The Wiley International Handbook of Clinical Supervision 2014
DOI: 10.1002/9781118846360.ch4
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Current Trends Concerning Supervisors, Supervisees, and Clients in Clinical Supervision

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Cited by 62 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…Data support the supervisor–supervisee relationship, perhaps the most substantial ‘inside’ matter, as being integral to fostering supervisee change (Carifio & Hess, ; Ellis, ; Park, Ha, Lee, Lee, & Lee, ). Data further suggest that supervision positively impacts supervisees, resulting in such gains as enhanced self‐awareness, enhanced self‐efficacy and enhanced skill acquisition (Goodyear & Guzzardo, ; Inman et al, ; Wheeler & Richards, ). But research supporting supervision's impact on skill transfer remains limited, as does research addressing supervision's impact on client outcomes.…”
Section: Research In Clinical Supervision: a Short Status Reportmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Data support the supervisor–supervisee relationship, perhaps the most substantial ‘inside’ matter, as being integral to fostering supervisee change (Carifio & Hess, ; Ellis, ; Park, Ha, Lee, Lee, & Lee, ). Data further suggest that supervision positively impacts supervisees, resulting in such gains as enhanced self‐awareness, enhanced self‐efficacy and enhanced skill acquisition (Goodyear & Guzzardo, ; Inman et al, ; Wheeler & Richards, ). But research supporting supervision's impact on skill transfer remains limited, as does research addressing supervision's impact on client outcomes.…”
Section: Research In Clinical Supervision: a Short Status Reportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The current state of supervision research can be compared to psychotherapy research in the 1950s or 1960s: measurement and effectiveness issues loom large as major concerns (Milne et al, ). It remains the case that ‘…although our knowledge and understanding of supervision has bourgeoned…, that which we do not understand or understand well continues to be vast’ (Inman et al, , p. 86). Hampering that understanding, supervision research has often been, and continues to be, criticised for the following reasons: small sample sizes, over‐reliance on self‐report measures, limited number of valid supervision measures, ex post facto designs, limited attention to client outcomes and lack of longitudinal data (Ellis, D’Iuso, & Ladany, ; Ellis & Ladany, ; Hill & Knox, ; Russell, Crimmings, & Lent, ).…”
Section: Research In Clinical Supervision: a Short Status Reportmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…But research where supervisor -supervisee outcome is examined can perhaps be seen as an intermediate step, with the guiding assumption being: By better understanding and working to improve what transpires between supervisor and supervisee, the probability of ultimately having favorable impact upon the therapist/patient interaction and inducing favorable patient changes can accordingly be substantially increased. Thus far, supervision research has overwhelmingly suggested that the process of supervision can prove of great benefit to supervisees (Inman et al, 2014). These supervisor -supervisee outcome studies can ideally serve as an instructive building block from which reasoned and reasonable extrapolations can seemingly be made.…”
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confidence: 99%