Rogers, Carl

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{{epname|Rogers, Carl}}
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{{Infobox scientist
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| name              = Carl Rogers
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| image            = Carl Ransom Rogers, fotoğraf.png
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| birth_date        = {{birth date|1902|1|8|mf=y}}
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| birth_place      = [[Oak Park, Illinois]], U.S.
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| death_date        = {{death date and age|1987|2|4|1902|1|8|mf=y}}
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| death_place      = [[San Diego]], [[California]], U.S.
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| nationality      = American
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| field            = [[Psychology]]
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| work_institutions = [[Ohio State University]]<br />[[University of Chicago]]<br /> [[University of Wisconsin–Madison]]<br />[[Western Behavioral Sciences Institute]]<br />'''Center for Studies of the Person'''
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| alma_mater        = [[University of Wisconsin–Madison]] ([[B. A.|BA]])<br />[[Union Theological Seminary (New York City)|Union Theological Seminary]]<br>[[Teachers College, Columbia University|Columbia University]] ([[M. A.|MA]], [[PhD]])
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| known_for        = The person-centered approach (e.g., [[Client-centered therapy]], [[Student-centered learning]], [[Rogerian argument]])
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| children          = [[Natalie Rogers]]
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| prizes            = Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Psychology (1956, [[American Psychological Association|APA]]); Award for Distinguished Contributions to Applied Psychology as a Professional Practice (1972, [[American Psychological Association|APA]]); 1964 Humanist of the Year ([[American Humanist Association]])
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}}
  
[[Category: Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category: Psychology]]
 
[[Category: Education]]
 
[[Category: Biography]]
 
 
'''Carl Ransom Rogers''' (January 8, 1902 &ndash; February 4, 1987) was an influential American [[psychologist]]. Along with [[Maslow, Abraham|Abraham Maslow]], Rogers was the founder of the [[Humanistic psychology|humanist approach]] to [[psychology]] and was instrumental in the development of non-directive [[psychotherapy]], which he initially called Client Centereted Therapy. However later in his career he changed the name to the Person Centered Aproach (PCA) to reflect that his theories applied to all interactions between people, not just therapist/client relations. It is also called [[person-centered psychotherapy]]. 
 
  
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'''Carl Ransom Rogers''' (January 8, 1902 &ndash; February 4, 1987) was an influential American [[psychologist]], who, along with [[Abraham Maslow]], founded the [[Humanistic psychology|humanistic approach]] to [[psychology]]. He developed [[Nondirective psychotherapy]], also called "Client-centered therapy" and later the "Person-centered approach," reflecting his belief that his model applied to interactions between all people, not just therapist-client relations. Rogers' work has had many positive results and achieved significant popularity. The strength of his approach is the importance of harmonious relationships based on respect, congruence, and [[empathy]] in promoting healthy [[psychological development]]. He also made a significant contribution to [[education]] through his work on [[experiential learning]]. However, his rejection of any authority outside one's own experience, including the authority of therapist over client, or [[teaching|teacher]] over student, also rejects the authority of [[God]]'s purpose for human beings, and denies any chance of correcting the underlying cause of corrupted human nature.
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==Biography==
 
==Biography==
'''Carl Rogers''' was born on January 8, 1902 in Oak Park, Illinois, a Chicago suburb. His father was a [[civil engineer]] and his mother was a housewife and devout [[Christianity|Christian]]; Carl was the fourth of six children.  
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Rogers was born on January 8, 1902 in Oak Park, Illinois, a suburb of [[Chicago]]. His father was a [[civil engineering|civil engineering]] and his mother was a [[homemaker]] and devout [[Christianity|Christian]]. Rogers was the fourth of six children.  
  
He could already read by the age for entering [[kindergarten]], and so he started his [[education]] directly in the second grade. When Carl was 12, his family moved to a farm, where he spent his adolescence in a strict religious and ethical environment. He became a rather isolated, independent, and disciplined person, acquiring an appreciation for the [[scientific method]] in a practical world.  
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Rogers could already read by the age for entering [[kindergarten]], and so he started his [[education]] directly in the second grade. When Rogers was 12, his family moved to a farm, where he spent his adolescence in a strict religious and ethical environment. He became a rather isolated, independent, and disciplined person, acquiring an appreciation for the [[scientific method]] in a practical world.  
  
He entered the [[University of Wisconsin]]* initially studying [[agriculture]], and later changing to [[religion]]. At age 20, he spent time in [[Beijing]], [[China]], at an international Christian conference, which led him to broaden his thinking and he started to doubt his religious convictions. However, after graduation in 1924, he enrolled in Union Theological Seminary in [[New York]] to continue his religious studies. At that time he also married Helen Elliot. They had two children, David born in 1926 and Natalie, born in 1928.
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He entered the [[University of Wisconsin]] initially studying [[agriculture]], and later changing to [[religion]]. At age 20, Rogers spent time in [[Beijing]], [[China]], at an international Christian conference, which led him to broaden his thinking and start to doubt his religious convictions. However, after graduation in 1924, he enrolled in Union Theological Seminary in [[New York]] to continue his religious studies. At that time he also married Helen Elliot. They had two children, David born in 1926 and Natalie in 1928.
  
While at Union Theological Seminary, he attended a seminar entitled ''Why am I entering the [[ministry]]?'', after which he changed his major to [[psychology]]. He graduated with a Masters degree in [[Clinical psychology]], and in 1931, received his Ph.D. in [[psychotherapy]]. While completing his doctoral work, he engaged in clinical work at the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (SPCC), in Rochester, New York, where he became familiar with [[Otto Rank]]'s work. In 1929 he was appointed director of the Child Study Department at the SPCC in Rochester.
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At Union Theological Seminary, Rogers attended a seminar entitled ''Why am I entering the ministry?'' after which he changed his major to [[psychology]]. He graduated with a Masters degree in [[clinical psychology]], and in 1931, received his Ph.D. in [[psychotherapy]]. While completing his doctoral work, he engaged in clinical work at the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (SPCC) in Rochester, New York, where he became familiar with [[Otto Rank]]'s work. In 1929, he was appointed director of the Child Study Department at the SPCC in Rochester.
  
He was offered a full professorship in Clinical psychology at [[Ohio State University]]* in 1940. In 1942, he wrote his first book, ''Counseling and Psychotherapy''. In it, Rogers made the startling suggestion that the client, not the [[therapist]], is the one with the resources to resolve difficulties and gain the insight necessary to restructure his or her own life.  
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He was offered a full professorship in Clinical psychology at [[Ohio State University]] in 1940. In 1942, he wrote his first book, ''Counseling and Psychotherapy''. In it, Rogers made the startling suggestion that the client, not the [[therapist]], is the one with the resources to resolve difficulties and gain the insight necessary to restructure his or her own life.  
  
