Transactional Analysis: History & Background
Transactional Analysis (TA) was developed by Eric Berne in the 1950s and 1960s. Berne was a Canadian doctor of medicine who became a psychiatrist and served with the US army in the Second World War. His observations there contributed to his dissatisfaction with the treatment of mental patients that he experienced when in practice in California after the war.
Working particularly with groups, Berne made observations that led him to develop his ideas of ego states, based on earlier ideas from Federn, with whom he worked in his own psychoanalysis. As Berne developed TA concepts he drew further away from traditional psychiatric practice. Berne became known to a wider audience with his publication of “Games People Play” in 1964, a book still in print, which has sold several million copies.
Transactional Analysis Today
Transactional Analysis spread under the auspices of the International Transactional Analysis Association (ITAA) which itself developed from the meeting series inaugurated by Berne in San Francisco. As a result of this growth, the European Association for Transactional Analysis (EATA) was formed and this body today has more than twenty affiliates in European countries and has outstripped the ITAA in member numbers. The ITAA continues to represent TA through affiliates in many countries of the world with major organisations for TA in Latin America, India, Australasia and the Pacific region and in many other countries.
Operationally TA has developed over this time with new theory supplementing the work of Berne and the pioneers. Whilst other applications of TA are noted below, our focus is on the practise of psychotherapy and psychotherapeutic counselling. A major drive for Berne was the use of simple everyday language in TA and the avoidance of psychoanalytic language which tends to mean little to the lay person. The use of every day words in naming concepts such as games, strokes and rackets is a benefit to clients who can relate the ideas to their everyday experience; however it has led, at times, to wide misunderstandings in undervaluing TA as a psychological modality and it has been labelled a “pop psychology”. Any serious examination of TA and its theory will dispel this myth. TA can be used effectively at different levels; it is an in-depth methodology for relational psychotherapy usually working with clients over many months or even years and it is effective as a solution based cognitive methodology in time limited or brief therapy or counselling.
Transactional Analysis in the UK
TA was pioneered in the UK in the late 1970s leading to the formation of the Institute of Transactional Analysis (ITA). The ITA has played an active role in developing TA in Europe and establishing itself as the governing body for TA in the UK. The ITA was formed to represent the development of the four fields of TA: psychotherapy, counselling, organisational and educational. By 2000 the ITA had grown into an organisation with nine hundred members representing EATA in the organisation of training and examinations. The ITA also organises an annual conference for the UK and has twice organised European conferences for EATA and in 2005 a world conference for EATA and ITAA. In 2004 interests representing organisational and educational TA decided that they would benefit by organising an institute dedicated to these applications and the Institute of Developmental Transactional Analysis (IDTA) was formed. The ITA continues to represent all fields of TA but inevitably focuses primarily on psychotherapy and therapeutic counselling.
Future Developments
The ITA currently has over 1,100 members in the UK of whom the majority, more than half, are training or qualified in the psychotherapy field. Continued growth is expected as we move towards statutory regulation of counselling and psychotherapy. The ITA is a member organisation of the United Kingdom Council for Psychotherapy, playing an active part in its organisation since its foundation. Through the UKCP the ITA is keeping a close watching brief in the development of regulation and contributing where appropriate.
Transactional Analysis & EICP
All counsellors and therapist working with the EICP are trained in the TA modality. Whilst TA provides a theoretical basis for the practice of counselling and psychotherapy, it will not normally be brought overtly into the therapy room. EICP practitioners will always be willing to discuss their work with you and, if appropriate this may include the introduction of some TA principles and theory.
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