Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Book Cover
book
BookBook
Author Shulman, Lawrence.

Title Interactional supervision / Lawrence Shulman.

Imprint Washington, DC : NASW Press, ©2010.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Standard Shelving Location  361.32 S562I    Check Shelf
Edition 3rd ed.
Description xiv, 415 pages ; 26 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Contents pt. I. The interactional supervision model: basic assumptions, theory, and research. Introduction, overview, and basic assumptions -- An interactional approach to supervision -- pt. II. Supervision and the phases of work. Preparatory and beginning phases -- A work-phase model -- Supervisory endings and transitions -- pt. III. Education and evaluation roles of the supervisor. Educational function of supervision -- Evaluation function of supervision -- Evidence-based practices -- Values, ethics, and legislative and judicial issues -- pt. IV. Working with staff groups. Formal and informal staff groups -- Encouraging mutual aid in the staff group -- Trauma, secondary trauma stress, and disaster stress: helping staff cope -- Working with the system -- Coda: recording procedures and professional competence -- Appendix: notes on research methodology.
Summary The book is written in a conversational mode and is designed to be easy for students in supervision courses and for new and experienced supervisors.
Shulman notes that most social work supervisors describe making the transition from frontline worker to supervisor as a very difficult process in which they received very little support. Many of the books on clinical supervision lack specific examples of individual and group supervision. To address this paucity of examples in the literature, Shulman, in the introductory chapter of the book, outlines some of the experiences that have been drawn from participant presentations at supervision workshops, including the following: After six years of frontline work with a large child welfare agency, a worker was promoted on the retirement of the previous supervisor. On the first Monday morning in her new role, she walked into the common room for coffee and her former peers became quiet. Two of them had also applied for the supervisory job and were upset that they didn't get it. She knew they were talking about her because she used to talk about the former supervisor with them. She wondered if this meant the end of her friendship with them.
Finally, Interactional Supervision, 3rd Edition, argues for what Shulman calls "the parallel process," where supervisors model in their interactions with frontline workers the manner in which the staff should ideally interact with clients, an approach that is well documented in scholarly research. --Book Jacket.
Subject Social workers -- Supervision of.
Social interaction.
Interpersonal communication.
Social workers -- Supervision of -- United States.
Interpersonal communication. (OCoLC)fst00977344
Social interaction. (OCoLC)fst01122562
Social workers -- Supervision of. (OCoLC)fst01123625
United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
Interpersonal Relations.
Personnel Management.
Social Work.
ISBN 9780871013941
0871013940
Standard No. 99939704944
99966627410
-->
Add a Review