In 1945, he was invited to set up a counseling center at the [[University of Chicago]]. Rogers served as president of the American Psychological Association (APA) in 1947. While working in Chicago, he published his major work, ''Client-Centered Therapy'' (1951), wherein he outlined his theory. Rogers received the first Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the APA in 1956, the first year this award was given. In 1957, he returned to the [[University of Wisconsin]]* to teach. However, following several internal conflicts within the psychology department, Rogers became disillusioned with [[higher education].
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In 1945, he was invited to set up a counseling center at the [[University of Chicago]]. Rogers served as president of the [[American Psychological Association]] (APA) in 1947. While working in Chicago, he published his major work, ''Client-Centered Therapy'' (1951), wherein he outlined his theory. Rogers received the first Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the APA in 1956, the first year this award was given. In 1957, he returned to the [[University of Wisconsin]] to teach. However, following several internal conflicts within the psychology department, Rogers became disillusioned with [[higher education]].
  
In 1964, Rogers was selected "humanist of the year" by the American Humanist Association, and received an offer to join the research staff of the Western Behavioral Studies Institute (WBSI) in La Jolla, California. He lived in La Jolla for the rest of his life, providing therapy, giving public talks, facilitating Person-Centered Approach workshops, and writing. As well as his contributions to psychology, Rogers also made significant impact in the field of [[education]], particularly with the publication of ''Freedom to Learn'' in 1969, which outlined his ideas of "Experiential learning."  
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In 1964, Rogers was selected "humanist of the year" by the American Humanist Association, and received an offer to join the research staff of the Western Behavioral Studies Institute in La Jolla, California. He lived in La Jolla for the rest of his life, providing therapy, giving public talks, facilitating Person-Centered Approach workshops, and writing. As well as his contributions to psychology, Rogers also made significant impact in the field of [[education]], particularly with the publication of ''Freedom to Learn'' in 1969, which outlined his ideas of "[[Experiential learning]]."  
  
His wife, Helen, died in 1979. During the last decade of his life, Rogers traveled worldwide in efforts to apply his theories to areas of national social conflict, such as [[Northern Ireland]], [[South Africa]], and the [[Soviet Union]].
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His wife, Helen, died in 1979. During the last decade of his life, Rogers traveled worldwide in efforts to apply his theories to areas of national social conflict, such as [[Northern Ireland]], [[South Africa]], and the [[Soviet Union]].
  
During his years in La Jolla, he continued to produce numerous publications, and also received various awards and recognitions for his contributions to psychology. These included the first APA award for for Distinguished Contributions to Applied Psychology as a Professional Practice in 1972, and a distinguished psychologists award from the Division of Psychotherapy. Carl Rogers died of a heart attack in 1987.
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Rogers was a prolific and influential writer, producing 16 books and over 200 professional articles. He also received numerous awards and recognitions for his contributions to psychology, including the first APA award for Distinguished Contributions to Applied Psychology as a Professional Practice in 1972, and a distinguished psychologist award from the Division of Psychotherapy. He died of a heart attack in 1987.
  
 
==Work==
 
==Work==
===Contributions to psychology===
 
'Rogerian psychotherapy' became widely influential, embraced for its [[humanistic]] approach.  Rogers  also made significant contributions to the field of [[adult education]], with his Experiential theory of learning.  Rogers maintained that all [[human being]]s have a natural desire to learn.  He defined two categories of learning: meaningless, or [[cognitive]] learning (e.g., memorizing multiplication tables) and significant, or "experiential learning" (applied knowledge which addresses the needs and wants of the learner).
 
  
Rogers' basic tenet was that if unconditional positive regard, genuineness, and [[empathic]] understanding, was present in any relationship (though he started out by focusing on counselor-client relationships), that growth and psychological healing would occur. According to Rogers, these tenets were both necessary and sufficient to create a relationship conducive to enhancing the client's [[psychological]] well being, by enabling the client to fully experience all of themselves. He saw one of the chief causes of mental, emotional and existential suffering as people not being able to accept or allow themselves to fully experience all of who they are&mdash;which includes aspects that are not always socially acceptable.
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Rogers was the first to conceptualize [[Carl Rogers#Person-centered Therapy|Person-centered therapy]], and was a well-known [[counseling|counselor]], [[personality]] theorist, and a key developer of [[Humanistic psychology]]. Rogers may be best known for his work in [[psychology]]. However, his contribution to the field of [[education]], in the form of [[Carl Rogers#Experiential Learning|Experiential learning]] is equally profound.
  
Writing about the role of the clinician, he remarked that, "In every respect in which we make an object of the person&mdash;whether by diagnosing him, analyzing him, or perceiving him impersonally in a case history&mdash;we stand in the way of our therapeutic goal. [...]  We are deeply helpful only when we relate as persons, when we risk ourselves as persons in the relationship, when we experience the other as a person in their own right.  Only then is there a meeting at a depth that dissolves the pain of aloneness in both client and therapist."
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===Person-centered Therapy===
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Rogers developed his [[Nondirective psychotherapy|Person-centered]] approach to [[psychotherapy]] after becoming frustrated by the standard methodologies and procedures used in [[Sigmund Freud|Freudian]] [[psychoanalysis]] and other therapies. He found that he obtained better results by listening to his patients and allowing them to direct the course of treatment. In his book, ''On Becoming a Person'', he wrote "Unless I had a need to demonstrate my own cleverness and learning, I would do better to rely upon the client for direction of movement" (Rogers 1961).
  
Rogers' idea of the fully functioning person involved the following qualities, which show marked similarities to [[Buddhist]] philosophy:
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Initially called "Nondirective therapy," and then "Client-centered therapy," Rogers finally changed its name to the "Person-centered approach," reflecting his belief that his theories applied to all interactions, not just those between client and therapist. It has most commonly been referred to as simply "Rogerian psychotherapy," and has become widely influential, embraced for its [[humanistic psychology|humanistic]] approach.
  
*<u>Openness to experience:</u> The accurate perception of one's feelings and experience in the world
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Rogers' basic tenet was that if unconditional positive regard (Respect), genuineness and honesty (Congruence), and [[empathy|empathic]] understanding (Empathy) were present in a relationship, growth and psychological healing would occur. According to Rogers, these qualities were both necessary and sufficient to create a relationship conducive to enhancing the client's psychological well-being. In other words, for Rogers, an effective therapist does not need any special technique, just the three qualities of respect, congruence, and empathy; without these three qualities, though, no technique would be successful.
  
