A study of member's warm-up experience in psychodrama

碩士 === 臺北市立大學 === 心理與諮商學系 === 103 === This study aims at explicating the experience process and situated structure of the spontaneous members in psychodrama groups during their warm-up phases. There are two psychodrama training groups that are invited by the researcher to be involved in this researc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lin, Yi-Ping, 林宜蘋
Other Authors: 游淑瑜
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/sdze8n
Description
Summary:碩士 === 臺北市立大學 === 心理與諮商學系 === 103 === This study aims at explicating the experience process and situated structure of the spontaneous members in psychodrama groups during their warm-up phases. There are two psychodrama training groups that are invited by the researcher to be involved in this research . Adherent to professional director’s advice, five members who spontaneously engaged in warm-up are selected and are interviewed in-depth about their experience of the warming up process. Thereon , the researcher writes about the warm-up experience of the interviewees and constructs a complete experience transcript with which then concepts of hermeneutic phenomenology approach is applied for further analysis. The experience analysis methodology and steps developed by Lee, W. L. and Lai, Y. S.(2009) shed light on the transcript and the warm-up phenomenon of the selected members. Gradually the situatedness of the members is established. This study finds that the general structure can be inducted from the members’ situatedness structures. When the members walk through the warm-up activity and receive language and action inputs from the others, they experience both physical and psychological sensations and re-experience events from personal life. They get more intimate to their inner selves, through which members may experience internal needs and desires that further cultivate spontaneity for acting or insight of themselves. This study contributes to the better clarification of warm-up process phenomenon that can facilitate members’ spontaneity and the advancement of psychodrama therapy theory.