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This article discusses the concept of Personal Construct Psychology and how it can help individuals understand and reflect on their own perspectives and behaviors. It explores the use of construct elicitation and laddering methods to uncover core values and dimensions of meaning.
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Using Personal Construct Methods in Reflective PracticeViv Burr and Nigel King University of HuddersfieldSchool of Human and Health Sciences Institute for Research in Citizenship and Applied Human Sciences Centre for Applied Psychological and Health Research
Personal Construct Psychology George Kelly (1955) The Psychology of Personal Constructs
Personal Construct Psychology • Clinical origins • Limited usefulness of (then) popular approaches: • Psychoanalysis • Behaviour therapy
Personal Construct Psychology • Meanings rather than events • How the world SEEMS to us • How we interpret events is key • Some interpretations are more helpful than others
Personal Construct Psychology A person may approach the world ‘as-if’ it were:
Personal Construct Psychology • Over the course of our lives we develop dimensions of meaning which we apply to our world • These dimensions of meaning are ‘constructs’ • Constructs are dichotomous (bi-polar) • People are different to the extent that they use different constructs • We can understand a person to the extent that we can understand the constructs they use
Personal Construct Psychology • Eliciting our constructs helps us to articulate how we see the world • We can then more explicitly reflect upon ourselves, our perspective and our conduct
Personal Construct Psychology Methods we will use today: Construct Elicitation Laddering: Helps us to articulate ‘core’ values
Personal Construct Psychology • Construct elicitation: friendship • Take 6 cards • Write ‘me as a friend’ on one • Write on each of the others a name for 5 other people you know • Select any 3 and ask “how are two similar but different from the third?” • Focus on how they treat others • Record your constructs on the sheet provided
Personal Construct Psychology Construct elicitation: social work values Take 6 cards • Write ‘me as a social worker’ on one • Write on each of the others a name for 5 other social workers you have seen in practice • Select any 3 and ask “how are two similar but different from the third?” • Focus on how they behave towards service users, service users’ families and friends, colleagues and professionals from other services • Record your constructs on the sheet provided
Personal Construct Psychology Example of ‘laddering’ “Vegetarian – Eats meat” Preferred pole? “Vegetarian” why? “it’s about recognising the right to life of animals” As opposed to what? “it’s just using animals for your own ends”. Why is it important to you recognise animals’ rights to life? It’s about living in the world in a way that accommodates the needs of others, not just yourself” As opposed to what? “it’s thinking only about yourself and what you want”.
Personal Construct Psychology Accommodate other’s needs – Think only about self ↑ Animals’ rights to life – Use animals for own ends ↑ Vegetarian - Eats meat