State the three assumptions of humanistic psychology
1, Humans have free will and are active agents - they are able to control and determine their own development 2, Humans strive towards achieving self-actualisation 3, To be psychologically healthy the perceived self and ideal self must be congruent
Who are the 2 main Humanist Psychologists?
Abraham Maslow and Carl Rogers
What is Maslow’s hierarchy of needs?
A motivational theory comprising a five-tier model of human needs. Depicted as hierarchical levels within a pyramid
State the 5 levels of Maslow's hierarchy of needs
1, Physiological 2, Safety 3, Belongingness and love 4, Esteem 5, Self-actualisation
Define self-actualisation
A continual striving for personal growth and self-fulfilment
What are the deficiency needs?
Motivate people when they are unmet = physiological, safety, belongingness and love and esteem needs
What is the growth need?
Self-actualisation
How did Rogers apply Maslow’s work to help people become psychologically happy?
x He believed that in order for a person to be truly happy and reach self-actualization there must be congruence between their perceived self and their ideal self x So he developed client-centered therapy.
What is the perceived and ideal self?
x Perceived self = How we see ourselves in real life x Ideal self = The person we want to be
What is congruence?
When there is a similarity between a person’s ideal self and their perceived self
What is incongruence?
When there is a big difference between a person’s ideal self and their perceived self
What could have happened in childhood that leads to incongruence?
Parents show conditional positive regard by placing conditions of worth on child
What are conditions of worth?
Parent placing limits or boundaries on their love of their children e.g. ‘I will only love you if you study medicine’
What is the aim of client-centred therapy?
Increase person’s feelings of self-worth and reduce incongruence between ideal and perceived self
Which 3 traits should a Rogerian therapist show?
Genuineness, empathy and unconditional positive regard
What is meant by client-centred therapy being non-directive?
People viewed as ‘clients’ and experts of own condition. Therapist acts as a guide.