ABSTRACT

Supervision is of increasing significance in the practice of mental health professionals, especially since the advent of voluntary and mandatory registration, managed care and clinical governance. Little, however, has been written to address the practical and theoretical needs and questions of those involved.

In Supervision in the Mental Health Professions, Joyce Scaife, along with her guest contributors, draws on over two decades of experience to illustrate ways of thinking about and doing supervision. Using practical examples, she explores often-encountered dilemmas, including:
* How can supervisors facilitate learning?
* What are the ethical bases of supervision?
* What helps to create a good working alliance?

This comprehensive, practical and indispensable text is vital reading for supervisors and supervisees involved in mental health care, including clinical psychology, counselling, psychotherapy, counselling psychology, psychiatry, nursing and social work.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|15 pages

Supervision and learning

chapter 4|18 pages

The contracting process and the supervisory relationship

Avoiding pitfalls and problems

chapter 5|29 pages

Frameworks for supervision

chapter 6|23 pages

Group supervision

chapter 7|23 pages

Ethical dilemmas and issues in supervision

chapter 8|15 pages

Use of audio and videotapes in supervision

chapter 9|13 pages

Live supervision and observation

chapter 10|16 pages

Creative approaches

chapter 12|9 pages

Learning logs in supervision

chapter 13|16 pages

Challenge and evaluation

chapter 14|8 pages

The supervisor’s role in coursework