Humanism powerpoint

Post on 15-May-2015

12.479 views 5 download

Tags:

Transcript of Humanism powerpoint

Definition:An approach in study, philosophy, or practice that focuses on human values and concerns.

A system of thought that rejects religious beliefs and centers on humans and their values, capacities, and worth.

Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)An American

psychologist.Born in April 1, 1908

and was raised in Brooklyn, New York, and died in June 8, 1970.

Father of Humanistic Psychology.

Humanistic Theory of LearningMaslow’s theory is based on the notion that experience is the primary phenomenon in the study of human learning and behavior. He placed emphasis on choice, creativity, values, self-realization, all distinctively human qualities, and believed that meaningfulness and subjectivity were more important than objectivity.

Maslow rejected behaviorist views and Freud’s theories on the basis of their reductionistic approaches. He felt Freud’s view of human nature was negative, and he valued goodness, nobility, and reason. Also, Freud concentrated on mentally ill, and Maslow was interested in healthy human psychology.

Maslow and his colleagues came to refer to their movement as “third force psychology”.

1. Psychoanalysis2. Behaviorism3. Humanism/Existentialism

Maslow is famous for proposing that human motivation is based on the Hierarchy of needs.

Hierarchy of Needs

Hierarchy of NeedsPhysiological Needs

- These are biological needs. They consist of needs for oxygen, food, water, and a relatively constant body temperature. They are the strongest needs because if a person were deprived of all needs, the physiological ones would come first in the person's search for satisfaction.

Hierarchy of NeedsSafety Needs

- When all physiological needs are satisfied and are no longer controlling thoughts and behaviors, the needs for security can become active. Adults have little awareness of their security needs except in times of emergency or periods of disorganization in the social structure.

Hierarchy of NeedsNeeds of Love, Affection and Belongingness- Maslow states that people seek to overcome feelings of loneliness and alienation. This involves both giving and receiving love, affection and the sense of belonging.

Hierarchy of NeedsNeeds for Esteem

- These involve needs for both self-esteem and for the esteem a person gets from others. Humans have a need for a stable, firmly based, high level of self-respect, and respect from others. When these needs are satisfied, the person feels self-confident and valuable as a person in the world.

Hierarchy of NeedsNeeds for Self-Actualization

- Maslow describes self-actualization as a person's need to be and do that which the person was "born to do." These needs make themselves felt in signs of restlessness. The person feels on edge, tense, lacking something, in short, restless.

Maslow proposed other goals of learning, including the following:1. one’s vocation or destiny2. knowledge of values3. realization of life as precious4. acquisition of peak experiences5. sense of accomplishment

6. satisfaction of psychological needs7. awareness of beauty and wonder of life8. impulse control9. developing choice10. grappling with the critical existential problems of life.

Carl Rogers (1902-1987)Born January 8, 1902 in Oak Park, Illinois and a suburb of Chicago.

Best known for his contributions to therapy.

Died on February 4, 1987.

Humanistic Psychology“People are essentially trustworthy, that they have a vast potential for understanding themselves and resolving their own problems without direct intervention on the therapist’s part, and that they are capable of self-directed growth if they are involved in a specific kind of therapeutic relationship.”

He was reactive against the traditional psychoanalytic techniques such as advice, suggestion, direction, persuasion, teaching, diagnosis and interpretation.  Humanistic psychology included existential therapy, person-centered and Gestalt therapy and all have in common basic tenets such as freedom, choice, values, responsibility, autonomy, purpose and meaning. 

Actualization Tendency“There is one central source of energy in the human organism; it is a function of the whole organism rather than some portion of it; and it is perhaps best conceptualized as a tendency toward fulfillment, toward actualization, toward the maintenance and enhancement of the organism.”

Actualization TendencyCarl Rogers sees people as basically good or healthy or at very least, not bad or ill. In other words, he sees mental health as the normal progression of life, and he sees mental illness, criminality, and other human problems, as distortions of that natural tendency.

Actualization TendencyRoger’s theory is built on a single “force of life” he calls “the actualizing tendency”.

