Price range: £150.00 through £975.00
Venue: The Manchester Institute for Psychotherapy
Date: 13th November, 20th November, 27th November, 4th December & 11th December 2026 (Fridays)
Time: 10am – 5pm (each day)
Cost: £975.00 (£150.00 Non-refundable deposit)
Description
What is Supervision?
The word has many meanings. It means to oversee and holds some
connotations of authority and a hierarchical form of learning. It is used in
counselling and psychotherapy in the medical and nursing fields in social
work and in aspects of teaching and general care of others. It implies a code
of conduct and it carries an element of protection and safety in its overall
application.
Holloway 1992 says that supervision provides an opportunity for the student
to capture the essence of the Psychotherapeutic process as it is articulated
and modelled by the supervisor thus recreating it in the counselling
relationship.
Lambert 1980 described supervision as part of an overall training of mental
health professionals that deals with modifying their actual in-therapy
behaviours.
In general supervision may be seen as either training supervision or
consultative supervision. Supervision is part of the overall training and
educational needs of the health professional and there are many supervision
model and styles to look at.
Here at the Institute we are offering a five-day course spread over a period of
five modules. We will look at the meaning of supervision as it applies in your
field of work whether you work individually or in a group setting, in
psychotherapy, counselling or in the areas of social work, nursing, clinical
psychology or psychiatry or indeed any of the caring professions.
Module One:
This module will explore the philosophical concepts of supervision, what it is in relation to the work you do. We will look at the goals and outcomes of the methods used and explore how it applies to each member of the group.
Module Two:
Here we will look at the ‘process model’ of supervision put forward by Hawkins and Shoet in their book on supervision called “Supervision in the helping profession” 1989. This is an excellent model for mapping out where you are in the supervisory process. You can also use this model as a Parallel process model.
Module Three:
In this module we will look at the different tasks of supervision and specifically the gate keeping process within supervision. We will also examine the notion of the Parallel process in supervision.
Module Four:
Here we will look at the developmental aspect of supervision.
We will look at the developmental models of Richard Erskine, Delworth, and Stoltenburg, as a guide to how we may approach the supervision process.
Module Five:
In this module we will bring together the various strands of what we have been looking at in the previous modules, and hopefully finding an integrative view of supervision, which will suit your own particular style.
Additional information
| Payment | Deposit, Full Price |
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