Reflective Supervision for Social Work Field Instructors: Lessons Learned from Infant Mental Health

AbstractReflective supervision is a specialized approach to supervision essential to infant mental health (IMH) practice, a relationship-based approach to working with infant and toddlers and their families. This unique approach to supervision is rooted in reflective practice, which has been cited as an important component of social work field and practice education (CSWE in Educational policy and accreditation standards,https://www.cswe.org/getattachment/Accreditation/Standards-and-Policies/2015-EPAS/2015EPASandGlossary.pdf.aspx, 2015; Bogo in Clin Soc Work J 43:317 –324, 2015; Franklin in Clin Superv 30(2):204–214, 2011; Hendricks et al. in Learning to teach: teaching to learn, Council on Social Work Education Press, Alexandria, 2013). Borne out of the findings from a reflective practice training series for social work field instructors, a 9-month reflecti ve supervision group was piloted for field instructors with a goal of enhancing the field instructors’ capacities for engaging their student interns in reflective practice. This reflective supervision group provided field instructors opportunities to engage in process-oriented group supervision, f acilitated by a field director with a background in IMH, and focused on the field instructors’ supervision of social work interns. This paper describes how this unique field instructor supervision group supports field instructors’ use of the reflective practice capacities of curiosity, self-awar eness, and use of paral...
Source: Clinical Social Work Journal - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research