*<u>Existential living:</u> Living in the present, rather than the past (''gone'') or the future (''yet to come'')
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The main technique Rogers recommended is that of "Reflection," or the mirroring of [[emotion]]al [[communication]]. For example, if a client says, "I hate men!" the therapist responds, "So you hate <u>all</u> men?" By doing so, the therapist is letting the client know that he or she is listening and trying to understand, as well as clarifying what the client is communicating. In this case, the client may well acknowledge that she does not hate all men, certainly not her brother, father, or some others, hopefully including the therapist if he is a man. Finally, she may realize that it is not hate she feels, but rather a lack of trust toward men, as a result of being hurt by a particular man.
  
*<u>Organismic trusting:</u> Trusting one's own thoughts and feelings as accurate; do what comes naturally
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According to Rogers, the fully functioning person exhibits the following qualities:
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*Openness to experience: The accurate perception of one's feelings and experience in the world.
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*Existential living: Living in the present, rather than the past, which has gone, or the future, which does not yet exist.
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*Organismic trusting: Trusting one's own thoughts and feelings as accurate; doing what comes naturally.
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*Experiential freedom: Acknowledging one's freedoms and taking responsibility for one's own actions.
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*Creativity: Full participation in the world, including contributing to society as a whole, whether through one's work, social relationships, or creative work in the arts or sciences.
  
*<u>Experiential freedom:</u> To acknowledge one's freedoms and take responsibility for one's own actions
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Rogers did not limit his theory to the therapeutic situation. He believed his ideas on the healthy human [[personality]] applied to all social interactions, such as those in [[marriage]], [[parenting]], [[education]], and could even be applied to conflict situations involving larger social groups.
  
*<u>Creativity:</u> Full participation in the world, including contributing to others' lives
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Rogers, as a [[Humanistic psychology|Humanistic psychologist]], regarded human beings as basically good, with an inherent [[motivation]] to actualize their potential to the fullest possible extent, which was referred to by [[Abraham Maslow]] as "self-actualization." He viewed [[Mental health and mental illness|mental health]] as a process of [[psychological development]], and [[psychopathology|mental illness]], [[crime|criminality]], and other human problems as distortions of the natural tendency for growth.
  
Rogers and some colleagues founded the '[[encounter group|Group Encounter]]' (for young people, managers etc.) and '[[Marriage Encounter]]' (ME).
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This raises the question of the fundamental nature of human beings. Humanistic psychology views human beings as basically positive creatures who, given the right conditions, develop constructively, [[biology|biologically]] and [[psychology|psychologically]]. However, there is no necessary correlation between physical and mental growth; it is possible to fulfill one's physical potential while having serious psychological problems. Physical growth occurs automatically given the necessary conditions, whereas psychological growth involves making choices and taking responsibility for them.  
  
===Experiental education===
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Rogers' approach implies that making bad choices is a sign of disturbance, or [[psychopathology]], or that the conditions for healthy mental growth have not been met. Given the fact that most people make bad choices in their lives, this leads to the conclusion that either most people have serious psychological problems, or human society is not a good environment in which to grow up. The optimism of Rogers' view comes through in his belief that all problems can be solved through interaction with others, such as counselors, who bring the three qualities of respect, congruence, and empathy into the relationship. However, although it is true that such qualities make for healthy relationships, it does not address the underlying problem of why human society is filled with unhealthy social relationships and psychologically disturbed individuals.
  
[[Image:LearningTheCountriesOfAsia.jpg|thumb|right|200px| A [[child]] learning the countries of [[Asia]] by [[experience]] rather than by [[rote learning]].]]
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===Experiential Learning===
  
'''Experiential education''' (or "learning by doing") is the process of actively engaging students in an authentic [[experience]] that will have benefits and consequences. Students make discoveries and experiment with knowledge themselves instead of hearing or reading about the experiences of others. Students also reflect on their experiences, thus developing new [[skill]]s, new [[attitude]]s, and new [[theories]] or ways of [[thinking]] (Kraft & Sakofs, 1988).  Experiential education is related to the [[Constructivism (learning theory)|constructivist]] learning theory.
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Rogers made significant contributions to the field of [[education]] with his theory of [[experiential learning]]. He maintained that all human beings have a natural desire to learn. Therefore, failure to learn is not due to the person's inability to learn, but rather to problems with the learning situation.
  
====Historical development====
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Rogers defined two categories of learning: cognitive (meaningless) learning, which involves academic knowledge, such as multiplication tables, and experiential (significant) learning, which is applied knowledge, such as how to repair a car. The key distinction is that experiential learning addresses the needs and wants of the learner, and thus has the qualities of personal involvement, self-initiation, self-evaluation, and long-lasting effects.
[[John Dewey]], an American educational philosopher, was an early twentieth century promoter of the idea of learning through direct experience (action and reflection). Experiential education differs from much traditional education in that teachers first immerse students in action and then ask them to reflect on the experience.  
 
  
In traditional education, teachers set the knowledge to be learnt (including analysis and synthesis) before students. They hope students will subsequently find ways to apply the knowledge.  
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Experiential education, or "learning by doing," is the process of actively engaging students in an authentic experience that has benefits and consequences. Students make discoveries and experiment with knowledge themselves, instead of hearing or reading about the experiences of others. Students also reflect on their experiences, thus developing new skills, [[attitude]]s, and ways of [[thinking]] (Kraft & Sakofs 1988).  
  
Despite the efforts of many efforts at progressive educational reform, reports by researchers such as Goodlad (1984) and Sizer (1984) suggest that most teaching, particularly at the high school level, still involves the teacher as purveyor of knowledge and the student as passive recipient.  
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Experiential education empowers students to take responsibility for their own learning. Whether [[teaching|teacher]]s employ experiential education in [[service learning]], environmental education, or more traditional school subjects, it involves engaging student "voice" in active roles for the purpose of learning.
  
==== Examples ====
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The caveat in the experiential learning situation is that while the content of much of what we need to learn is desirable and amenable to the experiential approach, there are many things that people, especially children, may not want to learn, but are necessary in order to function fully as adults in human society. Allowing children to decide that certain "meaningless" knowledge need not be learned, reduces the job of teachers to mere supports in their students' learning process, taking away their role in guiding education to fulfill the larger purpose determined by society.
Examples of experiential education abound in all disciplines. In her 1991 book ''Living Between the Lines'', [[Lucy Calkins]] states,  
 
"If we asked our students for the highlight of their school careers, most would choose a time when they dedicated themselves to an endeavor of great importance...I am thinking of youngsters from P.S. 321, who have launched a save-the-tree campaign to prevent the oaks outside their school from being cut down. I am thinking of children who write the school newspaper, act in the school play, organize the playground building committee.... On projects such as these, youngsters will work before school, after school, during lunch. Our youngsters want to work hard on endeavors they deem significant."
 
