important object of psychological study is a person's subjective
experiences, because these experiences alone are the ultimate causal agents of behavior.
Finally, Rogers' choice of a phenomenological approach to personality theory reflects his belief that the
complexity of behavior can only be understood by reference to the entire person. In other words, Rogers
espouses a holistic view of personality, the view that a person behaves as an integrated organism and that
his or her unity cannot be derived from atomistic (i.e., reductionistic) approaches to behavior. As will
become evident in the ensuing discussion, Rogers' commitment to a holistic point of view is manifest in
practically every facet of his thought.
Concept of Self: Who am I anyway?
The self is the most important construct in Rogers' theory of personality; indeed, the concept of self is
indispensable to an appreciation of Rogers' view of human behavior.
The conscious perceptions, and values of the concept "I" or "me." The self-concept denotes the individual's
conception of the kind of person he or she is. The self-concept is one's image of oneself. Especially
included are awareness of being (what I am) and awareness of function (what I can do).
The self-concept includes not only one's perceptions of what one is like but also what one thinks one ought
to be and would like to be. This latter component of the self is called the ideal self. The ideal self represents
the self-concept that the individual would. Most like to possess. It is basically equivalent to the superego in
Freudian theory.
Rogers postulates that when the self is first formed, it is governed by the organismic valuing process alone.
In other words, the infant or child evaluates each new experience in terms of whether it facilitates or
impedes his or her innate actualizing tendency. For instance, hunger, thirst, cold, pain, and sudden loud
noises are negatively valued, since they interfere with the maintenance of biological integrity. Food, water,
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security, and love are positively valued; they favor the enhancement of the organismic tendency. In a sense,
the organismic valuing process is a monitoring system that keeps the human infant on the proper course of
need, satisfaction. Infants evaluate their experiences according to whether or not they like them, whether
they are pleasing or displeasing, and so on. Such evaluations result from their spontaneous responses to
direct experiences, i.e., they are completely "natural."
Need for Positive Regard
Rogers contends that all persons possess a basic desire to experience attitudes such as warmth, respect,
admiration, love, and acceptance from significant people in their lives. This need for positive regard
develops as the awareness of self emerges, and it is pervasive and persistent. It is first seen in the infant's
need to be loved and cared for, and is subsequently reflected in the person's satisfaction when approved by
others and frustration when disapproved. Roger indicates that positive regard may be either learned or
innately given to all persons, and although he prefers the former explanation (i.e., that it is a secondary
learned motive), its origin is irrelevant to his theory.
Conditions of Worth
Given the fact that a child has a compelling need for Positive regard, she becomes increasingly sensitive to
or influenced by the attitudes. For example, such is the case when a father tells his son that bringing home a
straight "A" report card will not only earn him an increase in his weekly allowance but also excuse him
from having to wash the family car and mow the grass. Conditional positive regard is also manifest in many
other types of human relationships involving the giving or withholding of approval and support.
Rogers states rather forcefully that conditions of worth imposed on a child are detrimental to his or her
becoming a fully functioning person. This is because the child tries to attain standards set by others rather
than to identify and attain what she or he really is or wants to be. Thus, he comes to evaluate himself and
his worth as an individual (what is valuable and what is not valuable about himself) in terms of only those
of his actions, thoughts, and feelings that received approval and support.
Unconditional Positive Regard
While it is obvious that no person is completely devoid of conditions of worth, Rogers feels that it is
possible to give or (receive positive regard irrespective of the worth placed on specific aspects of a person's
behavior. This means that a person is accepted and respected for what he or she is without any ifs, ands, or
buts.' Such unconditional positive regard is strikingly evident in a mother's love for her child when-
regardless of the child's actions, thoughts, and feelings- he or she is genuinely loved and respected. She
loves the child because it is her child, not because the child has fulfilled any specific condition or lived up
to a Specific Expectation
It can be seen, then, that Rogers' emphasis on unconditional positive regard as the ideal approach to
child rearing does not imply an absence of discipline, social constraints, or other forms of behavioral
control. What it does mean is providing an atmosphere in which a child is valued and loved for exactly
what he or she is- a precious human being. When children perceive themselves in such a way that no
self-experience is more or less worthy of positive regard than any other, they are experiencing
unconditional positive self-regard.
