Ulman Personality Assessment

Ulman Personality Assessment (UPAP)
Reference
: Agell (1989) & Ulman & Dachinger (1975)
Purpose: The UPAP is a projective assessment that provides information about the personality and emotional status of an individual.
Materials: Grey bogus paper, or grey construction paper, 18x24”, Nu pastels (12 assorted hard chalk pastels with full spectrum of color), Drawing board, 24x30” and easel, Masking tape, Stopwatch
Administration:
1. Draw anything you’d like.
2. Exercise big sweeping motions. Then recreate those motions on paper with the chalk pastels.
3. With you eyes closed, draw a large scribble on the paper. Put paper on floor. Ask artist to find object in scribble.
4. Make a picture from the found scribble image.
Taking notes is okay unless it is bothersome to artists. At the same time, examiner must give artist full attention. With much tactfulness, encourage person to not make too much of a tangled scribble. If too much resistance to eyes closed, artist may open eyes. Discreetly, take note of how much time is used.
Inquiry: No specific inquiry is noted.
Interpretation: Put all four drawings up on a wall. The evaluator sits next to the client, facing the drawings. The evaluator asks the client about their associations, ideas, feelings about the individual drawings and the collective series of drawings.
Look at use of color and line quality, and not how easy it is for the person to work abstractly. Is it easy to for him or her to find images in scribble? What is the content of free drawings? Look at whole picture that emerges from the series of drawings.
Strengths: This assessment functions on a kinesthetic level, as well as symbolic, cognitive, and perceptive. It evokes the imagination.
Limitations: Clients may feel uncomfortable making large sweeping motions. This assessment requires a lot of space and relatively unusual materials. Reliability and validity have yet to be determined.
Reflection: I would feel silly making large sweeping motions with my eyes closed, especially if I hadn’t yet established rapport with my therapist. I would like the part about finding a picture in the scribble because it is imaginative and fantasy-based, which is always fun. If I were to administer this assessment, I would probably opt out of the first two steps unless I knew the client felt very comfortable being silly with me.

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