  
There are other examples. High school English classes in Rabun Gap, Georgia have published the Foxfire books and magazines for over 25 years (Wigginton, 1985). Students research the culture of the Appalachian mountains through taped interviews and then write and edit articles based upon their interviews. Foxfire has inspired hundreds of similar cultural journalism projects around the country.
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==Legacy==
  
One widely adopted form of experiential education is learning through service to others (Kielsmeier & Willits, 1989). An example is Project OASES (Occupational and Academic Skills for the Employment of Students) in the Pittsburgh public schools. Eighth graders, identified as potential dropouts, spend three periods a day involved in renovating a [[homeless shelter]] as part of a service project carried out within their industrial arts class. Students in programs such as these learn enduring skills such as planning, communicating with a variety of age groups and types of people, and group decisionmaking. In carrying out their activities and in the reflection component afterward, they come to new insights and integrate diverse knowledge from fields such as English, [[political science]], mathematics, and sociology.
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Carl Rogers had a profound impact on [[psychotherapy]], [[personality]] theory, and [[education]]. His passionate regard for humanistic values, his optimistic and implicit faith in the inherent goodness of human beings, and his steadfast belief that troubled people can be helped, contributed to the popularity of his work. His achievements in the academic sphere, as shown by his publication record, the number of students he had, and the honors his fellow [[psychologist]]s bestowed upon him, made Rogers one of the significant figures in twentieth-century [[psychology]]. The emergence of [[Humanistic psychology]] as the "third force" in psychology is due in large part to Carl Rogers.  
  
Other approaches at the university level include laboratory courses in social sciences and humanities that seek to parallel laboratory courses in the natural sciences. In social science laboratory courses, students combine theory with tests of the theory in field settings and often develop their own social models in disciplines as far ranging as history and philosophy to economics, political science and anthropology (Lempert, 1996).
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His [[person-centered approach]] offers a unique paradigm for [[group therapy]], which Rogers called the "Basic Encounter Group." Rogers and his colleagues started to experiment with the concept of large [[community]] groups of 50 to 300 or more individuals, and subsequently to include individuals from different [[culture]]s and [[nation|nationalities]]. The cross-cultural groups provided Rogers with a foundation from which to conduct workshops using client-centered principles as a way to induce societal change, particularly the diminishing of international tensions among nations.  
  
[[Friends World Program]], a four-year international study program operating out of [[Long Island University]], operates entirely around self-guided, experiential learning while immersed in foreign cultures. Regional centers employ mostly advisors rather than teaching faculty; these advisors guide the individual students in preparing a "portfolio of learning" each semester to display the results of their experiences and projects.
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Rogers' theories continue to inspire [[counseling|counselors]] working with individuals, couples, families, and larger groups.  
  
Other projects and "capstone" programs have included everything from student teams writing their own international development plans and presenting them to Presidents and foreign media and publishing their studies as textbooks, in development studies, to running their own businesses, NGOs, or community development banks (Lempert, 1996).
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Although popular, and achieving a certain level of success, Rogers' approach has its weaknesses. In particular, the emphasis on counselors' exhibiting congruence, respect, and empathy toward their clients, has led them to become supportive of their clients' situation and viewpoint to such an extent that the clients feel no need to change. Without invoking some standard or [[norm]], or at least presenting alternative viewpoints, the counselor does not have any position of authority from which to guide the client to make constructive changes. While this was in no way Rogers' intention, it has led to counselors validating actions, otherwise deemed unacceptable by society, because their clients experience satisfaction from them.  
  
At the professional school level, experiential education is often integrated into curricula in "clinical" courses following the medical school model of "See one, Do one, Teach one" in which students learn by practicing medicine. This approach is now being introduced in other professions in which skills are directly worked into courses to teach every concept (starting with interviewing, listening skills, negotiation, contract writing and advocacy, for example) to larger scale projects in which students run legal aid clinics or community loan programs, write legislation or community development plans.
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Rogers' work on [[experiential learning]] has greatly impacted [[education]]. Numerous programs have successfully employed some form of experiential learning.
  
====Change in Roles and Structures====
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One widely adopted form of experiential education is [[service learning]], or learning through service to others (Kielsmeier & Willits 1989). An example is Project OASES (Occupational and Academic Skills for the Employment of Students) in the Pittsburgh public schools, where eighth graders, identified as potential dropouts, spend three periods a day involved in renovating a homeless shelter as part of a service project carried out within their industrial arts class.  
Whether teachers employ experiential education in cultural journalism, [[service learning]], [[environmental education]], or more traditional school subjects, its key idea involves engaging [[student voice]] in active roles for the purpose of learning. Students participate in a real activity with real consequences for the purpose of meeting learning objectives.  
 
  
Some experts in the field make the distinction between "democratic experiential education" in which students help design curricula and run their own projects and even do their own grading (through objective contracted standards) and other forms of "experiential education"
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Other approaches at the university level include laboratory courses in [[social science]]s and [[humanities]] that seek to parallel laboratory courses in the natural sciences. In social science laboratory courses, students combine theory with tests of the theory in field settings and often develop their own social models in disciplines as far ranging as [[history]] and [[philosophy]] to [[economics]], [[political science]], and [[anthropology]], (Lempert 1995).
that put students in existing organizations in inferior roles (such as service learning and internships) or in which faculty design the field work (Lempert, 1996).
 
  
Besides changing student roles, experiential education requires a change in the role of teachers. When students are active learners, their endeavors often take them outside the classroom walls. Because action precedes attempts to synthesize knowledge, teachers generally cannot plan a curriculum unit as a neat, predictable package. Teachers become active learners, too, experimenting together with their students, reflecting upon the learning activities they have designed, and responding to their students' reactions to the activities. In this way, teachers themselves become more active; they come to view themselves as more than just recipients of school district policy and curriculum decisions.  
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Friends World Program, a four-year international study program operating out of Long Island University, operates entirely around self-guided, experiential learning while immersed in foreign cultures. Other projects and "capstone" programs have included everything from student teams writing their own international development plans, presenting them to presidents and foreign media, and publishing their studies as textbooks, to running their own [[business]]es, non-for-profit organizations, or community development [[bank]]s (Lempert 1995).
  
