Supervision and culture : meetings at thresholds
Crocket, Kathie; Flanagan, Paul; Alford, Zoë; Allen, Jody; Baird, Janet; Bruce, Arthur; Bush, Diana; Campbell, Joan; Finnigan, Sandie; Frayling, Ian; Frayling, Maureen; Pizzini, Nigel; Simpson, Naarah; Smith, Bernard; Soundy, Tricia; Swann, Brent; Swann, Huia
Date
2013Citation:
Crocket, K., Flanagan, P., Alford, Z., Allen, J., Baird, J., Bruce, A., Bush, D., Campbell , J., Finnigan, S., Frayling, I., Frayling, M., Pizzini, N., Simpson, N., Smith, B., Soundy, T., Swann, B., and Swann, H. (2013). Supervision and culture: Meetings at thresholds. New Zealand Journal of Counseling, 33(1),.68-86Permanent link to Research Bank record:
https://hdl.handle.net/10652/2668Abstract
Counsellors are required to engage in supervision in order to reflect on, reflexively review, and extend their practice. Supervision, then, might be understood as a partnership in which the focus of practitioners and supervisors is on ethical and effective practice with all clients. In Aotearoa/New Zealand, there has recently been interest in the implications for supervision of cultural difference, particularly in terms of the Treaty of Waitangi as a practice metaphor, and when non-Māori practitioners counsel Māori clients. This article offers an account of a qualitative investigation by a group of counsellors/supervisors into their experiences of supervision as cultural partnership. Based on interviews and then using writing-as-research, the article explores the playing out of supervision’s contribution to practitioners’ effective and ethical practice in the context of Aotearoa/New Zealand, showing a range of possible accounts and strategies and discussing their effects. Employing the metaphor of threshold, the article includes a series of reflections and considerations for supervision practice when attention is drawn to difference