Exploratory Study of Counseling Professionals’ Attitudes Toward Distance Clinical Supervision

Many forms of distance clinical supervision (DCS) have been used in the last decade, but a sparse amount of research addressing (DCS) in counselor education exists to date. The author used random and snowball sampling to survey American Counseling Association members, with a analytic sample total of...

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Main Author: Munchel, Brittani Fiore
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5997
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7193&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-71932018-02-07T05:11:40Z Exploratory Study of Counseling Professionals’ Attitudes Toward Distance Clinical Supervision Munchel, Brittani Fiore Many forms of distance clinical supervision (DCS) have been used in the last decade, but a sparse amount of research addressing (DCS) in counselor education exists to date. The author used random and snowball sampling to survey American Counseling Association members, with a analytic sample total of 96 participants. In the sample, 54.2% of participants were licensed counseling professionals and 39.6% were student or post-masters level interns. The average participant age was 43, ranging from 23 to 74 years. Participants had a mean of 8.1 years of experience. A total of 37.5% of participants had used DCS at some point for supervision sessions. Overall, participants have a positive attitude toward DCS, agreeing most that DCS is a valid form of supervision and that they are interested in learning about DCS. Overall, participants are being minimally exposed to DCS (x̅ = 1.61). A moderate, negative relationship (r = -.39, p < .001) exists between individuals whom have used DCS and attitudes toward DCS (Cohen, Cohen, West, & Aiken, 2003, p. 52). Also, a weak, negative relationship (r = -.23, p < .05) was found between individuals who have used DCS and their level of exposure to DCS. There is a limited amount of literature related to DCS and counseling professionals are being minimally exposed to distance clinical supervision. Despite limited exposure and literature, professionals are still using DCS to conduct supervision sessions. Therefore, it would seem important to increase research focused on DCS and develop relevant practices in order for DCS to be an effective form of supervision. 2015-11-14T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5997 http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7193&amp;context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons counselor education standards practices practicum internship Counseling Psychology Education
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic counselor education
standards
practices
practicum
internship
Counseling Psychology
Education
spellingShingle counselor education
standards
practices
practicum
internship
Counseling Psychology
Education
Munchel, Brittani Fiore
Exploratory Study of Counseling Professionals’ Attitudes Toward Distance Clinical Supervision
description Many forms of distance clinical supervision (DCS) have been used in the last decade, but a sparse amount of research addressing (DCS) in counselor education exists to date. The author used random and snowball sampling to survey American Counseling Association members, with a analytic sample total of 96 participants. In the sample, 54.2% of participants were licensed counseling professionals and 39.6% were student or post-masters level interns. The average participant age was 43, ranging from 23 to 74 years. Participants had a mean of 8.1 years of experience. A total of 37.5% of participants had used DCS at some point for supervision sessions. Overall, participants have a positive attitude toward DCS, agreeing most that DCS is a valid form of supervision and that they are interested in learning about DCS. Overall, participants are being minimally exposed to DCS (x̅ = 1.61). A moderate, negative relationship (r = -.39, p < .001) exists between individuals whom have used DCS and attitudes toward DCS (Cohen, Cohen, West, & Aiken, 2003, p. 52). Also, a weak, negative relationship (r = -.23, p < .05) was found between individuals who have used DCS and their level of exposure to DCS. There is a limited amount of literature related to DCS and counseling professionals are being minimally exposed to distance clinical supervision. Despite limited exposure and literature, professionals are still using DCS to conduct supervision sessions. Therefore, it would seem important to increase research focused on DCS and develop relevant practices in order for DCS to be an effective form of supervision.
author Munchel, Brittani Fiore
author_facet Munchel, Brittani Fiore
author_sort Munchel, Brittani Fiore
title Exploratory Study of Counseling Professionals’ Attitudes Toward Distance Clinical Supervision
title_short Exploratory Study of Counseling Professionals’ Attitudes Toward Distance Clinical Supervision
title_full Exploratory Study of Counseling Professionals’ Attitudes Toward Distance Clinical Supervision
title_fullStr Exploratory Study of Counseling Professionals’ Attitudes Toward Distance Clinical Supervision
title_full_unstemmed Exploratory Study of Counseling Professionals’ Attitudes Toward Distance Clinical Supervision
title_sort exploratory study of counseling professionals’ attitudes toward distance clinical supervision
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2015
url http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5997
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7193&amp;context=etd
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