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Humanistic approach ‘third force in psychology’ Humanistic approach ‘third force in psychology’

Humanistic approach ‘third force in psychology’ - PowerPoint Presentation

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Humanistic approach ‘third force in psychology’ - PPT Presentation

Lesson 3 Test research methods Objectives You will be able to Outline the assumptions of the humanistic approach Outline and evaluate humanistic qualitative methods Evaluate the contribution of humanistic approach in terms of strength limitations applications and ethical issues ID: 723102

humanistic approach free stage approach humanistic stage free human hierarchy person order approaches work food physiological sex sleep family

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Slide1

Humanistic approach‘third force in psychology’

Lesson 3Slide2

Test: research methodsSlide3

Objectives:

You will be able to

Outline the assumptions of the humanistic approach

Outline and evaluate humanistic qualitative methods

Evaluate the contribution of humanistic approach in terms of strength, limitations, applications and ethical issues. Slide4

Homework: Monday

Revise

Biopsychology

Issues, Debates and ApproachesSlide5

To Start…

Read the following lyrics….

What do they mean?

How do they link to psychological approaches?

“Are

we human?

Or are we dancer?

My sign is vital

My hands are cold

And I'm on my knees

Looking for the answer

Are we human?

Or are we dancer?”

But which one actually are we? Human or Dancer?Slide6

Human or Dancer?

Human = Free Will, Free Thinking, Free Choosing

Dancer = Determined by forces beyond our control. Slide7

Why is this important?

Cognitive, behaviourist and Biological approach = Deterministic

Cognitive:

choose our own thoughts but constrained to limits of our cognitive system

(soft determinism)

Behaviourist: reinforcement/conditioning (environmental determinism)

Biological: ANS/genetics (biological determinism)Slide8

Free will

is the idea that we have choices in how we act.

Free will separates out what is the intention of an individual from what has been created by other causes.

This means that we are ‘self-determining’ and free from the causal influences of the past.

What is free will?

How far does everyone have the ability to reach their full potential, be the best they could possibly be and self actualise?Slide9

By using science can you…

Exercise free will?

Resist the influence of overriding forces?

(Determinism)

Measure viewpoints and perspectives openly and subjectively?

(Science usually requires objectivity & falsification)

Study the whole person rather than a part?

(Holism)

Look at unique cases rather than groups of people and establishing general laws?

Humanistic Psychologists HATE

Science!Slide10

The Humanistic Approach

It assumes that a healthy psychological attitude is dependant on taking personal responsibility, recognising the existence of

free will

, and striving towards personal growth and fulfilment.

The uniqueness of human beings –

(

concerned with one individual).

The importance of subjective experience – human behaviour is best understood from the perspective of the individual.

Humans have free will – we have the ability to make our own choices and these are driven by the need to self-actualise. Slide11

Abraham

Maslow (1908 – 1970)

An

American Psychologist who

in 1940-1950

developed the Hierarchy as a way for employers to get the best out of their employees by understanding their needs.

But it has been adapted to explain needs in general

terms.

The original Hierarchy has 5 stages but has been adapted by others and we often use the 7 stage approach

There are a number needs in front of you. Can you organise these in order of importance – group some together if you wish. Remember, you need to be able to justify your order - 5 minutesSlide12

NEEDS?

FOOD

SEX

SLEEP

EMPLOYMENT

MORALITY

SAFETY

OF FAMILY

HEALTH

FRIENDS

FAMILY

INTIMACY

CONFIDENCE

RESPECT

ACHIEVEMENT

CREATIVITY

PROBLEM SOLVING

LACK

OF PREJUDICE

SECURITY OF

PROPERTY

Task 1

Organise them in order of importance

Justify your decisions

Can you categories or group them in any way?

Challenge:

How far are these applicable to everyone?Slide13

Maslow’s hierarchy of needs

Task 2:

We are going to build Maslow’s hierarchy of needs by applying it to a story

to

help us understand what each

level of the hierarchy means.

Individually,

Decide which parts of the story represent which needs.

Annotate your version of the hierarchy with examples from the story

.Explain how they exemplify each need. Slide14

Stage 1 – Physiological needs

Physiological

needs

air, water, food, drink, warmth, sleep,

sex

Do note here that sexual needs are those to continue the human race, not really the act of intercourseSlide15

Stage 2 – Safety needs

Safety Needs

protection, security, stability, order

, rules

, law

Physiological needs

air, water, food, drink, warmth, sleep, sexSlide16

Stage 3 – Belonging needs

Physiological needs

Air, water, food, drink, warmth, sex, sleep

Safety Needs- free from chaos

Protection, security, stability, rules, order, law,

Belonging and love needs

Family, affection, relationships, work groupsSlide17

Stage 4 – Self-esteem needs

Physiological needs

Air, water, food, drink, warmth, sleep, sex

Safety Needs

Protection, security, order, law, limits, stability

Belonging and love needs

Family, affection, relationships, work groups

Self-esteem needs

Achievement, status, responsibilitySlide18

Stage 5 – Cognitive Needs (key term)

