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Block 1.2 - Problem 3: "Humanistic Approach" $7.50   Add to cart

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Block 1.2 - Problem 3: "Humanistic Approach"

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Discussed: How childhood has an impact on future personality development; What Carl Roger's view is on personality development; How children imitate behaviour according to Bandura. Includes: The need for positive regard, Conditions of worth, Introjection and Identification, The self and processes...

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  • December 26, 2019
  • 8
  • 2019/2020
  • Class notes
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Problem 3
Self-Actualising or Learning:
Humanistic Approach

Case 1 Learning Goals:
1. How does childhood impact future personality development.
2. What is ​Carl Roger’s​ view on personality development?
Key Words: Self-Actualisation

Case 2 Learning Goals:
1. How do children imitate behaviour according to ​Bandura​?
Key Words: Social Cognitive Theory, Imitative Behaviour



Case 1:

Humanistic Psychology ​(Schneider, Bugental, & Pierson, 2001) ​→ Reflects the idea that
everyone has the potential for growth and development.

Self-Actualisation ​(Rogers, 1959) ​→ ​The tendency to develop capabilities in ways that
maintain or enhance the organism.
It is the ​maintenance or enhancement of the self​; enriches your experiences and ​enhances
creativity. Promotes congruence​ (harmony), wholeness or integration within the person, and
it ​minimizes disorganisation or incongruence​.
Carl Rogers ​viewed the potential for positive, healthy growth, expresses itself in everyone if
there are no strong opposing influences. - This growth is termed actualisation.

Organismic Valuing Process ​→ Refers to the​ idea that the organism automatically evaluates
its experience to tell whether they are enhancing actualisation​. - If the ​aren’t​, the organismic
valuing process ​creates a nagging sense that something isn’t right.

Fully Functioning Person ​→ ​Someone who is self-actualising.
→ Such people are open to ​experiencing their feelings and are not threatened by them,​ no
matter what their feelings are.
Characteristics/Traits Include:
- They trust their feelings
- Also open to experiencing the world, rather than hide from it; they immerse
themselves in the world.
- They live their lives filled with meaning, challenge, and excitement, but also a
willingness to risk pain.
A fully functioning person isn’t a particular ​kind of person,​ ​it’s a way of ​functioning​ ​that can
be adopted by anyone who chooses to live that way.

, The Need For Positive Regard:

Positive Regard ​→ ​The need for acceptance, love, friendship, and the affection of others ​-
particularly others who matter to them. Positive regard can come in the form of two different
ways:
1. Unconditional Positive Regard ​→ Affection is given ​without ​special conditions - with
“no strings attached”.
2. Conditional Positive Regard ​→ Affection is given ​only if ​certain conditions are
satisfied. (E.g. “I’ll like and accept you, but only if you act in a particular way.”)

Conditional Self-Regard ​→ ​We give ourselves affection and acceptance ​only w ​ hen we
satisfy those conditions.​ Conditional self-regard makes you behave so as to fit conditions of
worth you’re applying to yourself (​Crocker & Wolfe, 2001​).

Conditions Of Worth ​→ The condition under which people are judged worthy of positive
regard; doing something for positive regard not because we desire it. → When people act to
confirm to a condition of worth, ​they’re doing so not because the act is intrinsically desirable,
but to get a positive regard from other people. ​(E.g. A child doing something that appeases a
parent; good or bad.)
Accepting conditions of worth may interfere with self-actualisation.

Journey Into Selfhood: Positive Regard And Conditions Of Worth:

- According to Rogers, all children are born wanting to be loved and accepted by their
parents and others → He called this inborn need for desire: ​positive regard.
- Parents frequently make their positive regard contingent on conditions​, such as the
conditions expressed in the statements:
- “Show me you are a good child and earn all A’s on your report card.”
- “I would really like it if you warn the star role in your school play.”
- → Another example, parents push children into sports, and the ​children might stay in
the sports, not because they like sports, but to earn the love and positive regard of
their parents.
- Parents can set conditions of worth for their children → Children may become
preoccupied with living up to these conditions of worth, rather than discovering what
makes them happy.

Contingent Self Worth ​→ People who use their performance in some area of life as a
condition for self-acceptance (which especially means the same thing as conditioned
self-regard). → ​People use something in a specific area as conditions of worth, applying
them to themselves​. E.g. Demanding about their academic performance or appearance.

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