Clinical supervision in South Africa: Perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competencies

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Abstract

We investigated South African clinical and counselling psychology supervisors' (n=44) perceptions of supervision training, their supervision experiences, and their perceived competence, confidence and effectiveness in providing supervision. Results indicated that many supervisors prematurely engage in supervision responsibilities and initiate supervision prior to receiving formal training in supervision. With limited regulatory guidelines available on supervision training and practices in South Africa, the findings indicate a need for the South African psychology profession to establish a formal regulatory framework on supervision training and practices. This includes identifying supervision training needs, developing training programmes, and instituting formal training requirements for practitioners who participate in clinical supervision.

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APA

Hendricks, S., Cartwright, D. J., & Cowden, R. G. (2021). Clinical supervision in South Africa: Perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competencies. South African Journal of Science, 117(3–4). https://doi.org/10.17159/SAJS.2021/7428

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