Physiological needs

Air, water, food, drink, warmth, sex, sleep

Safety Needs

Protection, security, order, law, limits, stability

Belonging and love needs

Family, affection, relationships, work groups

Self-esteem needs

Achievement, status, responsibility

Cognitive needs

Able to think for ourselves, solve problemsSlide19

Stage 6 – Aesthetic needs (key term)

Physiological needs

Air, water, food, drink, warmth, sex, sleep

Safety Needs

Protection, security, order, law, limits, stability

Belonging and love needs

Family, affection, relationships, work groups

Self-esteem needs

Achievement, status, responsibility

Cognitive needs

Able to think for ourselves, solve problems

Aesthetic needs

Appreciation of beauty &

prettinessSlide20

Maslow’s

Hierarchy of Needs

7 stage model

Physiological needs

Air, water, food, drink, warmth, sex, sleep

Safety Needs

Protection, security, order, law, limits, stability

Belonging and love needs

Family, affection, relationships, work groups

Self-esteem needs

Achievement, status, responsibility

Cognitive needs

Able to think for ourselves, solve problems

Aesthetic needs

Beauty,

prettyness

, appreciation

Self-Actualisation

Personal growth , fulfilmentSlide21

Self actualisation is very hard to get to…it means ALL your needs have to have been met

Does anyone think they know anyone who has reached self actualisation?

How far up Maslow’s hierarchy of needs do you think you are and why?Slide22

Does it always

work?

Could

it be hard to follow the rules of the society (stage 2 – laws and not

steal) if

you are hungry (stage 1)

?

It is difficult to enjoy a special relationship (stage 3) if you do not feel safe (stage 2)? Think of children or old people that are

abused

Can you expect someone to have a high self-esteem (level 4) when they are always left out and do not feel part of a team (level 3)

?

Can you motivate someone to achieve their target education grade (level 4) when they're having big problems at home with their family (level 3)?Slide23

Personal Growth

Humanistic psychologists see personal growth as an essential part of being human.

Personal growth = changing and developing as a human to become more fulfilled, satisfied and goal orientated.

Not everyone will manage to achieve this as their may be psychological barriers in the way to achieve this. Slide24

Personality Development

Central to Rogers personality theory is the notion of

self

or

self-concept

.

This is defined as ‘the organised, consistent set of perception and beliefs about oneself’.

The self is influenced by the experiences a person has in his or her life, and our interpretations of those experiences. Slide25

Lesson 4Slide26

Starter: Exam question

Referring to two assumptions of the humanistic approach, explain why humanistic psychologists have rejected the scientific method.

(

Total 4 marks

)Slide27

Referring to two assumptions of the humanistic approach, explain why humanistic psychologists have rejected the scientific method

. (

Total 4 marks

)

Up to two marks for two assumptions of the humanistic approach.

Up

to two marks for explaining why each assumption is at odds with the scientific method. One mark for each explanation.

Each

person can exercise free will

–determinism

Each person is a rational and conscious being and not dominated by unconscious primitive instinctsA person’s subjective experience and understanding of the world is of greater importance to understanding the person than objective reality Humans should be viewed as a whole and not reduced to component parts Humans strive towards achieving self-

actualisationEach person is unique Slide28

Task

draw on the whiteboard Maslow’s hierarchy of needsSlide29

Maslow’s

Hierarchy of Needs

7 stage model

Physiological needs

Air, water, food, drink, warmth, sex, sleep

Safety Needs

Protection, security, order, law, limits, stability

Belonging and love needs

Family, affection, relationships, work groups

Self-esteem needs

Achievement, status, responsibility

Cognitive needs

Able to think for ourselves, solve problems

Aesthetic needs

Beauty,

prettyness

, appreciation

Self-Actualisation

Personal growth , fulfilmentSlide30
Slide31

Experiences

Two primary sources that influence our self-concept are childhood experiences and evaluation by others.

According to Rogers (1959) we want to feel and behave in ways which are consistent with our self image and which reflect what we would like to be like, our

ideal self.

3 selves which need to integrate to achieve self-actualisation.

Self-worth (self-esteem) – the way you see yourself

Self-Image (real/perceived self) – who you actually are

Ideal self – the self you wish to be

State of self-actualisation is important for the person to be fully functioning/ Slide32

Congruence (Rogers)

Write down your perceived self on a sheet of paper. On a different sheet write down your ideal self.

Compare the two –

how congruent are you?

