YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :The Theories of Carl Rogers
Essays 1 - 30
followed this by subjecting any hypotheses generated to elaborate and vigorous tests for validity and error. But from the sixties ...
the Teachers College was the international center for the "dissemination of Deweys educational philosophy" (Gordon, Feb 1997, p. 7...
relationship (Capuzzi & Gross, 2006). Rogers defined a method for achieving an atmosphere that was conducive to healing ...
attitudinal conditions into their own practice without abandoning their own therapeutic orientations. It also offered the opportun...
perspective that is still basically Freudian; others have brought innovations to Freuds techniques (Nye, 2000). Freud relied heavi...
Rogers originated the concept of client-centered therapy, which is characterized by three primary factors. First of all Rogers fel...
The field of psychotherapy owes much to Carl Rogers. Rogers is considered one of the...
In six pages this paper contrasts and compares these two approaches to nursing theory that are based upon the concepts of nursing,...
Zukav, for example, was primarily known...
This essay provides an analysis of Rogers' and Gestalt's different approaches to psychotherapy. The author gives examples of the ...
The writer gives the definitions Carl Rogers used to describe what he calls a fully functioning person. The writer says that Roger...
Carl Rogers is often referred to as the grandfather of client centered therapy. The writer looks at this well-known clinical psych...
Carl Rogers initiated the Person Centered approach to therapy, sometimes called, client centered. This paper is based on a YouTube...
capacity of the individual to be expressed and to strengthen (Kirschenbaum, 2004, p. 116). In pursuing this line of thinking, Ro...
worth of the client and a positive and cohesive interaction. Rogers believed that the essential role of the therapist is to suppo...
attitudes and feelings which he may have, no matter how unconventional, absurd, or contradictory these attitudes may be" (Rogers 1...
a heavy emphasis on psychoanalytic and behaviorist models of therapy. Rogers offered an alternative. It was revolutionary at the t...
reinforcement, at least to an extent. II. Carl Rogers 1. Who is he? Some have said he was the most influential psychologist in h...
In five pages this paper examines the similarities between what would appear to be 2 diametrically opposed theories. Five sources...
as a vehicle through which the client can interact and grow to understand themselves better. Unlike earlier therapeutic perspecti...
his own feelings within the self," as the individual struggles to make his attitudes about himself more congruent with experience ...
from which the ego and the superego become differentiated in early childhood (Holme, et al, 1972). Because the id is a component o...
degree of self-disclosure benefits relationships, increases self-esteem and leads to a more stable self-image" (Underwood, 2003). ...
shaping our self actualization but also emphasized that the environment and our interaction with it was constantly changing (Roger...
choices and is creative (Boeree). On the other hand, there are numerous other psychological perspectives and models that also ad...
for ourselves. Dahmers actions, however, were undoubtedly driven by a considerably more complex collection of factors. Car...
In five pages this paper discusses counseling in a comparative analysis of Carl Rogers' client centered therapeutic approach and t...
2001). The nurse maid left the home when Sigmund was just 2 years old (2001). Then, his father would go bankrupt and the family ha...
In eleven pages this paper discusses the influence of Carl Rogers' Client Centered Therapy upon the 1964 development of Lydia Hall...
to move on in a positive direction. 2. Phenomenological Person Centered Carl Rogers Self- Antwone has aggressive feelings, which l...