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William Glasser

William Glasser (May 11, 1925 – August 23, 2013) was an American psychiatrist. He was the developer of W. Edwards Deming's workplace ideas, reality therapy and choice theory.[1] His innovations for individual counseling, work environments and school, highlight personal choice, personal responsibility and personal transformation. Glasser positioned himself in opposition to conventional mainstream psychiatrists, who focus instead on classifying psychiatric syndromes as "illnesses" and prescribe psychotropic medications to treat mental disorders.[2]

William Glasser
Glasser at the 2009 Evolution of Psychotherapy Conference
Born(1925-05-11)May 11, 1925
DiedAugust 23, 2013(2013-08-23) (aged 88)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materCase Western Reserve University
University of California, Los Angeles
Known fordeveloped reality therapy and choice theory
AwardsDoctor of Humane Letters, Honoris Causa, University of San Francisco, American Counseling Association Professional Development Award, American Psychotherapy Association Master Therapist
Scientific career
FieldsPsychiatry
Counseling
InstitutionsCalifornia State University, Northridge
William Glasser Institute
Institute for Reality Therapy

Based on his wide-ranging and consulting clinical experience, Glasser applied his theories to broader social issues, such as education, management, and marriage, to name a few. As a public advocate, Glasser warned the general public of potential detriments caused by older generations of psychiatry, wedded to traditional diagnosing of patients as having mental illnesses (brain disorders) and prescribing medications. In his view, patients simply act out their unhappiness and lack of meaningful personal connection with important people in their life. Glasser advocated educating the general public about mental health issues; offering, post-modern frameworks for finding and following healthy therapeutic direction.

Early life and career edit

Glasser was born on May 11, 1925, in Cleveland, Ohio, to Ben Glasser, a watch and clock repairman, and his wife Betty. He attended Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, where in 1945 he earned his BS in chemical engineering. After a short career as an engineer, Glasser returned in 1946 to Case Western, but instead, during his first semester, was drafted into the US Army and stationed at Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. He returned to Case Western in 1947, earning his MA in clinical psychology in 1949 and his MD in psychiatry in 1953. He completed his medical internship and psychiatric residency at UCLA and the Veterans Administration Hospital, respectively, and became board certified in 1961.[3][4][5][6]

After being "thrown off the staff" at the VA hospital due to his anti-Freudian beliefs, Glasser took a position as staff psychiatrist at the Ventura School for Delinquent Girls, where he began teaching ideas that became the basis for reality therapy.[3] During this time, Glasser met G. L. Harrington, an older psychiatrist who openly disbelieved the Freudian model of mental illness, whom Glasser credits as being his "mentor".[5]

Glasser set up a private psychotherapy practice in Los Angeles, which he maintained until 1986.[4]

Work edit

Glasser authored and co-authored numerous and influential books on mental health, counseling, school improvement, and teaching, and several publications advocating a public health approach to or emphasis within mental health versus the prevailing "medical" model.

Glasser founded the Institute for Reality Therapy in 1967, which was renamed the Institute for Control Theory, Reality Therapy and Lead Management in 1994 and later the William Glasser Institute in 1996 in Chatsworth, CA.[7] The institute is now located in Tempe, Arizona, and has branch institutes throughout the world.

By the 1970s Glasser called his body of work "Control Theory". By 1996, the theoretical structure evolved into a comprehensive body of work renamed "Choice Theory",[8] mainly because of the confusion with perceptual control theory by William T. Powers, developed in the 1950s.[9]

Reality therapy organizations edit

In the United States, the Glasser Institute was originally organized with regional groups in New England, the Sunbelt, the Northwest, the Midwest, the Southeast, and the West Coast.

In July 2010 the William Glasser Association International (WGAI) was established in Nashville, Kentucky, with an interim governing board charged with setting up the organization to coordinate worldwide activities and conferences, the first of which was in 2012 in Los Angeles. The board eventually became incorporated in California under the new name of William Glasser International (WGI) and is the umbrella body recognised by Glasser to represent his ideas around the world. The members of the WGI Board are elected by members.