An important part of achieving congruence (consistency between perceived/real self and ideal self) is unconditional positive regard (not have conditions of worth placed upon them)Slide33

Apply It

Joyce

is a successful teacher and is well liked by her colleagues. However, Joyce has always dreamed of becoming a ballroom dancer. She spends much of her spare time with her partner practicing elaborate lifts, and can often be seen twirling around in the classroom during break times.

 

Joyce is considering leaving teaching and becoming a professional dancer. Her colleagues have described her plans as ‘ridiculous’, and her parents, who are very proud of the fact that their daughter is a teacher, have told Joyce that they will not talk to her again if she does. Joyce is beginning to feel sad and miserable.

 

Referring

to features of humanistic psychology, explain how Joyce’s situation may affect her personal growth.

 Slide34

Exam practice (4 marks)Slide35

Exam practice (4 marks)Slide36

Evaluate the contribution of humanistic approach in terms of strength, limitations, applications and ethical issues.

Task 4: Expand on the evaluation point

Reductionism?

Practical Application?

Culture Bias?

Testability?

Alternative Approaches?Slide37

Not Reductionist

Humanists refuse to break up behaviour and experience into smaller components.

They believe to understand human behaviour fully we need to understand all elements of the persons experience (according to their own view/interpretation).

They advocate a holistic approach.

This approach has more validity than its alternatives as it considers human behaviour as meaningful within its real life context. Slide38

Limited Application

The humanistic approach is unlike any of the other mainstream approaches that we have covered so far.

It has had an impact on counselling and helping it develop further as a field.

HOWEVER, the humanistic approach has had little to no influence on psychology as an overall discipline.

This could be due to the Humanistic approach lacking in empirical evidence, which means it can often be seen as abstract rather than a comprehensive theory. Slide39

Limited Application

Hierarchy of needs – influential.

However, it is criticised as being culture-specific (individualistic vs. collectivist

cultires

)Slide40

Positive Approach

Humanistic psychologists are praised for bringing the person back into psychology – as often other approaches have negative views on the person (Freud e.g. a person is a slave of their past and claimed all of us existed between common unhappiness and absolute despair).

Humanistic psychologists offer a refreshing and optimistic alternative to these views and sees a person as basically good, free to work towards the achievement of their potential and in control of their lives. Slide41

Untestable Concepts

Humanistic psychology does include a number of vague ideas that are abstract and difficult to test.

Concepts such as self-actualisation and congruence may be useful therapeutic tools but would prove problematic to assess under experimental conditions.

Rogers did attempt to introduce more rigour into his work by developing the

Q-sort

in therapy. However humanists do not see this as an issue as they do not feel measurement is appropriate.

Nevertheless, as would be expected of an approach that describes itself as anti-scientific, humanistic psychology is short on empirical evidence to support its claims.

This can be seen as a strength of the approach – rejects the scientific measurement does not try to be objective.Slide42

Cultural Bias

The ideas promoted by the Humanistic approach can arguably only be seen within individualist cultures ( E.g. USA).

Whilst collectivist cultures offer an alternative emphasis on the individual ( interdependency etc.) therefore it would not fit in the humanist values

Therefore, we are able to draw the conclusion that this approach would not travel well and is a product of the cultural content it is based on. Slide43

Compare and Contrast Essays

The compare and contrast essays rely on you having a clear knowledge on the fundamental elements of each approach.

What you can identify are similarities and differences between each approach ..

A common Problem is:

you fail to gain marks in the exam because when asked to ‘refer to another theory/approach’ you simply describe a different one without making comparisons or contrasts.

Solution

: structure your comparisons around key debates and research methods. Use these as the basis for pointing out similarities and differences between theories and approaches. Slide44

Pattern to use to structure your answer.

1.Write

a sentence explaining how the theories/approaches are

similar /different.

2

. Add a further sentence or two

explaining the similarity or difference

by pointing out the features of each theory/approach that relate to the difference/similarity you are discussing.

3

. Write a further sentence or two explaining a

consequence or implication of the similarity/difference. 4. If appropriate, identify a difference/similarity that relates to the one you have discussed but which contrasts with it (i.e. a similarity within a difference or a difference within a similarity). Slide45

Example

One similarity between the biological and behaviour

is

that they both use nonhuman animals in their research. (1)

For

example, behaviourists used rats in Skinner boxes to investigate operant conditioning and

bio psychologists

did neurosurgical studies on many species to discover how the nervous system works. (2)

The approaches use animal subjects in different ways, however. Behaviourists focus on how

the

animal responds to changes in its external environment whereas bio psychologists focus on how it responds to changes in its internal structure. (4) In either case a consequence of this is that critics have attacked both approaches on ethical grounds and because the findings they produce may not generalise to humans. (3)