As students and teachers take on new roles, the traditional organizational structures of the school also may meet challenges (Zemelman, Daniels, & Hyde, 1998). For example, at the Challenger Middle School in Colorado Springs, Colorado, service activities are an integral part of the academic program. Such nontraditional activities require teachers and administrators to look at traditional practices in new ways. For instance, they may consider reorganizing time blocks. They may also teach research methods by involving students in investigations of the community, rather than restricting research activities to the library (Rolzinski, 1990). At the University Heights Alternative School in [[the Bronx]], the Project Adventure experiential learning program has led the faculty to adopt an all-day time block as an alternative to the traditional 45-minute periods. The faculty now organizes the curriculum by project instead of by separate disciplines. Schools that promote meaningful student involvement actively engage students as partners in education improvement activities. These young people learn while planning, researching, teaching, and making decisions that affect the entire education system.
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"Adventure education," which uses outdoor activities to learn how to overcome adversity, work alongside others, and to develop a deeper relationship with nature, is one form of experiential education that is highly effective in developing team and group skills in both students and adults (Rohnke 1989).
  
At the university level, including universities like Stanford and the University of California Berkeley, students are often the initiators of courses and demand more role in changing the curriculum and making it truly responsive to their needs.  In some cases, universities have offered alternatives for student-designed faculty approved courses.  In other cases, students have formed movements or even their own NGOs like Unseen America Projects, Inc., to promote democratic experiential learning and to design and accredit their own alternative curricula (Lempert, 1996).
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==Quotes from Carl Rogers==
 
 
==== Helping with the transition ====
 
 
 
At first, these new roles and structures may seem unfamiliar and uncomfortable to both students and adults in the school. Traditionally, students have most often been rewarded for competing rather than cooperating with one another. Teachers are not often called upon for collaborative work either. Teaching has traditionally been an activity carried out in isolation from one's peers, behind closed doors. Principals, used to the traditional hierarchical structure of schools, often do not know how to help their teachers constitute self-managed work teams or how to help teachers coach students to work in cooperative teams. The techniques of experiential education can help students and staff adjust to teamwork, an important part of the process of reforming schools.
 
 
 
[[Adventure education]] is one form of experiential education that is highly effective in developing team and group skills in both students and adults (Rohnke, 1989). Initially, [[group]]s work to solve problems that are unrelated to the problems in their actual [[school]] environment. For example, in a [[ropes course]] designed to build the skills required by [[teamwork]], a faculty or student [[team]] might work together to get the entire [[group]] over a 12-foot wall or through an intricate web of rope. After each challenge in a series of this kind, the group looks at how it functioned as a team. Who took the [[leadership]] roles? Did the [[planning]] process help or hinder progress? Did people listen to one another in the [[group]] and use the strengths of all group members? Did everyone feel that the group was a [[support]]ive environment in which they felt comfortable making a contribution and taking [[risks]]?
 
 
 
The wall or web of rope can becomes a [[metaphor]] for the [[classroom]] or [[school]] environment. While the problems and challenges of the [[classroom]] or [[school]] are different from the physical challenges of the adventure activity, many skills needed to respond successfully as a team are the same in both settings.
 
 
 
These skills &mdash; [[listening]], recognizing each other's strengths, and supporting each other through difficulties &mdash; can apply equally well to academic [[problem-solving]] or to schoolwide improvement efforts.
 
 
 
For example, the Kane School in Lawrence, Massachusetts, Massachusetts has been using adventure as a tool for [[school]] restructuring. The entire faculty &mdash; particularly the Faculty Advisory Council, which shares the decisionmaking responsibilities with the principal &mdash; has honed group skills through experiential education activities developed by [[Project Adventure]]. These skills include open [[communication]], methods of [[conflict resolution]], and mechanisms for [[decision making]] (High Strides, 1990).
 
 
 
==== Summary ====
 
 
 
Experiential education can change schools because it requires new roles of students, teachers, and administrators. It can provide a different, more engaging way of treating academic content through the combination of action and reflection. Experiential education empowers students to take responsibility for their own learning.  Experiential education can also provide a process for helping all those involved in schooling become more comfortable with the unfamiliar roles commonly proposed for restructured schools.
 
  
==Quotes from Carl Rogers==
+
:”It is the client who knows what hurts, what directions to go, what problems are crucial, what experiences have been deeply buried.” Carl Rogers, from ''On Becoming a Person''
  
"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. Neither the Bible nor the prophets &ndash; neither Freud nor research &ndash; neither the revelations of God nor man &ndash; can take precedence over my own direct experience. My experience is not authoritative because it is infallible. It is the basis of authority because it can always be checked in new primary ways. In this way its frequent error or fallibility is always open to correction.
+
:”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. Neither the Bible nor the prophets &ndash; neither Freud nor research &ndash; neither the revelations of God nor man &ndash; can take precedence over my own direct experience. My experience is not authoritative because it is infallible. It is the basis of authority because it can always be checked in new primary ways. In this way its frequent error or fallibility is always open to correction.Carl Rogers, from ''On Becoming a Person''
Carl Rogers, from '''On Becoming a Person''
 
  
"If we value independence, if we are disturbed by the growing conformity of knowledge, of values, of attitudes, which our present system induces, then we may wish to set up conditions of learning which make for uniqueness, for self-direction, and for self-intitiated learning."
+
==Major Works==
Carl Rogers
+
*Rogers, Carl R. 1942. ''Counseling and Psychotherapy''. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0395053218
 +
*Rogers, Carl R. 1951. ''Client-centered Therapy''. Houghton Mifflin College Division. ISBN 0395053226
 +
*Rogers, Carl R. 1961. ''On Becoming a Person''. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0395081343
 +
*Coulson, William, and Carl R. Rogers. 1968. ''Man and the Science of Man''. Merrill Publishing Co. ISBN 0675095999
 +
*Rogers, Carl R. 1969. ''Freedom to Learn: A View of What Education Might Become''. C.E. Merrill Pub. Co. ISBN 0675095190
 +
*Rogers, Carl R., and Barry Stevens. 1971. ''Person to Person: The Problem of Being Human''. Pocket Publishers. ISBN 0671780573
 +
*Rogers, Carl R. 1975. ''Becoming Partners: Marriage and Its Alternative''. Constable. ISBN 978-0094597105
 +
*Rogers, Carl R. 1978. ''Carl Rogers on Personal Power: Inner Strength and Its Revolutionary Impact''. Trans-Atlantic Publications. ISBN 0094620903
 +
*Rogers, Carl R. 1980. ''A Way of Being''. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0395299152
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Calkins, L. (1991). Living between the lines. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann Educational Books, Inc.
+
*Kielsmeier, J., and R. Willits. 1989. ''Growing hope: A Sourcebook on Integrating Youth Service into the Curriculum.'' St. Paul, MN: National Youth Leadership Council, University of Minnesota.
*Dewey, J. (1938). Experience and education. New York: Collier Books.
+
*Kraft, Richard, and M. Sakofs. 1988. ''Theory of Experiential Education''. Boulder, CO: Association for Experiential Education. ISBN 0929361008
*Educational Writers Association. (1990). Lawrence grows its own leaders. High Strides: Bimonthly Report on Urban Middle Grades, 2 (12). Washington, DC: Author.
+
*Lempert, David H. 1995. ''Escape from the Ivory Tower: Student Adventures in Democratic Experiential Education.'' San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers. ISBN 0787901369
*Fletcher, A. (2005). Meaningful student involvement: Students as partners in school change. Olympia, WA: HumanLinks Foundation.
+
*Rohnke, Karl E. 1989. ''Cowstails and Cobras II''. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company. ISBN 0840354347
*Freire, P. (1971). Pedagogy of the Oppressed. NY: Continuum.
 