Outside of the United States, William Glasser International (WGI) has active affiliate organizations in many countries including Canada, Croatia, Slovenia, Ireland, the UK, Finland, Malaysia, the Philippines, South Korea, Japan, Central and South America, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. Neither WGI nor its affiliate organisations confer titles such as "counsellor" or "therapist" in their regular certification courses. In Europe, however, there are two special courses offering by the European Institute for Reality Therapy, one leading to the title Reality Therapy Psychotherapist and the other to obtain the title Reality Therapy Counsellor. Both can lead to The European Certificate in Psychotherapy (ECP).

The William Glasser Institute UK (formally Institute for Reality Therapy UK), with its own administration executive, coordinates the faculty workshops and practicums in the United Kingdom on behalf of WGI International, leading up to and including Reality Therapy Certification (CTRTC). The WGI UK strives to promote and develop choice theory, reality therapy, and lead management in the UK, offering guidance and support to its membership made up of a body of like-minded individuals, committed to their own personal and professional advancement. Support is offered by a team of training and practicum supervisors. Members of the institute subscribe to the "ethos" that Choice Theory, Reality Therapy, and Lead Management guide and support their relationships both on a personal and professional basis, and that Reality Therapy should be taught with integrity and adherence to fundamental concepts as described by Glasser and others who write, teach, and are associated with WG International.

Death edit

Glasser died at his home in Los Angeles on August 23, 2013, in the company of his wife, Carleen, and others.[10] Glasser's obituary reported the cause of death as respiratory failure stemming from pneumonia.[3] The William Glasser Institute website referred to Glasser's death as "a massive shock to all", despite him having been "in poor health for some time".[11]

Bibliography edit

  • Mental Health or Mental Illness? Psychiatry for Practical Action, 1962 ISBN 0-06-091092-5
  • Reality Therapy, 1965 (reissued 1989), ISBN 0-06-090414-3
  • The Effect of School Failure on the Life of a Child, 1971
  • The Identity Society, 1972 ISBN 0-601-15726-5
  • Schools Without Failure, 1975 ISBN 0-06-090421-6
  • Positive Addiction, 1976 ISBN 0-06-091249-9
  • Stations of the Mind, 1981 ISBN 0-06-011478-9
  • Take Effective Control of Your Life, 1984 ISBN 0-06-015342-3
  • Control Theory, 1985 ISBN 0-06-091292-8
  • Control Theory in the Classroom, 1986 ISBN 0-06-095287-3
  • Control Theory in the Practice of Reality Therapy: Case Studies, 1989 ISBN 0-06-055174-7
  • The Quality School, 1990 ISBN 0-06-095286-5
  • The Quality School Teacher, 1992 ISBN 0-06-095285-7
  • Reclaiming Literature, 1994 ISBN 0-275-94959-1
  • The Control Theory Manager, 1995 ISBN 0-88730-719-1
  • Staying Together, 1996 ISBN 0-06-092699-6
  • Choice Theory, 1997 ISBN 0-06-093014-4
  • Choice Theory in the Classroom Revised, 1998
  • Choice: The Flip Side of Control, 1998
  • The Quality School Teacher: A Companion Volume to The Quality School, 1998
  • Teoria de La Eleccion, 1999
  • Reality Therapy in Action, 2000 (Re-issued in 2001 as Counseling with Choice Theory)
  • Counseling with Choice Theory, 2001 ISBN 0-06-095366-7
  • Fibromyalgia: Hope from a Completely New Perspective, 2001 ISBN 0-9678444-2-8
  • Unhappy Teenagers: A Way for Parents and Teachers to Reach Them, 2002 ISBN 0-06-000798-2
  • For Parents and Teenagers: Dissolving the Barrier Between You and Your Teen, 2003 ISBN 0-06-000799-0
  • Warning: Psychiatry Can Be Hazardous to Your Mental Health, 2004 ISBN 0-06-053866-X
  • Take Charge of Your Life: How to get What You Need with Choice Theory Psychology, 2013 ISBN 978-1938908-32-3

