3. Virginia Satir the eldest daughter of a family
with four children, born in Neillsville, Wisconsin,
a girl full of curiosity, who learned to read
when she was 3 years old!
4. Virginia Satir shows that, from the age of 5, she was already curious
about how her family worked and this, later, was crucial in her role as a
researcher.
In 1929 Virginia's mother insisted on leaving where they were to go to a
farm in Milwaukee so that Satir could study high school.
In 1932 he obtained his high school diploma.
She then enrolled in the Milwaukee State Teachers College and, to break
even, began working as a nanny and in a department store
simultaneously.
5. In 1936 Satir graduated with a master's degree in
education, second in her class.
She worked as a teacher.
It was in the 1950s that Virginia Satir began her
adventures in therapy.
It didn't take long for her to move to California,
where in the late 1950s she would co-found the
Mental Research Institute, an institution she was a
leader in family therapy for a long time.
7. Virginia Satir's theory was eventually consolidated into a model
of personal growth, which had important implications for
psychotherapy.
The most important elements:
communication, self-esteem, rules and taking risks.
satyr theory
8.
9. Mary Ainsworth was born in the
United States in 1913, but her family
moved to Toronto, Canada, when
she was still a child. She graduated
in developmental psychology from
the University of Toronto in 1935.
(1913-1999)
Mary Ainsworth
11. Mary Ainsworth was a developmental psychologist
perhaps best known for her evaluation of the Strange
Situation.
Mary Ainsworth's research on attachment has played an
important role in our understanding of child
development. In addition to Ainsworth's three styles,
other researchers have identified a fourth style known as
disorganized-insecure attachment.