Projective Drawings: Administration Instructions: I. Draw-A-Person
Projective Drawings: Administration Instructions: I. Draw-A-Person
Seating: The subject is seated in a comfortable chair across from a flat and clear working surface. The
experimenter is seated to the side of the subject, as opposed to across from the subject.
I. Draw-A-Person
Present a piece of plain, white 8.5x11-inch paper at an angle to the subject and say:
“I want you to draw a person as well as you can.”
Present a piece of plain, white 8.5x11-inch paper at an angle to the subject and say:
“Now draw a [opposite sex of the first picture] as well as you can.”
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Projective Drawings: Administration Instructions (continued)
Seating: The subject is seated in a comfortable chair across from a flat and clear working surface. The
experimenter is seated to the side of the subject, as opposed to across from the subject.
III. House-Tree-Person
(1) House: Present a piece of plain, white 8.5x11-inch paper at an angle to the subject and say:
“Here I want you to draw a house as good as you can.”
(2) Tree: Present a piece of plain, white 8.5x11-inch paper at an angle to the subject and say:
“Here I want you to draw a tree as good as you can.”
**Alternative instructions: Have the subject draw all three items on the same piece of paper, then ask
the above questions. The advantage of this method is that you get to see the relationship between the
three items.
“Here I want you to draw a house, a tree, and a person as good as you can.”
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Projective Drawings: Administration Instructions (continued)
Seating: The subject is seated in a comfortable chair across from a flat and clear working surface. The
experimenter is seated to the side of the subject, as opposed to across from the subject.
IV. Draw-A-Person-In-The-Rain
Present a piece of plain, white 8.5x11-inch paper at an angle to the subject and say:
“I want you to draw a person standing in the rain.”
**Alternative instructions:
“I want you to draw a person in the rain with an umbrella. Be sure to draw all three parts: the
person, the rain, and the umbrella.”
Present a piece of plain, white 8.5x11-inch paper at an angle to the subject and say:
“Here I want you to draw you and your family all doing something together. It can be anything
you want.”
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