With co-author Carleen Glasser edit

Other edit

  • Therapeutic Crisis Intervention, 1998, Adrian Gorman

Chapters in books edited by others edit

  • Chapter 4: Reality Therapy: An Explanation of the Steps of Reality Therapy, in What Are You Doing?, 1980, edited by Naomi Glasser ISBN 0-06-011646-3
  • Several chapters (not numbered), in The Reality Therapy Reader 1976, edited by Thomas Bratter and Richard Rachin, ISBN 0-06-010238-1
    • p38 "Youth in Rebellion: Why?"
    • p50 "A Talk with William Glasser"
    • p58 "The Civilized Identity Society"
    • p68 "How to Face Failure and Find Success"
    • p92 "Notes on Reality Therapy"
    • p345 "Practical Psychology G.P.s Can Use"
    • p359 "A New Look At Discipline"
    • p382 "Roles, Goals and Failure"
    • p465 "What Children Need"
    • p490 "The Role of the Leader in Counseling" (co-authored with Norman Iverson)
    • p498 "Discipline as a Function of Large Group Meetings" (co-authored with Norman Iverson)
    • p510 "A Realistic Approach to the Young Offender"

Biography edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Development of Ideas - William Glasser Institute Ireland". William Glasser Institute Ireland. Retrieved 2018-06-07.
  2. ^ "William Glasser, MD 1925-2013". Psychology Today. Retrieved 2018-06-07.
  3. ^ a b c "Dr. William Glasser, unorthodox psychiatrist and author, dies at 88". Los Angeles Times. 28 August 2013. Retrieved 2013-08-28.
  4. ^ a b "Dr. Glasser - GIFCT". Retrieved 2020-04-14.
  5. ^ a b "Development and Evolution of William Glasser's Ideas". Retrieved 2013-08-28.
  6. ^ "Biography of William Glasser". Retrieved 2013-08-25.
  7. ^ "Reality Therapy". apa.org. Retrieved 2018-06-07.
  8. ^ "Choice Theory by William Glasser: What is Choice Theory?". www.brucedavenport.com. Retrieved 2018-06-07.
  9. ^ "A perceptual control revolution? | The Psychologist". thepsychologist.bps.org.uk. Retrieved 2018-06-07.
  10. ^ "William Glasser Institute". Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  11. ^ "William Glasser, Champion of Choice". Retrieved 2013-08-25.

External links edit

  • William Glasser International
  • William Glasser Institute USA
  • Institute for Reality Therapy UK
  • William Glasser Institute Ireland