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Table of Contents:
  1. THE NATURE OF PERSONALITY THEORY:Objectives of Personality Psychology
  2. PERSONALITY MEASUREMENT:Observational Procedures, Rating Scales
  3. MAIN PERSPECTIVES:Psychometrics, observation, Behavioral Coding Systems
  4. SIGMUND FREUD: A PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY OF PERSONALITY
  5. INSTINCT: WHAT MOTIVATES HUMAN BEHAVIOR?, The Oral Stage
  6. PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY OF SIGMUND FREUD:The Ego, Free association
  7. THEORY OF CARL JUNG:Biographical Sketch, Principles of Opposites, The Persona
  8. THE PSYCHOLOGICAL TYPES:Childhood, Young Adulthood, Middle Ages
  9. ALFRED ADLER:Biographical Sketch, Individual Psychology, Feeling of Inferiority
  10. INDIVIDUAL PSYCHOLOGY:Fictional Finalism, Social Interest, Mistaken Styles of Life
  11. KAREN HORNEY:Adjustment to Basic Anxiety, Adjustment Techniques
  12. ADJUSTMENT TO BASIC ANXIETY:Moving Towards People, Moving Against People
  13. ERIK ERIKSON:Anatomy and Destiny, Ego Psychology, Goal of Psychotherapy
  14. ERIK ERIKSON:Human Development, Goal of Psychotherapy
  15. SULLIVAN’S INTERPERSONAL THEORY:Core Concepts, The Self-System
  16. SULLIVAN’S INTERPERSONAL THEORY:Cognitive Process, Tension
  17. CONSTITUTIONAL PSYCHOLOGY:The Structure of Physique, Evaluation
  18. SHELDON’S SOMATOTYPE THEORY:The Structure of Physique
  19. MASLOW’S THEORY:Self-Actualizers Aren't Angels, Biographical Sketch
  20. MASLOW’S THEORY:Basic Concepts of Humanistic Psychology, Problem Centering
  21. ROGERS PERSON CENTERED APPROACH:Humanistic, Actualizing tendency
  22. ROGERS PERSON CENTERED APPROACH:Fully functioning person
  23. ROGERS PERSON CENTERED APPROACH:Client Centered Therapy,
  24. KELLY’S COGNITIVE THEORY OF PERSONALITY THEORY:Biographical Sketch
  25. CORE CONCEPTS OF GEORGE KELLY’S COGNITIVE THEORY OF PERSONALITY
  26. GORDON ALLPORT: A TRAIT THEORY OF PERSONALITY:Personality as a
  27. GORDON ALLPORT: A TRAIT THEORY OF PERSONALITY:Secondary Traits
  28. FACTOR ANALYTIC TRAIT THEORY:Factor Analysis, The Nature of Personality
  29. FACTOR ANALYTIC TRAIT THEORY:The Specification Equation, Research Methods
  30. HENRY MURRAY’S PERSONOLOGY:Need, Levels of Analysis, Thema
  31. HENRY MURRAY’S PERSONOLOGY (CONTINUED)
  32. ALBERT BANDURA’S SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY:BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
  33. ALBERT BANDURA’S SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY:Reciprocal Determinism
  34. THE STIMULUS RESPONSE THEORY OF DOLLARD AND MILLER:Core Concepts
  35. THE STIMULUS RESPONSE THEORY OF DOLLARD AND MILLER:Innate Equipment
  36. SKINNER’S THEORY OF PERSONALITY:Biographical Sketch, Books
  37. SKINNER’S THEORY OF PERSONALITY:Positive Reinforcement, Generalization
  38. ALBERT ELLIS THEORY OF PERSONALITY:Biographical Sketch, Social Factors
  39. THE GRAND PERFECT THEORY OF PERSONALITY:Genes and Biology
  40. PERSPECTIVES OR DOMAINS OF PERSONALITY PSYCHOLOGY:Dispositional
  41. PERSPECTIVES OR DOMAINS OF PERSONALITY PSYCHOLOGY
  42. PERSPECTIVES OR DOMAINS OF PERSONALITY PSYCHOLOGY:Need
  43. THE GRAND THEORY OF PERSONALITY:Psychosexual Stages of Development
  44. PERSONALITY APPRAISAL:Issues in Personality Assessment
  45. PERSONALITY PSYCHOLOGY: NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE DISCIPLINE