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The supervisory working alliance

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Title: The supervisory working alliance


1
The supervisory working alliance
  • Susanne Bennett, Ph.D.
  • NCSSS Field Instruction Training, August 26, 2009
  • The Goals, Tasks, Bonds of
  • Social Work Field Supervision

This presentation is the intellectual property of
the author and may be used only with written
permission and appropriate credit.
2
What is successful supervision in the social
work field practicum?
3
How is success determined?
  • By the effectiveness of the learning activities
  • By the skills the student learns
  • By the behaviors the student develops
  • By the educational goals the student achieves
  • By the professional identity sense of self the
    student develops

4
The supervisory working alliance?
  • How is this related to

5
The Supervisory Working Alliance(Borden, 1983)
  • A multidimensional framework for understanding
    supervision
  • Includes the process of supervision the
    supervisory relationship
  • Based on collaboration mutual understanding
    between the supervisor supervisee
  • Centers around the feelings of liking, caring,
    trusting between the supervisor supervisee
    (Borden, p. 36)

6
The alliance includes
7
The Goals of Field Supervision
  • Provide a laboratory for students to practice
    academic learning
  • Facilitate development of ethical, competent,
    effective practitioners
  • Enhance understanding of the knowledge, values,
    skills of professional social work

8
The Tasks of Field Supervision
  • Create a feasible, concrete learning plan
  • Observe model professional behavior
  • Communicate critique the skills process of
    intervention
  • Explain the purpose of professional interaction
  • Integrate theory with social work practice

9
The Bonds of Field Supervision
  • Provide a safe environment to explore
    uncertainties new ideas
  • Encourage students growth development of a
    professional self
  • Considered essential for completion of tasks
    achievement of goals

10
Significance of supervision bond
11
More about goals
  • One of the markers of success in supervision is
    the achievement of educational goals
  • The Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) sets
    curriculum standards for all components of BSW
    MSW programs, including field education
  • NCSSS incorporates CSWE standards outlines the
    primary goals of field instruction in the Field
    Instruction Manual

12
But what should be done with these goals?
13
More about tasks
  • Tasks operationalize goals of supervision
  • Both students supervisors have tasks
  • Tasks include behavioral process activities
  • Tasks measure whether the goals of the internship
    are being met
  • Tasks vary based on the shifting functions of the
    supervisor the development of the student

14
Types of tasks
  • CONCRETE TASKS
  • PROCESS TASKS
  • Behavioral activities
  • Easy to measure
  • Examples
  • Home office interviews
  • Referrals
  • Process recordings
  • Case record notes
  • Biopsychosocial assessments
  • Video audio recordings
  • Role plays
  • Mental activities
  • Difficult to measure
  • Examples
  • Reflecting
  • Observing
  • Thinking
  • Critically analyzing
  • Feeling
  • Reviewing
  • Listening

15
Role of the Learning Plan
16
Areas of Competence
  • The NCSSS Learning Plan outlines 5 areas of
    competence, stated here as goals
  • Student will demonstrate growing use of self
  • Student will gain understanding of social work
    processes
  • Student will demonstrate understanding of agency
  • Student will utilize supervisory process well
  • Student will demonstrate professional behavior
  • When these areas of competence are achieved, the
    student will have met the goals of social work
    field education the goals of supervision

17
What does use of self entail?
  • Help student increase awareness of personal
    thoughts, feelings, attitudes, behaviors,
    interactions
  • Help student understand how use of self affects
    the helping relationship, which in turn affects
    the outcome of any intervention
  • Work with student to develop cultural competence
    around many kinds of diversity

18
What does social work process entail?
  • Use SW models of practice to teach student about
    problem-solving processes
  • Help student apply theory to organize information
    learned to plan interventions
  • Help student apply knowledge appropriate
    theories to both micro macro practice
  • Help student develop into competent practitioner

19
What does understanding of agency entail?
  • Help student understand the social work role
    within the agency
  • Help student reflect on the strengths
    weaknesses of the agency at multiple levels
  • Help student understand outcome measures to
    evaluate program effectiveness
  • Help student see how theories can be applied to
    particular agency practice

