THEORY IN HUMANISTIC PSYCHOLOGY • INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP WORK COUNSELLING • • • THE PERSON-CENTRED APPROACH GESTALT THERAPY TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS BODY WORK PRIMAL INTEGRATION TRANSPERSONAL PSYCHOLOGY ENCOUNTER • FAMILY THERAPY OR COUNSELLING • • HUMANISTIC EDUCATION HUMANISTIC MANAGEMENT
INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP WORK • • • Awareness of the body Taking responsibility. The here and now. Feelings. Risk taking. ". • • Listening. Bridging distances. Distress. Support and confrontation. • Avoidance. • The saver. .
Humanistic psychology • includes several approaches to counseling and therapy. • Among the earliest approaches we find the developmental theory of Abraham Maslow, Maslow emphazising a hierarchy of needs and motivations; the existential psychology of Rollo May acknowledging human choice and the tragic aspects of human existence; and the person-centered or client-centered therapy of Carl Rogers, Rogers which is centered around the clients' capacity for selfdirection and understanding of his/her own development (Clay, 2002).
Humanistic psychology Abraham Maslow Rollo May Carl Rogers