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Transactional Analysis Journal

July 2004 Abstract

Update on the Functional Fluency Model in Education
Susannah Temple
The updated functional fluency model is presented with an outline of its research-based development. The ways in which the model links with, and is different from, other ego state models are explained. The educational relevance of the functional fluency concepts is emphasized. Ways of using the model for the personal and professional development of educators are indicated.


Script Interventions in the School Setting
Ferdinando Montuschi
This article discusses whether it is acceptable in educational settings to intervene at the level of script and within what boundaries the teacher may act at this level without overstepping his or her professional contract. After defining the space and limits of such interventions—and proposing the dynamic concept of “expanding script”—intervention criteria are suggested and some exercises for use in school settings are described.


Dealing with Fear of Failure: Working with Script Concepts in the Classroom
Miriam Toth
One of the important tasks performed by teachers, especially with younger students, is to focus on pupils’ behavior and, if necessary, to correct it. Transactional analysis script theories help teachers to understand why children act as they do and to offer options for responding more specifically to what children need so as to support them in changing their self-limiting behavior. This article presents a common school situation—fear of failure—and ways to prevent fixation of negative patterns of thinking, feeling, and acting. It also describes how to practice new behavior, thinking, and feeling in the group, which helps students to increase their ability to learn as well as their chances for having good relationships with others.


Fairy Tales and Psychological Life Plans
AgnPs Le Guernic
This article is based on the premise that the field of education in general and educational transactional analysis in particular are geared toward prevention rather than cure. The author describes how fairy tales provide children with different relationship models, and it proposes a positive triangle of social roles in contrast to Karpman’s (1968) drama triangle, which is based on life scripts and focuses on negative psychological roles. Depending on whether they are supported by a positive life position or not, social roles can lead to either personal growth and autonomy or negative scripty outcomes.


Learning for Leadership
Sari van Poelje
Leadership is learned in large part through on-the-job experience. Building on the work of Lindsey, Homes, and McCall (1987), this article describes seven key learning experiences for managers: personal trauma, mission impossible, setback, role models, conflicting norms and values, dealing with subordinates, dealing with the political arena, and personal experiences. It suggests that, although not all successful managers must be top learners, top learners are successful managers. The learning process they go through is described in terms of five steps. A learning process mode and a method for management development based on identification of top learners and coaching for learning are proposed.


Conflict Resolution Using Transactional Analysis and Aikido
Philippe Martin
Centering yourself, connecting with the aggressor, channeling the attack so that neither you nor your aggressor gets hurt, and safely concluding the interaction constitute four essential steps to reaching a peaceful conflict resolution—even in the face of conflict potentially involving physical harm. The author uses these steps as the basis for what he calls “the 4Cs model.” Transactional analysis provides the operational concepts underlying the 4Cs and reveals how they work, while the Japanese martial art of aikido, which focuses on stopping conflict before it starts and on establishing harmony, offers practical techniques and a unifying metaphor. The 4Cs are described in detail, and aikido classes for children are used as a case study to discuss how to teach autonomy “through the body.”


Transactional Analysis in the College Classroom
Samuel Gaft and Cynthia Moore Brown El
This article describes a cross-discipline college course taught by two teachers: a professor in psychology, who taught the transactional analysis component, and a professor of communications. The course was offered to college students regardless of whether they had any previous course work in psychology. The method of delivery was lecture, web-sourced text and tasks, group activities, and videotaping with class analysis. The students reported that topics related to game theory, strokes, and life position were the most useful to them, while script theory was the least useful. Overall, the students rated the course as very useful.


The Use of Transactional Analysis Theory in Teaching University Students the Psychology of Relationships
Olga Smischenko
University students were taught a number of transactional analysis concepts as part of their studies of communication and interaction. The effect of the teaching was evaluated using a standardized test and found to result in significant change.


Student Teachers’ Professional and Personal Development through Academic Study of Educational Transactional Analysis
Marja-Kristiina Lerkkanen and Susannah Temple
The aim of this study was to investigate student teachers’ personal and professional development following academic study of educational transactional analysis. Students from two countries, 21 from Finland and 15 from England, participated in the study. Members of both cohorts each made an action plan and a personal growth plan with regard to their personal and professional growth on completion of the two-day Introduction to Transactional Analysis (TA 101) course. Approximately 6 months after their respective transactional analysis courses, the students completed a follow-up questionnaire. The first-stage results showed how the students thought they would apply certain transactional analysis concepts and gave evidence of their reasons, intentions, and goals for achieving increased effectiveness as a teacher. In the second stage, the results showed the students’ estimations of their increase of awareness and skill with respect to six key areas of personal and professional growth. These results indicate a need to strengthen psychosocial studies in teacher education and also that transactional analysis might be a useful theory and instrument for the personal and professional development of student teachers.


How the Philosophical Assumptions of Transactional Analysis Complement the Theory of Adult Education
Jan Grant
Transactional analysis and adult education are both located within the tradition of humanistic psychology, and they share many underlying assumptions, including that human beings naturally tend toward growth and change, that adults are responsible for themselves, and that people are inherently good. The principles of adult education are useful when reflecting on the structure and process of transactional analysis training groups.


Transactional Analysis and Parent Education in the United States
Jean Illsley Clarke
Parent education programs based on transactional analysis have probably been offered in many areas of the United States, but there is no way of knowing how many, for what length of time, or by whom they were designed and presented. This article reports the author’s perception of the impact of books and classes that present transactional analysis theories in language that was acceptable to the parents with whom she developed these works. Positive outcomes have been identified by several research studies and from information offered by readers and class participants, often long after the book was read or the class attended. A brief sketch of the history of parent education is included.


The Journey of Educational Transactional Analysis from Its Beginnings to the Present
Nadine Emmerton and Trudi Newton
This article traces the development of transactional analysis in education through a detailed literature review based on the Transactional Analysis Bulletin (TAB), the Transactional Analysis Journal (TAJ), and books written by transactional analysis practitioners.


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