ABSTRACT

This fully updated edition of Supervision in Clinical Practice: A Practitioner’s Guide is packed with practical examples from personal and professional experience. Since the publication of the first two editions, health and social care organisations have become increasingly risk averse, resources more strained, and moves have been made towards stifling levels of clinical governance. In this edition Joyce Scaife counters the idea of supervision as a constraint and challenges some of the thinking associated with ‘evidence-based’ practice when this focuses on what can be easily measured rather than what matters.

Joyce Scaife explores frequently encountered dilemmas including:

  • How can supervisors facilitate learning?
  • What are the ethical bases of supervision?
  • What helps to create and maintain an effective working alliance?
  • How can supervisors balance management and supervision roles?
  • How can supervisors work equitably in an increasingly diverse and pluralistic world?

Supervision in Clinical Practice remains an indispensable text for supervisors and supervisees who practice clinically in a range of professions, including applied psychology, counselling, psychotherapy, psychiatry, nursing and social work.

chapter 1|20 pages

Supervision

Is it worth it?

chapter 2|21 pages

What is supervision?

chapter 3|15 pages

Supervision and learning

chapter 4|25 pages

The contracting process

chapter 6|41 pages

Frameworks for supervision

chapter 8|21 pages

Supervision and diversity

chapter 9|27 pages

Use of technologies in supervision

chapter 10|21 pages

Creative approaches

chapter 11|23 pages

Live supervision and observation

chapter 12|27 pages

Challenge and the assessment role

chapter 14|13 pages

The organisational context