*Goodlad, J. (1984). A place called school: Prospects for the future. NY: McGraw Hill.
 
*Kielsmeier, J., & Willits, R. (1989). Growing hope: A sourcebook on integrating youth service into the curriculum. St. Paul, MN: National Youth Leadership Council, University of Minnesota.
 
*Kraft, D., & Sakofs, M. (Eds.). (1988). The theory of experiential education. Boulder, CO: Association for Experiential Education.
 
*Lempert, D. and others (1996). Escape from the ivory tower: Student adventures in democratic experiential education. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers.
 
*Rohnke, K. (1989). Cowstails and cobras II. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company.
 
*Rolzinski, C. (1990). The adventure of adolescence: Middle school students and community service. Washington, DC: Youth Service America.
 
*Sizer, T. (1984). Horace's compromise. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.
 
*Wigginton, E. (1985). Sometimes a shining moment: The Foxfire experience. Garden City, NY: Anchor Press/Doubleday.
 
*Zemelman, S., Daniels, H. & Hyde, A. (1998). Best Practice: New Standards for Teaching and Learning in America's Schools. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 
+
All links retrieved January 18, 2024.
* [http://www.aee.org Association for Experiential Education]
+
* [https://webspace.ship.edu/cgboer/rogers.html Personality Theories: Carl Rogers] by Dr. C. George Boeree
* [http://www.wilderdom.com/experiential Experiential Learning & Experiential Education: Philosophy, Theory, Practice & Resources]
+
*[https://counsellingresource.com/therapy/types/person-centred/ An Introduction to Person-Centred Counselling] ''Counselling Resource''
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/1992-3/changing.htm Changing Schools through Experiential Education. ERIC Digest.] The original version of the Wikipedia article was based on the public domain text at this site.
+
* [https://www.apa.org/about/governance/president/carl-r-rogers Carl Rogers, PhD: 1947 APA President] ''American Psychological Assocation''
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/1997-4/higher.htm Experiential Learning in Higher Education: Linking Classroom and Community. ERIC Digest.]
+
* [http://carlrrogers.org/ Carl R. Rogers.org]
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/2000-4/voice.htm Incorporating Student Voice into Teaching Practice. ERIC Digest.]
 
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/1995-2/improving.htm Improving Evaluation in Experiential Education. ERIC Digest.]
 
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/2003-2/outdoor.html Outdoor, Experiential, and Environmental Education: Converging or Diverging Approaches? ERIC Digest.]
 
* [http://newhorizons.org/voices/fletcher.htm Broadening the Bounds of Involvement: Transforming Schools With Student Voice. New Horizons for Learning.]
 
* [http://www.nrogers.com/carlrogersbio.html nrogers.com] - Rogers Biography
 
* [http://www.ship.edu/%7Ecgboeree/rogers.html Personality Theories] - Carl Rogers
 
* [http://www.panarchy.org/rogers/person.html Carl R. Rogers, On Becoming a Person (1961)]
 
* [http://www.panarchy.org/rogers/learning.html Carl R. Rogers, Freedom to Learn (1969)]
 
  
 
{{Credit2|Carl_Rogers|29245320|Experiential_education|36682955|}}
 
{{Credit2|Carl_Rogers|29245320|Experiential_education|36682955|}}
 +
[[Category: Psychologists]]
 +
[[Category: Educators and Educational theorists]]

Latest revision as of 00:14, 19 January 2024

Carl Rogers

BornJanuary 8 1902(1902-01-08)
Oak Park, Illinois, U.S.
DiedFebruary 4 1987 (aged 85)
San Diego, California, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
FieldsPsychology
InstitutionsOhio State University
University of Chicago
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Western Behavioral Sciences Institute
Center for Studies of the Person
Alma materUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison (BA)
Union Theological Seminary
Columbia University (MA, PhD)
Known forThe person-centered approach (e.g., Client-centered therapy, Student-centered learning, Rogerian argument)
Notable awardsAward for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Psychology (1956, APA); Award for Distinguished Contributions to Applied Psychology as a Professional Practice (1972, APA); 1964 Humanist of the Year (American Humanist Association)


Carl Ransom Rogers (January 8, 1902 – February 4, 1987) was an influential American psychologist, who, along with Abraham Maslow, founded the humanistic approach to psychology. He developed Nondirective psychotherapy, also called "Client-centered therapy" and later the "Person-centered approach," reflecting his belief that his model applied to interactions between all people, not just therapist-client relations. Rogers' work has had many positive results and achieved significant popularity. The strength of his approach is the importance of harmonious relationships based on respect, congruence, and empathy in promoting healthy psychological development. He also made a significant contribution to education through his work on experiential learning. However, his rejection of any authority outside one's own experience, including the authority of therapist over client, or teacher over student, also rejects the authority of God's purpose for human beings, and denies any chance of correcting the underlying cause of corrupted human nature.

Biography

Rogers was born on January 8, 1902 in Oak Park, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. His father was a civil engineering and his mother was a homemaker and devout Christian. Rogers was the fourth of six children.

Rogers could already read by the age for entering kindergarten, and so he started his education directly in the second grade. When Rogers was 12, his family moved to a farm, where he spent his adolescence in a strict religious and ethical environment. He became a rather isolated, independent, and disciplined person, acquiring an appreciation for the scientific method in a practical world.

