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From: ganetauk
Date: Tue Feb 19, 2002 6:35pm
Subject: t modelling over view..
Modelling
Modeling is the process that
created all the existing NLP techniques.
It is the
methodology of NLP.
The first model was the Meta Model
(modeled from Virginia Satir and Fritz Perls together with
Chomsky's Transformational Grammar).
The second model
was representational systems and the third was the
Milton Model (modeled from Milton Erickson).
The
basic NLP presupposition of modeling is - If one person
can do something then it is possible to model it and
teach it to others.
A model is a deleted,
distorted and generalised copy of the original and
therefore there can never be such a thing as a complete
model. A model is not true. A model can only work - or
not. If it works, it allows another person to get the
same class of results as the original person from whom
the model was taken.
You can never get exactly the
same results as the person you model, because everyone
is different, they will assemble the elements in
their own unique way.
Modeling does not create
clones - it gives you the opportunity to go beyond your
present limitations.
An NLP model normally
consists of:
The mental strategies. (Internal
computations)
The beliefs and values.
The physiology. (External
behaviour and internal state)
The context in which the
person being modeled is operating.
The full
process of modeling involves:
Elicitation -
discovering patterns of experience.
Coding - describing
those patterns in terms of NLP distinctions, creating
new distinctions or using the distinctions taken from
the person being modelled.
Utilisation -
exploring ways to use those patterns.
Propagation -
creating a teaching method to transfer the model to
others.