Introduction. 1. Supervision: A Journey of Life-Long Learning. Michael Carroll. 2. "It's at the Heart of our Practice at the Family Nurse Partnership." Ann Rowe. 3. Finding "Ariel". A Small Enterprise Learns to Navigate the Storm of Change. Richard Olivier. 4. "If you want to go faster, go alone. If you want to go further, go together." Work as Transformation through Supervision. Joan Wilmot. 5. The Tapestry of my Approach to Transformational Supervision. Fiona Adamson. 6. Supervision through conversation; being seen, being real. Interview with Alan Rodgers by Robin Shohet. 7. Supervising Psychotherapists who work with Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Space to Reflect where Feelings are Unbearable. Judy Ryde. 8. Reflections on Learning in Supervision. Mary Creaner. 9. Resistance is a Natural Path. An Alternative Perspective on Transformation. Christina Breene. 10. Fear and Stepping Forward Anyway. My Journey to and with The Interfaith Seminary. Nicola Coombe. 11. Another way of knowing. Emptying our Minds and Undoing Projections: A Life Skill. Interview with Robin Shohet by Christina Breene. The Contributors. Subject Index. Author Index.
Shows how transformative supervision can be when approached in the right way
Judy Ryde PhD is a freelance psychotherapist, supervisor and trainer of 25 years' experience. She provides supervision training across the helping professions within the Centre for Supervision and Team Development. Judy also supervises the BCPC Asylum Project which provides counselling and psychotherapy for asylum seekers and refugees, and was a co-founder of Psychotherapists and Counsellors for Social Responsibility.
Although none of the essays are of direct relevance to ministers,
the underlying challenge for ministers is how much richer ministry
could become if supervision were to become the norm for us.
*Ministry Today UK*
I recognise the truth of these essays in the depth of the clinical
supervision which I have received in recent years. For anyone who
is considering entering such a relationship to support his or her
ministry, this book offers a variety of voices articulating a
vision of supervision which is both human and divine. An MD of a
large financial firm recently summed up his own experience of
professional supervision: "This work is really all about Love."
*Church Times*
this is a text for those who want a wider view on supervision,
delivered in non-academic readable chunks, albeit with adequate
references after each chapter, I can't imagine anyone finding
nothing of value. Most is pure transformative gold.
*Counselling, Children and Young People*
If you want to know about these more spiritual approaches, and how
they apply to supervision, this is the book for you. It is very
charmingly written, and quite inspiring (...) It would challenge
anyone who had a more stereotyped view of supervision
*ACPNL Magazine*
I suggest that this book would be useful to supervisors in
particular, and would recommend individual chapters to the
professional within any field, including healthcare, who wishes to
see organisational change with and openness to exploring how
supervision may facilitate this.
*HCPJ*
Robin Sholet has a knack for inviting authors with original
contributions to make. These 10 authors offer an interesting,
collegial take on the fashionable topic of transformational
learning (TL), which is enabled through relationships, and reviews
basic assumptions... Overall, the book addresses a fashionable
topic in supervision, in original, practice-based, engagingly
readable and varied ways. It would be of interest to experience
practitioners, most probably those also curious about the
relationship of personal to professional development, and the
impact of the organisational context for work.
*Therapy Today*
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