20
What does supervisory process entail?
  • Model appropriate use of supervisory process
  • Encourage student to be adult learner, showing
    initiative resourcefulness
  • Help student learn to evaluate own practice

21
What does professional behavior entail?
  • Help student understand appropriate personal
    professional boundaries
  • Help student understand ethical behavior
    resolution of ethical dilemmas
  • Help student become a professional social
    worker
  • Help student appreciate social justice values of
    social work
  • Help student identify with the social work
    profession

22
What are examples of concrete process tasks for
both students supervisors that will help
students achieve the five social work
competencies?
  • Small group exercise

23
For example
  • What tasks will develop the students use of
    self?
  • What tasks will facilitate the social work
    process?
  • What tasks will increase the students
    understanding of the agency?
  • What tasks will facilitate the supervisory
    process?
  • What tasks will develop the students
    professional behavior?

24
How can you help students integrate theory
academic learning into their field practice
experiences?
  • On the application of theory to practice

25
Why is theory important?
  • It helps us organize our thoughts, interpret the
    world, evaluate our actions
  • It explains predicts
  • Human behavior (micro)
  • The impact of social structures (mezzo)
  • Social problems (macro)
  • It directs research informs policy
  • It guides practice
  • It gives credibility to the profession

26
How are theories, models, interventions
connected?
27
The differences between theories models
  • Theories are general
  • Theories are abstract
  • Theories are self-contained
  • Theories explain and predict
  • Models are specific to populations problems
  • Models include sets of concrete actions or
    techniques
  • Models may use one or more theory
  • Models are goal oriented to resolve a problem

28
In other words.
  • Theories help you know which way to go how to
    get theretechniques assist you with that
    journey!

29
Tasks that help students apply theory to practice
  • Be open to new ways of knowing respect the
    value of theory as a guide to practice
  • Be clear about which theories underpin your work
    the clinical interventions used in your agency
  • Ask students about the theories they are learning
    how they may or may not apply in your setting
  • Encourage students to demonstrate explanatory
    change concepts their link to interventions
    used
  • Encourage students to think critically about
    their clinical work critique the outcome of
    their interventions

30
The student-supervisor bond is key to creating
maintaining the supervisory working alliance
  • Finally

31
Research says that predictors of student
satisfaction are
  • The affective component (Fortune Abramson,
    1993)
  • Trust, support, openness, and availability
    (Fortune Abramson, 1993)
  • Positive, supportive relationships (Kadushin,
    1992)

32
For this reason
  • It is vital for the supervisor to form a secure
    bond of supervision with the student
  • This relational bond can be seen as a circle of
    supervisory security
  • The supervisor is the major facilitator of this
    bond

33
CIRCLE OF SUPERVISORY SECURITY
I need you to
I need you to
  • Watch over me
  • Delight in me
  • Help guide me
  • Enjoy with me

Support my exploration
I need you to
I need you to
  • Protect me
  • Comfort me
  • Appreciate me
  • Organize my feelings ideas

Welcome my coming to you
Adapted with permission from Marvin, Cooper,
Hoffman, Powell, 2002
34
Remember that all relationships are mutual
  • You your student each bring your internal
    models of relating your personal social
    histories that influence your relational styles
  • Yet you have power over your student must take
    the lead to work out any ruptures that occur in
    the supervisory relationship or the internship

35
A secure, supportive bond is key to maintaining
the supervisory working alliance central to
meeting the goals tasks of field supervision
  • In summary

36
References
  • Bordin, E. (1983). A working alliance based model
    of supervision. The Counseling Psychologist, 11,
    35-42.
  • Fortune, A., Abramson, J. (1993). Predictors of
    satisfaction with field practicum among social
    work students. The Clinical Supervisor, 11(1),
    95-109.
  • Kadushin, A. (1992). Whats wrong, whats right
    with social work supervision. The Clinical
    Supervisor, 10(1), 3-19.
  • Marvin, R., Cooper, G., Hoffman, K., Powell, B.
    (2002). The Circle of Security project
    Attachment-based intervention with
    caregiver-pre-school child dyads. Attachment
    Human Development, 4(1), 107-124.
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