william, glasser, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, january, 2012, learn, when, remove, this, message, 1925, aug. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message William Glasser May 11 1925 August 23 2013 was an American psychiatrist He was the developer of W Edwards Deming s workplace ideas reality therapy and choice theory 1 His innovations for individual counseling work environments and school highlight personal choice personal responsibility and personal transformation Glasser positioned himself in opposition to conventional mainstream psychiatrists who focus instead on classifying psychiatric syndromes as illnesses and prescribe psychotropic medications to treat mental disorders 2 William GlasserGlasser at the 2009 Evolution of Psychotherapy ConferenceBorn 1925 05 11 May 11 1925Cleveland OhioDiedAugust 23 2013 2013 08 23 aged 88 Los Angeles CaliforniaNationalityAmericanAlma materCase Western Reserve UniversityUniversity of California Los AngelesKnown fordeveloped reality therapy and choice theoryAwardsDoctor of Humane Letters Honoris Causa University of San Francisco American Counseling Association Professional Development Award American Psychotherapy Association Master TherapistScientific careerFieldsPsychiatryCounselingInstitutionsCalifornia State University NorthridgeWilliam Glasser InstituteInstitute for Reality Therapy Based on his wide ranging and consulting clinical experience Glasser applied his theories to broader social issues such as education management and marriage to name a few As a public advocate Glasser warned the general public of potential detriments caused by older generations of psychiatry wedded to traditional diagnosing of patients as having mental illnesses brain disorders and prescribing medications In his view patients simply act out their unhappiness and lack of meaningful personal connection with important people in their life Glasser advocated educating the general public about mental health issues offering post modern frameworks for finding and following healthy therapeutic direction Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Work 3 Reality therapy organizations 4 Death 5 Bibliography 5 1 With co author Carleen Glasser 5 2 Other 5 3 Chapters in books edited by others 6 Biography 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and career editGlasser was born on May 11 1925 in Cleveland Ohio to Ben Glasser a watch and clock repairman and his wife Betty He attended Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland where in 1945 he earned his BS in chemical engineering After a short career as an engineer Glasser returned in 1946 to Case Western but instead during his first semester was drafted into the US Army and stationed at Dugway Proving Ground in Utah He returned to Case Western in 1947 earning his MA in clinical psychology in 1949 and his MD in psychiatry in 1953 He completed his medical internship and psychiatric residency at UCLA and the Veterans Administration Hospital respectively and became board certified in 1961 3 4 5 6 After being thrown off the staff at the VA hospital due to his anti Freudian beliefs Glasser took a position as staff psychiatrist at the Ventura School for Delinquent Girls where he began teaching ideas that became the basis for reality therapy 3 During this time Glasser met G L Harrington an older psychiatrist who openly disbelieved the Freudian model of mental illness whom Glasser credits as being his mentor 5 Glasser set up a private psychotherapy practice in Los Angeles which he maintained until 1986 4 Work editGlasser authored and co authored numerous and influential books on mental health counseling school improvement and teaching and several publications advocating a public health approach to or emphasis within mental health versus the prevailing medical model Glasser founded the Institute for Reality Therapy in 1967 which was renamed the Institute for Control Theory Reality Therapy and Lead Management in 1994 and later the William Glasser Institute in 1996 in Chatsworth CA 7 The institute is now located in Tempe Arizona and has branch institutes throughout the world By the 1970s Glasser called his body of work Control Theory By 1996 the theoretical structure evolved into a comprehensive body of work renamed Choice Theory 8 mainly because of the confusion with perceptual control theory by William T Powers developed in the 1950s 9 Reality therapy organizations editIn the United States the Glasser Institute was originally organized with regional groups in New England the Sunbelt the Northwest the Midwest the Southeast and the West Coast In July 2010 the William Glasser Association International WGAI was established in Nashville Kentucky with an interim governing board charged with setting up the organization to coordinate worldwide activities and conferences the first of which was in 2012 in Los Angeles The board eventually became incorporated in California under the new name of William Glasser International WGI and is the umbrella body recognised by Glasser to represent his ideas around the world The members of the WGI Board are elected by members Outside of the United States William Glasser International WGI has active affiliate organizations in many countries including Canada Croatia Slovenia Ireland the UK Finland Malaysia the Philippines South Korea Japan Central and South America South Africa Australia and New Zealand Neither WGI nor its affiliate organisations confer titles such as counsellor or therapist in their regular certification courses In Europe however there are two special courses offering by the European