A Clinical Supervision Training Handbook Quotes
A Clinical Supervision Training Handbook: Becoming a Reflective Systemic Supervisor
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Evangeline Willms Thiessen1 rating, 4.00 average rating, 1 review
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A Clinical Supervision Training Handbook Quotes
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“The supervisory relationship provides the context and the environment wherein the learning process takes place and lays the foundation for the work that will occur in supervision. The quality of the working relationship between the supervisee and supervisor is one of the key components determining the outcomes of clinical supervision. The effectiveness of these relational interactions largely depends on the kind of person the supervisor is and his or her ability to establish and maintain a good connection with the supervisee.”
― A Clinical Supervision Training Handbook: Becoming a Reflective Systemic Supervisor
― A Clinical Supervision Training Handbook: Becoming a Reflective Systemic Supervisor
“I have been challenged, as a supervisor, to adjust my thinking about needing to be “all-knowing” to a position of “not knowing” and greater curiosity. Although I don’t see myself as a particularly intuitive or creative person, guidance while a supervisee has enabled me, as a supervisor, to implement interactive, creative, and sometimes evocative methods in supervision. The use of Satir’s sculpting and coping stances and other Gestalt techniques in group supervision has been very illustrative.”
― A Clinical Supervision Training Handbook: Becoming a Reflective Systemic Supervisor
― A Clinical Supervision Training Handbook: Becoming a Reflective Systemic Supervisor
“WE ALL VIEW THE WORLD around us through a unique set of lenses. Much of how we see clinical supervision comes from our own experiences, which have informed our current ideas, beliefs, and practices. Engagement in supervisory conversation invites us into a process about how we can learn to see things differently with “super-vision” – new eyes, new perceptions, new visions. Supervision then becomes a new way of seeing, a super way of visioning (Carroll, 2011). What would happen if we looked at ourselves, our supervisees, our clients, the multiple systems, and all the intertwining relationships in different ways? By sharing our perspectives, I believe that together we can co-create multiple ways of seeing and thinking about the practice of systemic clinical supervision.”
― A Clinical Supervision Training Handbook: Becoming a Reflective Systemic Supervisor
― A Clinical Supervision Training Handbook: Becoming a Reflective Systemic Supervisor
