House Tree Person
House Tree Person
House Tree Person
House Tree-Person
What is HTP?
The house-tree-person test (HTP) is
a projective personality test, a type
of exam in which the test taker
responds to or provides ambiguous,
abstract, or unstructured stimuli (often
Historical background
HTP was designed by John Buck and was
originally based on the Goodenough scale of
intellectual functioning.
It was developed in 1948, and updated in 1969.
Buck included both qualitative and quantitative
measurements of intellectual ability in the HTP (V).
Author
Current:
Executive Coach
and Psychologist
at The Collabrium
John N
Buck
Nature
Purpose
The primary purpose of the HTP is to
measure aspects of a person's
personality through interpretation of
drawings and responses to questions.
Tests requiring human figure drawings
were already being utilized as projective
personality tests.
Precautions
Because it is mostly subjective,
scoring and interpreting the HTP is
difficult. Anyone administering the HTP
must be properly trained. The test
publishers provide a detailed 350-page
administration and scoring manual.
Description
The HTP can be given to anyone
over the age of three. Because it
requires test takers to draw pictures,
it is often used with children and
adolescents. It is also often used with
individuals suspected of having brain
damage or other neurological
impairment. The test takes an
average of 150 minutes to complete;
it may take less time with normally
functioning adults and much more
Administration
Pencil & white paper
Patient asked to draw a good house
(as good as possible), take as much
time as needed, erase anything you
need to.
Then the pencil is taken away &
you can use crayons in anyway to
shade in or draw.
Scoring
The HTP is scored in both an
objective quantitative manner and a
subjective qualitative manner. The
quantitative scoring scheme involves
analyzing the details of drawings to
arrive at a general assessment of
intelligence, using a scoring method
devised by the test creators.
Interpretation
HOUSE
It is loosely based on research and
on the symbolic meaning of the aspects
of the house. They should hopefully be
nurturing places with normal levels of
detail and normal size. Too little and the
client may reject family life; too big and
they may be overwhelmed by it.
The roof symbolizes the fantasy life
TREE
Other details:
Christmas trees after the
season is over can mean
regressive fantasies (thinking
about holidays and family and
good times to make yourself feel
better).
PERSON
The idea is that the person of
the same sex is like you, and the
person of the opposite sex is what
you may not admit is like you. Very
Jungian when you think of it, in that
the opposite sex is the anima or
animus.
References
Richard Niolon, Ph.D., Chicago
School of Professional Psychology,
Spring 2003
http://www.intelligentietesten.com/
house_tree_person_drawings.htm
http://www.minddisorders.com/FluInv/House-tree-person-test.html