Eclecticism

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    Intentional Interviewing

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    The textbook, Intentional Interviewing and Counseling: Facilitating Client Development in a Multicultural Society (2014) explores core counselling skills and techniques. The authors, Ivey, Ivey, & Zalaquett (2014) assert that counselors help clients to help themselves by using competent and effective counselling skills. When counselors accurately use their basic counseling skills, they aid clients in developing their own abilities to use their human potential in the present and in future. Numerous counseling skills are discussed in the textbook, such as intentional and diagnostic interviewing skills, attending skills, observing and reflecting skills, listening skills, confronting skills, and influencing skills. These skills and techniques are not used in the same way from one theoretical framework to the next, but they are the basic tenants of counseling. Different counseling theories exist to provide counselors with a specific framework from which to work. Within these different frameworks are specific techniques and skills. There are multiple theoretical approaches, such as psychodynamic theory, existential theory, Gestalt theory, etc. One theory in particular, eclectic counseling theory, asserts that more than one approach is necessary in effectively treating clients and their specific needs as individuals (Richert, 2010). Richert (2010) makes an example of his integrated use of existential theory and narrative theory, and how using both theories allows the counselor and…

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    Whilst it is ethical to use the methods and techniques of more than one therapy with a client, it is also important that the counsellor has an understanding of any therapeutic model they use. There are two forms of mixing therapies; integrative and eclectic. Integrative therapists are trained in two or more therapeutic models on the same course and use different skills to single-model skills. The model has its own distinct structure and expected outcomes from the counselling are usually…

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    The Roman culture was an inimitable intermingling of Roman and Greek philosophies, that “…came to full flower, not only in the “high” art forms—literature, art, architecture—but also in the improvements of daily life by Roman technology and engineering” (Rawls, 2016, p. 173). In addition, the Romans were exceedingly diverse (cultural Eclecticism) in their cultural values as they did not stand strong on one theory, instead believed there were many ways to arrive at a conclusion. Another way to…

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    Revivalism and Eclecticism Architecture has undergone many changes and developments throw different eras as a result of major movements that influenced architecture and fine art as well, example (Renaissance, Baroque, Rococo, and Neoclassical), and that paved the way for the appearance of various styles ancient and modern ones , Egyptian Architecture ,Sumerian Architecture , Early Irish Architecture , Minoan Architecture , Greek Architecture , Roman Architecture , Byzantine Architecture , Gothic…

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    Lyman, Thomas W. 1988. "The Politics of Selective Eclecticism: Monastic Architecture, Pilgrimage Churches, and Resistance to Cluny." Gesta 27, no. 1-2: 83-92. Lyman’s article does not originally appear to be useful to my project. The building in question is Romanesque style instead of Gothic and the focus is on French buildings rather than Spanish. However, these buildings are being analyzed in the context of a pilgrimage to Spain and what Lyman is doing can influence the way Spanish pilgrimage…

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    times individual to each child in that family, because we all do not learn the same way. What is working for one, might work for another. To answer this question there are some typical terms you’ll hear when looking into homeschooling. These include—classicalist, unschooling, traditionalist and eclecticism (relaxed). The classicalist style is one of the first methods, this style uses three tools grammar, dialectic, and rhetoric. The goal of this style is to teach people how to learn for…

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    111). The theoretical integration- counselors take two or more counseling theories and combine into a systematic whole (Nugent, p. 111). And technical eclecticism- where the professional uses one theoretical view of personality and selects various techniques from many theoretical orientations which is in contrast to unsystematic eclecticism (Nugent, p.…

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    Art Deco

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    This style influenced the decorative arts, architecture, interior design, and industrial design as well as the visual arts, fashion, painting, graphic arts, and cinema. It was a mixture of many styles and movements such as constructivism, cubism, bauhaus, art nouveau, and modernism. Although many movements had established roots in architecture, the Art Deco was purely decorative. It was seen as elegant, functional, and ultra modern. The buildings, sculptures, and furniture are geometrical.…

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    philosophy is absolutely essential for human beings because one of the things that makes us human is that we are moral beings, we make moral choices. To make good moral choices we need to think seriously about the kind of people we ought to be and about what the right thing to do is in any given situation. That what is right and what is wrong does not depend on the whim of human desires and delights. Right and wrong, morality and immorality, grow out of what it is to be a human being. Since…

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    The “use whatever works” motto is what justifies such borrowing of ideas. It should be noted that although the concepts originate from other orientations, therapists use them from their own theoretical standpoint. For example, a behavioral therapist using a family therapy technique would do so in order to observe behavioral tendencies rather than benefit family interaction. Theoretical eclecticism involves the mixing of different theories and ideas from different frameworks. What distinguishes…

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