He entered the University of Wisconsin initially studying agriculture, and later changing to religion. At age 20, Rogers spent time in Beijing, China, at an international Christian conference, which led him to broaden his thinking and start to doubt his religious convictions. However, after graduation in 1924, he enrolled in Union Theological Seminary in New York to continue his religious studies. At that time he also married Helen Elliot. They had two children, David born in 1926 and Natalie in 1928.

At Union Theological Seminary, Rogers attended a seminar entitled Why am I entering the ministry? after which he changed his major to psychology. He graduated with a Masters degree in clinical psychology, and in 1931, received his Ph.D. in psychotherapy. While completing his doctoral work, he engaged in clinical work at the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (SPCC) in Rochester, New York, where he became familiar with Otto Rank's work. In 1929, he was appointed director of the Child Study Department at the SPCC in Rochester.

He was offered a full professorship in Clinical psychology at Ohio State University in 1940. In 1942, he wrote his first book, Counseling and Psychotherapy. In it, Rogers made the startling suggestion that the client, not the therapist, is the one with the resources to resolve difficulties and gain the insight necessary to restructure his or her own life.

In 1945, he was invited to set up a counseling center at the University of Chicago. Rogers served as president of the American Psychological Association (APA) in 1947. While working in Chicago, he published his major work, Client-Centered Therapy (1951), wherein he outlined his theory. Rogers received the first Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the APA in 1956, the first year this award was given. In 1957, he returned to the University of Wisconsin to teach. However, following several internal conflicts within the psychology department, Rogers became disillusioned with higher education.

In 1964, Rogers was selected "humanist of the year" by the American Humanist Association, and received an offer to join the research staff of the Western Behavioral Studies Institute in La Jolla, California. He lived in La Jolla for the rest of his life, providing therapy, giving public talks, facilitating Person-Centered Approach workshops, and writing. As well as his contributions to psychology, Rogers also made significant impact in the field of education, particularly with the publication of Freedom to Learn in 1969, which outlined his ideas of "Experiential learning."

His wife, Helen, died in 1979. During the last decade of his life, Rogers traveled worldwide in efforts to apply his theories to areas of national social conflict, such as Northern Ireland, South Africa, and the Soviet Union.

Rogers was a prolific and influential writer, producing 16 books and over 200 professional articles. He also received numerous awards and recognitions for his contributions to psychology, including the first APA award for Distinguished Contributions to Applied Psychology as a Professional Practice in 1972, and a distinguished psychologist award from the Division of Psychotherapy. He died of a heart attack in 1987.

Work

Rogers was the first to conceptualize Person-centered therapy, and was a well-known counselor, personality theorist, and a key developer of Humanistic psychology. Rogers may be best known for his work in psychology. However, his contribution to the field of education, in the form of Experiential learning is equally profound.

Person-centered Therapy

Rogers developed his Person-centered approach to psychotherapy after becoming frustrated by the standard methodologies and procedures used in Freudian psychoanalysis and other therapies. He found that he obtained better results by listening to his patients and allowing them to direct the course of treatment. In his book, On Becoming a Person, he wrote "Unless I had a need to demonstrate my own cleverness and learning, I would do better to rely upon the client for direction of movement" (Rogers 1961).

Initially called "Nondirective therapy," and then "Client-centered therapy," Rogers finally changed its name to the "Person-centered approach," reflecting his belief that his theories applied to all interactions, not just those between client and therapist. It has most commonly been referred to as simply "Rogerian psychotherapy," and has become widely influential, embraced for its humanistic approach.

Rogers' basic tenet was that if unconditional positive regard (Respect), genuineness and honesty (Congruence), and empathic understanding (Empathy) were present in a relationship, growth and psychological healing would occur. According to Rogers, these qualities were both necessary and sufficient to create a relationship conducive to enhancing the client's psychological well-being. In other words, for Rogers, an effective therapist does not need any special technique, just the three qualities of respect, congruence, and empathy; without these three qualities, though, no technique would be successful.

The main technique Rogers recommended is that of "Reflection," or the mirroring of emotional communication. For example, if a client says, "I hate men!" the therapist responds, "So you hate all men?" By doing so, the therapist is letting the client know that he or she is listening and trying to understand, as well as clarifying what the client is communicating. In this case, the client may well acknowledge that she does not hate all men, certainly not her brother, father, or some others, hopefully including the therapist if he is a man. Finally, she may realize that it is not hate she feels, but rather a lack of trust toward men, as a result of being hurt by a particular man.

According to Rogers, the fully functioning person exhibits the following qualities:

  • Openness to experience: The accurate perception of one's feelings and experience in the world.
  • Existential living: Living in the present, rather than the past, which has gone, or the future, which does not yet exist.
  • Organismic trusting: Trusting one's own thoughts and feelings as accurate; doing what comes naturally.
  • Experiential freedom: Acknowledging one's freedoms and taking responsibility for one's own actions.
  • Creativity: Full participation in the world, including contributing to society as a whole, whether through one's work, social relationships, or creative work in the arts or sciences.

Rogers did not limit his theory to the therapeutic situation. He believed his ideas on the healthy human personality applied to all social interactions, such as those in marriage, parenting, education, and could even be applied to conflict situations involving larger social groups.

Rogers, as a Humanistic psychologist, regarded human beings as basically good, with an inherent motivation to actualize their potential to the fullest possible extent, which was referred to by Abraham Maslow as "self-actualization." He viewed mental health as a process of psychological development, and mental illness, criminality, and other human problems as distortions of the natural tendency for growth.

This raises the question of the fundamental nature of human beings. Humanistic psychology views human beings as basically positive creatures who, given the right conditions, develop constructively, biologically and psychologically. However, there is no necessary correlation between physical and mental growth; it is possible to fulfill one's physical potential while having serious psychological problems. Physical growth occurs automatically given the necessary conditions, whereas psychological growth involves making choices and taking responsibility for them.

Rogers' approach implies that making bad choices is a sign of disturbance, or psychopathology, or that the conditions for healthy mental growth have not been met. Given the fact that most people make bad choices in their lives, this leads to the conclusion that either most people have serious psychological problems, or human society is not a good environment in which to grow up. The optimism of Rogers' view comes through in his belief that all problems can be solved through interaction with others, such as counselors, who bring the three qualities of respect, congruence, and empathy into the relationship. However, although it is true that such qualities make for healthy relationships, it does not address the underlying problem of why human society is filled with unhealthy social relationships and psychologically disturbed individuals.

