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

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...

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Main Authors: Shariefa Hendricks, Duncan J. Cartwright, Richard G. Cowden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2021-03-01
Series:South African Journal of Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajs.co.za/article/view/7428
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spelling doaj-c7a5bf1b8df74238a45622155342799f2021-03-30T06:04:42ZengAcademy of Science of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Science1996-74892021-03-011173/410.17159/sajs.2021/7428Clinical supervision in South Africa: Perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competenciesShariefa Hendricks0Duncan J. Cartwright1Richard G. Cowden2College of Law and Management Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South AfricaSchool of Applied Human Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South AfricaDepartment of Psychology, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa 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. Significance: • The sample of South African clinical and counselling psychologists involved in the supervision of trainee psychologists tended to engage in clinical supervision in advance of obtaining three years of independent clinical practice and prior to receiving appropriate training in providing supervision. • There is a need for the Professional Board for Psychology of the Health Professions Council of South Africa (PBP-HPCSA) to appropriately monitor and enforce ethical obligations of psychologists who engage in supervision of trainee psychologists. • Psychologists who provide clinical supervision to trainee psychologists ought to take personal responsibility for ensuring that they are appropriately trained and have acquired the necessary competencies to provide supervision before deciding to engage in supervision activities. • Formal guidelines and policies regulating clinical supervision are necessary for ensuring psychology supervisors obtain appropriate training in supervision and fulfil mandatory HPCSA accredited supervision training requirements. https://sajs.co.za/article/view/7428competencyinternprofessional developmentcounsellingsupervisionaccredited training
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shariefa Hendricks
Duncan J. Cartwright
Richard G. Cowden
spellingShingle Shariefa Hendricks
Duncan J. Cartwright
Richard G. Cowden
Clinical supervision in South Africa: Perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competencies
South African Journal of Science
competency
intern
professional development
counselling
supervision
accredited training
author_facet Shariefa Hendricks
Duncan J. Cartwright
Richard G. Cowden
author_sort Shariefa Hendricks
title Clinical supervision in South Africa: Perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competencies
title_short Clinical supervision in South Africa: Perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competencies
title_full Clinical supervision in South Africa: Perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competencies
title_fullStr Clinical supervision in South Africa: Perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competencies
title_full_unstemmed Clinical supervision in South Africa: Perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competencies
title_sort clinical supervision in south africa: perceptions of supervision training, practices, and professional competencies
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
series South African Journal of Science
issn 1996-7489
publishDate 2021-03-01
description 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. Significance: • The sample of South African clinical and counselling psychologists involved in the supervision of trainee psychologists tended to engage in clinical supervision in advance of obtaining three years of independent clinical practice and prior to receiving appropriate training in providing supervision. • There is a need for the Professional Board for Psychology of the Health Professions Council of South Africa (PBP-HPCSA) to appropriately monitor and enforce ethical obligations of psychologists who engage in supervision of trainee psychologists. • Psychologists who provide clinical supervision to trainee psychologists ought to take personal responsibility for ensuring that they are appropriately trained and have acquired the necessary competencies to provide supervision before deciding to engage in supervision activities. • Formal guidelines and policies regulating clinical supervision are necessary for ensuring psychology supervisors obtain appropriate training in supervision and fulfil mandatory HPCSA accredited supervision training requirements.
topic competency
intern
professional development
counselling
supervision
accredited training
url https://sajs.co.za/article/view/7428
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AT duncanjcartwright clinicalsupervisioninsouthafricaperceptionsofsupervisiontrainingpracticesandprofessionalcompetencies
AT richardgcowden clinicalsupervisioninsouthafricaperceptionsofsupervisiontrainingpracticesandprofessionalcompetencies
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