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Developed in the 1930s by the American psychologist Carl Rogers, client-centered therapy departed from the typically formal, detached role of the therapist emphasized in psychoanalysis ... Self-actualization, a term derived from the human potential movement, is an important concept underlying person-centered therapy.
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www.minddisorders.com/Ob-Ps/Person-centered-therapy.htm...
www.minddisorders.com/Ob-Ps/Person-centered-therapy.html
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This feature allows you to create and manage separate folders for your different research projects. To view markups for a different project, make that project your current project.
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www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=5011100568
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Actualisation: A Functional Concept in Client-Centered Therapy ... It is important to recognize that in Rogers' thinking all potentialities of individuals and of species are not aspects of the directionality of the actualising tendency (Rogers, 1989). For example, people have the potential to vomit or to commit murder.
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www.allanturner.co.uk/papers/actualization.html
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Cain (1986), a vigilant promoter of client-centered therapy, also espouses a position which Grant (1989) identifies as instrumental non-directivity. The crux of "instrumental non-directivity" is that non-directivity is important as long as it is useful;
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personcentered.com/nondirect.html
personcentered.com/nondirect.html
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Significant Aspects of Client-Centered Therapy [1] ... The third distinctive feature of this type of therapy is the character of the relationship between therapist and client. Unlike other therapies in which ... Every little word is not so important if you have the correct accepting and permissive attitude toward the client.
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psychclassics.yorku.ca/Rogers/therapy.htm
psychclassics.yorku.ca/Rogers/therapy.htm
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Concrete Interventions are Crucial: The Influence of the Therapist's Processing Proposals on the Client's Intrapersonal Exploration in Client-Centered Therapy ... Whether therapeutic interventions become more important depending on how deep a client is in the explication process...
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www.focusing.org/sachse.html
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In client-centered therapy, the therapist listens without trying to provide solutions. The therapist must create an atmosphere in which clients can communicate their feelings with certainty that they are being understood rather than judged, says the Harvard Mental Health Letter. ... It's also important to eat whole grains,
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www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/35545.php
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Rogers' theory of personality evolved out of his work as a clinical psychologist and developed as an offshoot of his theory of client-centered (later called person-centered) therapy (Rogers, 1959). He was first and foremost a therapist, with an abiding respect for the dignity of persons and an interest in persons...
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pandc.ca/?cat=carl_rogers&page=rogerian_theory
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My view is that client-centered therapy is a distinctive and important practice and that it can be defined as a practice and its parameters clarified. I do not believe it would, by defining it in a delimiting way, become static or not evolve further.
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world.std.com/~mbr2/whatscct.html
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