Institute for Reality Therapy one leading to the title Reality Therapy Psychotherapist and the other to obtain the title Reality Therapy Counsellor Both can lead to The European Certificate in Psychotherapy ECP The William Glasser Institute UK formally Institute for Reality Therapy UK with its own administration executive coordinates the faculty workshops and practicums in the United Kingdom on behalf of WGI International leading up to and including Reality Therapy Certification CTRTC The WGI UK strives to promote and develop choice theory reality therapy and lead management in the UK offering guidance and support to its membership made up of a body of like minded individuals committed to their own personal and professional advancement Support is offered by a team of training and practicum supervisors Members of the institute subscribe to the ethos that Choice Theory Reality Therapy and Lead Management guide and support their relationships both on a personal and professional basis and that Reality Therapy should be taught with integrity and adherence to fundamental concepts as described by Glasser and others who write teach and are associated with WG International Death editGlasser died at his home in Los Angeles on August 23 2013 in the company of his wife Carleen and others 10 Glasser s obituary reported the cause of death as respiratory failure stemming from pneumonia 3 The William Glasser Institute website referred to Glasser s death as a massive shock to all despite him having been in poor health for some time 11 Bibliography editMental Health or Mental Illness Psychiatry for Practical Action 1962 ISBN 0 06 091092 5 Reality Therapy 1965 reissued 1989 ISBN 0 06 090414 3 The Effect of School Failure on the Life of a Child 1971 The Identity Society 1972 ISBN 0 601 15726 5 Schools Without Failure 1975 ISBN 0 06 090421 6 Positive Addiction 1976 ISBN 0 06 091249 9 Stations of the Mind 1981 ISBN 0 06 011478 9 Take Effective Control of Your Life 1984 ISBN 0 06 015342 3 Control Theory 1985 ISBN 0 06 091292 8 Control Theory in the Classroom 1986 ISBN 0 06 095287 3 Control Theory in the Practice of Reality Therapy Case Studies 1989 ISBN 0 06 055174 7 The Quality School 1990 ISBN 0 06 095286 5 The Quality School Teacher 1992 ISBN 0 06 095285 7 Reclaiming Literature 1994 ISBN 0 275 94959 1 The Control Theory Manager 1995 ISBN 0 88730 719 1 Staying Together 1996 ISBN 0 06 092699 6 Choice Theory 1997 ISBN 0 06 093014 4 Choice Theory in the Classroom Revised 1998 Choice The Flip Side of Control 1998 The Quality School Teacher A Companion Volume to The Quality School 1998 Teoria de La Eleccion 1999 Reality Therapy in Action 2000 Re issued in 2001 as Counseling with Choice Theory Counseling with Choice Theory 2001 ISBN 0 06 095366 7 Fibromyalgia Hope from a Completely New Perspective 2001 ISBN 0 9678444 2 8 Unhappy Teenagers A Way for Parents and Teachers to Reach Them 2002 ISBN 0 06 000798 2 For Parents and Teenagers Dissolving the Barrier Between You and Your Teen 2003 ISBN 0 06 000799 0 Warning Psychiatry Can Be Hazardous to Your Mental Health 2004 ISBN 0 06 053866 X Take Charge of Your Life How to get What You Need with Choice Theory Psychology 2013 ISBN 978 1938908 32 3 With co author Carleen Glasser edit The Language of Choice Theory 1999 ISBN 0 06 095323 3 What Is This Thing Called Love 2000 ISBN 0 9678444 0 1 Getting Together and Staying Together 2000 ISBN 0 06 095633 X Eight Lessons for a Happier Marriage 2007 ISBN 978 0 06 133692 8 Other edit Therapeutic Crisis Intervention 1998 Adrian Gorman Chapters in books edited by others edit Chapter 4 Reality Therapy An Explanation of the Steps of Reality Therapy in What Are You Doing 1980 edited by Naomi Glasser ISBN 0 06 011646 3 Several chapters not numbered in The Reality Therapy Reader 1976 edited by Thomas Bratter and Richard Rachin ISBN 0 06 010238 1 p38 Youth in Rebellion Why p50 A Talk with William Glasser p58 The Civilized Identity Society p68 How to Face Failure and Find Success p92 Notes on Reality Therapy p345 Practical Psychology G P s Can Use p359 A New Look At Discipline p382 Roles Goals and Failure p465 What Children Need p490 The Role of the Leader in Counseling co authored with Norman Iverson p498 Discipline as a Function of Large Group Meetings co authored with Norman Iverson p510 A Realistic Approach to the Young Offender Biography editWilliam Glasser Champion of Choice 2014 ISBN 978 1934442470References edit Development of Ideas William Glasser Institute Ireland William Glasser Institute Ireland Retrieved 2018 06 07 William Glasser MD 1925 2013 Psychology Today Retrieved 2018 06 07 a b c Dr William Glasser unorthodox psychiatrist and author dies at 88 Los Angeles Times 28 August 2013 Retrieved 2013 08 28 a b Dr Glasser GIFCT Retrieved 2020 04 14 a b Development and Evolution of William Glasser s Ideas Retrieved 2013 08 28 Biography of William Glasser Retrieved 2013 08 25 Reality Therapy apa org Retrieved 2018 06 07 Choice Theory by William Glasser What is Choice Theory www brucedavenport com Retrieved 2018 06 07 A perceptual control revolution The Psychologist thepsychologist bps org uk Retrieved 2018 06 07 William Glasser Institute Retrieved 2013 08 24 William Glasser Champion of Choice Retrieved 2013 08 25 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to William Glasser William Glasser International William Glasser Institute USA Institute for Reality Therapy UK William Glasser Institute Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Glasser amp oldid 1206522807, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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