It can be defined as the built-in motivation present in every life—form to develop its potentials to the fullest extent possible.

Actualization TendencyRogers captures with the single great need or motive all other motives that other theorists talk about. He asks us:a. Why do we want air, water, and food?b. Why do we seek safety, love, and a sense of competence?c. Why, indeed, do we seek to discover new medicines, invent new power sources, or create new works of art?

Organismic Valuing“One of the basic things which I was a long time in realizing, and which I am still learning, is that when an activity feels as though it is valuable or worth doing, it is worth doing.  Put another way, I have learned that my total organismic sensing of a situation is more trustworthy than my intellect.”

Organismic ValuingRogers tells us that organisms know what is good for them.

Rogers, like Maslow, is just as interested in describing the healthy person. His term is “fully-functioning”, and involves the ff. qualities:

a.openness to experience

b.Existential livingc.Organismic trustingd.Experiential freedome.creativity

Viktor Frankl (1905-1997)Australian, born March 26, 1905

Dreamed to become a physician at age 4

Conducted his theory on therapy

Died September 2, 1997.

LogotherapyFrom Greek word Logos, which mean study, word, spirit, God, or meaning.

Postulates “a will to meaning”

Frankl also uses the Greek word noos, which means mind or spirit.

LogotherapyIn addition, Frankl says that we should pay attention to noodynamics, wherein tension is necessary for health, at least when it comes to meaning.

LogotherapyFrankl believed that entire generations of doctors and scientists were being indoctrinated into what could only lead to a certain cynicism in the study of human existence.

He said, “the de-neuroticization of humanity requires a re-humanization of psychotherapy.

ConscienceOne of Frankl’s major concept

He sees conscience as a sort of unconscious that Freud and others emphasize.

Core of our being and the source of our personal integrity.

Conscience“being human is being responsible—existentially responsible, responsible for one’s own existence.”

“pre-reflective ontological self-understanding” or “the wisdom of the heart,” “more sensitive than reason can ever be sensible.”

Psychopathologythe study of mental illness, mental distress and abnormal, maladaptive behavior. The term is most commonly used within psychiatry where pathology refers to disease processes. Abnormal psychology is a similar term used more frequently in the non-medical field of psychology.

PsychopathologyFactors:1. Depression- founded in a “vital low”, a diminishment of physical energy. On the psychological level, he relates depression to the feelings of inadequacy we feel when we are confronted by tasks that are beyond our capacities, physical or mental.

Psychopathology2. Schizophrenia- understood by Frankl as rooted in a physiological dysfunction, in this case one which leads to the person experiencing himself as an object rather than a subject.

Finding Meaning

So how do we find meaning?

Finding Meaning3 Broad Approaches:1. Experiential Values- experiencing something—or someone—we value.

example: love we feel towards each other.

Finding Meaning2. Creative Values- doing a deed. Traditional existential idea of providing oneself with meaning by becoming involved in one’s projects, or, better, in the project of one’s own life.

example: music, writing, invention

Finding Meaning3. Attitudinal Values- include such virtues as compassion, bravery, a good sense of humor, and so on.

example: achieving meaning by way of suffering

Basic PrinciplesCurrent and future welfare of students.

Worth and rights of the individuals.

Openness, honesty, selflessness, altruism.

Competition for academic success.

Motivation TheoryHierarchy of needs of Abraham Maslow wherein he emphasizes the basic needs of human beings before anything else.

Actualization tendency of Carl Rogers wherein he sees human beings functioning as a whole and not just a part of it.

View of Nature

Humanism view human beings as naturally good and healthy.

Humanism view human beings as unique individuals.

Humanism view human beings as important organisms.

View of Control of Human Behavior and How Values are DevelopedHumanist teachers and Students- humanist teacher’s effort would be put into developing a child’s self-esteem. It would be important for children to feel good about themselves.

Implications and Applications in Values EducationApplications: Humanism can apply to the curriculum, teaching method, or style of teacher.

Implications: Discovery learning, respect student’s feelings and aspirations, right to self-determination, social personal development, provide opportunity for success.