Who was Samuel Slavson (1890-1981)?

Introduction

Samuel Richard Slavson (25 December 1890 to 05 August 1981) was an American engineer, journalist and teacher, who began to engage in group analysis in 1919. He is considered one of the pioneers of group psychotherapy for his contributions to its recognition as a scientific discipline. Slavson wrote over 20 books and served as the founding president of the American Group Psychotherapy Association (AGPA). He also established children’s group therapy and developed a specific small group model.

Life and Work

Slavson, born Amstislavski, came to New York in 1903 after escaping the Ukrainian pogroms. Early on, he became involved in self-culture clubs for children and young people. While studying to become a civil engineer, he developed youth support programmes, because he believed there was inherent creative potential in every human being. He sympathized with the ideas of progressive education and Freud’s theories, as well as the child guidance movement. He was also a part of the Jewish Board of Guardians in New York, a care centre for girls and boys with developmental disabilities, where he worked from 1934 to 1956. In 1934, he was able to start proving the efficacy of group work with emotional disorders.

In 1943, Slavson published An introduction to Group Therapy, the first and fundamental work on the use of group psychotherapy with children and youth. This work gained wide recognition and was for instance ranked by the Menninger Foundation among the 10 Classics of Psychotherapy. He was a founding member and the first President of the AGPA, which was keen to be well-recognised by psychiatrists; all of the 12 direct successors of the non-medical practitioner Slavson were in fact psychiatrists. Moreover, Slavson – who still exerted substantial influence in the organisation after the end of his presidency in 1940 – strictly ensured that the institution remained classically Freudian, orthodox and in a clear defensive position to Neo-Freudians, existentialists and transactional analysts. Slavson worked as a teacher, supervisor and de facto editor of the International Journal of Group Psychology, at both the national and international level. His was involved in a decades-long controversy and rivalry with Jacob L. Moreno, the founder of psychodrama.

According to Stumm et al. (1992):

“Slavson justified the recognition of group psychotherapy as a scientific discipline, provided fundamental theoretical contributions to this end and established a professional organization in the United States, which laid out binding guidelines for qualified training for the first time.”

Children’s Group Psychotherapy

Slavson is considered the founder of children’s group psychotherapy. He saw games as methods of therapy and used modelling clay, puppet theatres and building blocks. He believed that by these means, children would develop their social skills and strengthen their community spirit. He said that children can change their behaviour while in a group of peers, believing that an otherwise quiet child becomes more open and bold and that a loud child becomes more reserved. He believed children would be able to relate to each other’s problems. Through the group, according to Slavson, a feeling of unity can be created and a sense of identity can become strengthened. Developmentally, he thought this is particularly important for children aged 6 to 7 years.

Small Group Model

After decades of work with children and young people, in the late 1940s Slavson started working with adults as well. His small group model is designed for a maximum of 8 participants and is based on groups homogeneous in terms of age, sex and symptoms. Slavson developed several disorder-specific models, with exact descriptions for clinical use. Distinctions were made between counselling, guidance and psychotherapy. His parent groups around child welfare were particularly well known as well as vita-erg therapy with psychotic women.

In 1964, Slavson put forward a summary of his theoretical developments and practical experience in the volume A Textbook in Analytic Group Psychotherapy. He combined Freud’s theory of psychosexual development with terms from the field of sociology and recognized the human search for relationships and acceptance as a primary need. He saw the group as an “I (ego) therapy” within a collective “we-superego”, which opens up a path out of selfishness and psychological isolation. He is credited for synthesizing the principles of the founding generation of psychoanalytical theory with the requirements of American psychiatry.

Awards

1969 Award from the American Academy of Psychotherapists
1972 Father of group psychotherapy

In Popular Culture

  • A. Klein: He lets them grow. Survey 85 (1949): 75-80
  • Hyman Spotnitz: In tribute to S.R.Slavson. Intern’ Journal of Group Psychotherapy 21 (1971): 402-405
  • Scheidlinger/Schamess: Fifty years of AGPA 1942–1992: An overview. Intern’ Journal of Group Psychotherapy 42 (1992): 1-22

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What is the American Group Psychotherapy Association?

Introduction

The American Group Psychotherapy Association (AGPA) is a not-for-profit multi-disciplinary organisation dedicated to enhancing the practice, theory and research of group psychotherapy.

Brief History

The inception of the American Group Psychotherapy Association began in 1942 with the actual decision to found the organisation being made in February 1943 during a meeting of the American Orthopsychiatric Association in New York City. The organisation was first named the American Group Therapy Association. In 1952, the name was officially changed to the American Group Psychotherapy Association. Samuel R. Slavson was one of the founders and served as the first president of the AGPA.

Membership

American Group Psychotherapy Association is a national organisation with over 2000 members internationally and 31 affiliate societies. Members come from disciplines such as psychology, creative art therapy, psychiatry, nursing, social work, professional counselling, addictions, and marriage and family therapy. AGPA’s annual meeting attracts approximately 1000 attendees.

Certification

The International Board for Certification of Group Psychotherapists is a not-for-profit corporation formed to function autonomously from AGPA. The International Board for Certification of Group Psychotherapists (IBCGP) awards group therapists certification after they have presented documentation demonstrating the completion of a significant amount of training through coursework, experience, and supervision. A Certified Group Psychotherapist (CGP) is also required to continue lifelong learning by obtaining continuing education credits (CEU’s) in effective leadership of psychotherapy groups.

Organisational Involvement

The diversity of AGPA membership has been actively involved in the promotion of group therapy as an alternative treatment to the public and private sectors. The development of ethical and practice standards. AGPA membership has also responded to the nation’s disasters; for example, September 11 and Hurricane Katrina. AGPA has also developed a set of standards of practice for group therapy for use by practitioners. This resource assists the clinician in the development of evidence-based and best practices. AGPA does not de-certify its members or monitor its membership for quality of practice, instead, they go by the state licensing. The only time an AGPA member would lose their CGP certification is if their license was suspended by their state’s board of psychologists.

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article < https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Group_Psychotherapy_Association >; it is used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA). You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the CC-BY-SA.