Experiential Learning

Rogers made significant contributions to the field of education with his theory of experiential learning. He maintained that all human beings have a natural desire to learn. Therefore, failure to learn is not due to the person's inability to learn, but rather to problems with the learning situation.

Rogers defined two categories of learning: cognitive (meaningless) learning, which involves academic knowledge, such as multiplication tables, and experiential (significant) learning, which is applied knowledge, such as how to repair a car. The key distinction is that experiential learning addresses the needs and wants of the learner, and thus has the qualities of personal involvement, self-initiation, self-evaluation, and long-lasting effects.

Experiential education, or "learning by doing," is the process of actively engaging students in an authentic experience that has benefits and consequences. Students make discoveries and experiment with knowledge themselves, instead of hearing or reading about the experiences of others. Students also reflect on their experiences, thus developing new skills, attitudes, and ways of thinking (Kraft & Sakofs 1988).

Experiential education empowers students to take responsibility for their own learning. Whether teachers employ experiential education in service learning, environmental education, or more traditional school subjects, it involves engaging student "voice" in active roles for the purpose of learning.

The caveat in the experiential learning situation is that while the content of much of what we need to learn is desirable and amenable to the experiential approach, there are many things that people, especially children, may not want to learn, but are necessary in order to function fully as adults in human society. Allowing children to decide that certain "meaningless" knowledge need not be learned, reduces the job of teachers to mere supports in their students' learning process, taking away their role in guiding education to fulfill the larger purpose determined by society.

Legacy

Carl Rogers had a profound impact on psychotherapy, personality theory, and education. His passionate regard for humanistic values, his optimistic and implicit faith in the inherent goodness of human beings, and his steadfast belief that troubled people can be helped, contributed to the popularity of his work. His achievements in the academic sphere, as shown by his publication record, the number of students he had, and the honors his fellow psychologists bestowed upon him, made Rogers one of the significant figures in twentieth-century psychology. The emergence of Humanistic psychology as the "third force" in psychology is due in large part to Carl Rogers.

His person-centered approach offers a unique paradigm for group therapy, which Rogers called the "Basic Encounter Group." Rogers and his colleagues started to experiment with the concept of large community groups of 50 to 300 or more individuals, and subsequently to include individuals from different cultures and nationalities. The cross-cultural groups provided Rogers with a foundation from which to conduct workshops using client-centered principles as a way to induce societal change, particularly the diminishing of international tensions among nations.

Rogers' theories continue to inspire counselors working with individuals, couples, families, and larger groups.

Although popular, and achieving a certain level of success, Rogers' approach has its weaknesses. In particular, the emphasis on counselors' exhibiting congruence, respect, and empathy toward their clients, has led them to become supportive of their clients' situation and viewpoint to such an extent that the clients feel no need to change. Without invoking some standard or norm, or at least presenting alternative viewpoints, the counselor does not have any position of authority from which to guide the client to make constructive changes. While this was in no way Rogers' intention, it has led to counselors validating actions, otherwise deemed unacceptable by society, because their clients experience satisfaction from them.

Rogers' work on experiential learning has greatly impacted education. Numerous programs have successfully employed some form of experiential learning.

One widely adopted form of experiential education is service learning, or learning through service to others (Kielsmeier & Willits 1989). An example is Project OASES (Occupational and Academic Skills for the Employment of Students) in the Pittsburgh public schools, where eighth graders, identified as potential dropouts, spend three periods a day involved in renovating a homeless shelter as part of a service project carried out within their industrial arts class.

Other approaches at the university level include laboratory courses in social sciences and humanities that seek to parallel laboratory courses in the natural sciences. In social science laboratory courses, students combine theory with tests of the theory in field settings and often develop their own social models in disciplines as far ranging as history and philosophy to economics, political science, and anthropology, (Lempert 1995).

Friends World Program, a four-year international study program operating out of Long Island University, operates entirely around self-guided, experiential learning while immersed in foreign cultures. Other projects and "capstone" programs have included everything from student teams writing their own international development plans, presenting them to presidents and foreign media, and publishing their studies as textbooks, to running their own businesses, non-for-profit organizations, or community development banks (Lempert 1995).

"Adventure education," which uses outdoor activities to learn how to overcome adversity, work alongside others, and to develop a deeper relationship with nature, is one form of experiential education that is highly effective in developing team and group skills in both students and adults (Rohnke 1989).

Quotes from Carl Rogers

”It is the client who knows what hurts, what directions to go, what problems are crucial, what experiences have been deeply buried.” Carl Rogers, from On Becoming a Person
”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. Neither the Bible nor the prophets – neither Freud nor research – neither the revelations of God nor man – can take precedence over my own direct experience. My experience is not authoritative because it is infallible. It is the basis of authority because it can always be checked in new primary ways. In this way its frequent error or fallibility is always open to correction.” Carl Rogers, from On Becoming a Person

Major Works

  • Rogers, Carl R. 1942. Counseling and Psychotherapy. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0395053218
  • Rogers, Carl R. 1951. Client-centered Therapy. Houghton Mifflin College Division. ISBN 0395053226
  • Rogers, Carl R. 1961. On Becoming a Person. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0395081343
  • Coulson, William, and Carl R. Rogers. 1968. Man and the Science of Man. Merrill Publishing Co. ISBN 0675095999
  • Rogers, Carl R. 1969. Freedom to Learn: A View of What Education Might Become. C.E. Merrill Pub. Co. ISBN 0675095190
  • Rogers, Carl R., and Barry Stevens. 1971. Person to Person: The Problem of Being Human. Pocket Publishers. ISBN 0671780573
  • Rogers, Carl R. 1975. Becoming Partners: Marriage and Its Alternative. Constable. ISBN 978-0094597105
  • Rogers, Carl R. 1978. Carl Rogers on Personal Power: Inner Strength and Its Revolutionary Impact. Trans-Atlantic Publications. ISBN 0094620903
  • Rogers, Carl R. 1980. A Way of Being. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0395299152

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Kielsmeier, J., and R. Willits. 1989. Growing hope: A Sourcebook on Integrating Youth Service into the Curriculum. St. Paul, MN: National Youth Leadership Council, University of Minnesota.
  • Kraft, Richard, and M. Sakofs. 1988. Theory of Experiential Education. Boulder, CO: Association for Experiential Education. ISBN 0929361008
  • Lempert, David H. 1995. Escape from the Ivory Tower: Student Adventures in Democratic Experiential Education. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers. ISBN 0787901369
  • Rohnke, Karl E. 1989. Cowstails and Cobras II. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company. ISBN 0840354347

External links

All links retrieved January 18, 2024.

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