Constructive Therapy Constructivism Is a Theoretical Perspective
Constructivism is a theoretical perspective that asserts that people attempt to make sense of the world by developing their own set of personal individualized constructs. Personal experience, interpretation, social context, and linguistic factors define a person's subjective reality. Constructive psychotherapy focuses on individual experience, personal resilience, change, and the therapeutic relationship to assist people with change. The current article asserts that constructivism and constructive psychotherapies heavily draw from principles of past theorists such as George Kelly and Kurt Lewin, and constructivism and constructive psychotherapies do not represent facets of a new paradigm. In this sense constructive psychotherapy is not a unified form of psychotherapy but instead a form of integrated psychotherapy. Finally the article applies five basic principles of constructivism: activity, order, the self, social-symbolic relations, and lifespan development in the proposed psychotherapy of Sam, a man who is experiencing frustration and anger-management issues at his work and in his relationships. The therapeutic process is viewed as an integration of several schools of psychotherapeutic thought.
School Scenario Formal Response Letter
When a technology teacher is not in control of her students, inappropriate things can happen, and that is the case in this paper. While the teacher was in the classroom (helping a student one-on-one) other students apparently logged onto a pornographic website, and some students apparently saw pornographic images. That caused the principal of the school to get busy and solve the problem. This paper shows how he worked to solve the problem.
Research Paper
Undergraduate
Social Work Summary Assessment of My Motivation,
Of all the issues that pertain to professionalism, none is more important than the issue of the “ goodness of fit” between one’s personal beliefs, characteristics, motivations, and ambitions and the nature of social work practice. At some point, you must honestly address the following questions: “ Am I personally suited for this profession? Are my beliefs, motives, attributes, and characteristics compatible with those needed by social workers? Am I capable of putting aside my own personal beliefs when they conflict with the values and ethics of the profession, and my service obligations as a social worker? Am I ready for the challenges and sacrifices that social work entails?”
Position: Free Will vs. Determinism Debate
From a theological viewpoint, human free will me nor exist at all, since God is all-knowing and all-powerful, the destiny of each individual is determined from the beginning to time. Augustine, Martin Luther, John Calvin and Jonathan Edwards all believed this, and before modern times it was the most common position in Christianity. Human life is also determined by certain physical and natural laws that exist in the material world, such as gravity, conservation of energy and chemistry, and perhaps by genetics as well. In addition, unfavorable environments and family life in childhood may also have a deterministic effect on individuals, such as a propensity to be involved in crime and drug abuse. Some people are more obviously constrained than others, such as alcoholics, drug addicts and insane persons, or those locked up in prison or some other institution where their lives are mostly determined by some external coercive authority.
Metaphors in I Too Sing America
Written in 1924, Langston Hughes poem "I, Too, Sing America" was a metaphoric work and commentary on the racial climate of the day. The poem discusses the varied "songs" of African-Americans that are also a part of the American anthem. This three page paper is a review of Hughes' elegant and vivid use of language and symbolism in the poem.