Applied Positive Psychology
Psychological testing & evaluations
What Is Applied
Positive Psychology?
When many people think about psychology, they naturally think about diagnosing problems, identifying symptoms, and understanding what is wrong. Applied Positive Psychology approaches mental health from a broader perspective by asking a different question: what is already working, and how can we build upon it?
Applied Positive Psychology is an evidence-based field dedicated to understanding wellbeing, resilience, character strengths, and the conditions that allow individuals to thrive. Rather than focusing solely on challenges, it seeks to identify existing strengths, values, and personal resources that can support growth and positive change.
At the heart of Caroline Goldsmith’s professional approach is the belief that effective psychological care should acknowledge both realities simultaneously — understanding difficulties while also recognising potential, capability, and opportunity.
Key Principles Of Applied Positive Psychology
If your child shows any of these signs, consider an autism evaluation.
- Understanding and developing personal strengths
- Promoting resilience during challenging life experiences
- Encouraging positive relationships and social connection
- Supporting meaning, purpose, and personal fulfillment
- Improving emotional wellbeing and life satisfaction
- Developing confidence and self-awareness
- Recognizing individual abilities alongside challenges
- Creating practical pathways for long-term growth
- Fostering optimism and future-focused thinking
- Encouraging healthy engagement with work, education, and family life
The Influence Of Martin Seligman
Research That Changed Modern Psychology
- Character Strengths
- Learned Optimism
- Resilience Development
- Positive Relationships
- Meaning & Purpose
- Achievement & Personal Growth
Why This Approach Matters For Families
Seeing The Whole Person
For many individuals and families, psychological assessments can feel overwhelming. Traditional approaches may focus heavily on difficulties, limitations, or diagnostic labels without providing a clear pathway forward.
A strengths-based perspective helps create a more complete understanding of the individual. Instead of ending with a diagnosis alone, the assessment process can identify strengths, interests, abilities, and opportunities for future development.
This approach is particularly valuable for families seeking autism assessments, developmental evaluations, or psychological guidance. By understanding both challenges and strengths, families receive practical recommendations that support long-term wellbeing and personal growth.
Applied Positive Psychology is not about ignoring difficulties or pretending problems do not exist. It is about recognising that every individual possesses strengths and capabilities that deserve equal attention within the assessment and support process.