Carl Rogers
"Experience
is, for me, the highest authority. The touchstone of validity is my own
experience. No other person's ideas, and none of my own ideas, are as
authoritative as my experience. It is to experience that I must return again
and again, to discover a closer approximation to truth as it is in the process
of becoming in me." -Carl Rogers, On Becoming
a Person
Carl Rogers is best-known for his nondirective approach to
treatment known as client-centered
therapy.
His concept of the actualizing tendency.
Developing the concept of the fully-functioning person.
Birth and Death
Born January 8, 1902
Died February 4, 1987
Timeline of Events:
1902 - Carl Rogers was
born in Oak Park, Illinois.
1919 - Enrolled at
University of Wisconsin.
1924 - Graduated from
University of Wisconsin and enrolled at Union Theological Seminary.
1926 - Transferred to
Columbia.
1931- Earned Ph.D.
from Columbia.
1940 - Began teaching
at University of Ohio.
1946 - Elected
president of American Psychological Association (APA).
1951 - Published Client-centered
Therapy.
1961 - Published On
Becoming A Person.
1980 - Published A
Way of Being.
1987 - Nominated for
Nobel Peace Prize.
Early Life:
Carl Rogers enrolled at the University of Wisconsin
in 1919 as an agriculture major, but later changed to religion. After attending
a 1922 Christian conference in China, Rogers began to question his career
choice. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1924 with a bachelor's
degree in History and enrolled at the Union Theological Seminary before
transferring to Teachers College of Columbia University to complete his
master's degree. He completed his doctorate at Columbia in 1931.
Career:
After receiving his Ph.D., Rogers spent a number of
years working in academia, holding positions at Ohio State University, the
University of Chicago, and the University of Wisconsin. It was during this time
that Rogers developed his approach to therapy, which he initially termed
"nondirective therapy." This approach, which involves the therapist
acting as a facilitator rather than a director of the therapy session,
eventually came to be known as client-centered therapy.
After a number of
conflicts within the psychology department at the University of Wisconsin,
Rogers accepted a position at the Western Behavioral Studies Institute (WBSI)
in La Jolla, California. Eventually, he and several colleagues left WBSI to
form Center for Studies of the Person (CSP). Carl Rogers continued his work
with client-centered therapy until his death in 1987.
Contributions to Psychology:
With his emphasis on human potential, Carl Rogers
had an enormous influence on both psychology and education. Beyond that, he is
considered by many to be one of the most influential psychologists of the 20th
century. More therapists cite Rogers as their primary influence than any other
psychologist. As described by his daughter Natalie Rogers, he was "a model
for compassion and democratic ideals in his own life, and in his work as an
educator, writer, and therapist."
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