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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Supervision is a cross-disciplinary practice among various professional groups.
This study focuses on clinical supervision as a practice linked to psychology
and psychotherapy. The literature highlights the need to expand and
consolidate knowledge in this area. Specifically, in the few existing approaches
to research on existential supervision, the need for the systematization
of knowledge is clear. The use of qualitative methods is recognized as an
approach that is likely to enrich knowledge of supervision. Objective: The
aim of this study was to explore the theme of clinical supervision, particularly
as it relates to existential psychotherapy, from the supervisor’s perspective
to assess insights from the experience of each participant. Method: The
three participants are both existential psychotherapists and supervisors that
apply the same approach, in group mode, in the context of psychotherapist
training. The data were collected using phenomenological interviews. A
comprehensive analysis of the transcripts of the interviews was performed
using the phenomenological method. Results: Emerging themes presented
a general meaning structure that represents eidetic dimensions and how
they are related. The eidetic dimensions, relationship and responsiveness, arise
in the existential approach as the foundational and promotional aspects of
successful supervision.
Description
Keywords
Supervision research Psychotherapy supervision Existential psychotherapy Phenomenological method
Citation
Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 1-21 Doi: 10.1177/0022167818802905
Publisher
SAGE Publications