Building therapeutic alliance across a range of clients, expressing professional self-doubt, utilizing interpersonal skills, and practicing your skills…all improve the therapist effect.
All in Monthly Group Topic
Building therapeutic alliance across a range of clients, expressing professional self-doubt, utilizing interpersonal skills, and practicing your skills…all improve the therapist effect.
How do we show up as our truest, most authentic selves in the work? This month we’re exploring this important common factor.
A year after George Floyd’s death, we’ll take a deeper dive into how we’re addressing race, power, privilege and oppression in our clinical work.
All month I asked all of you in supervision to tell me your secrets about building a therapeutic alliance. Here is the master list!
Like all common factors, unconditional positive regard must be at the heart of your evidence-based practice in order to lead to more positive outcomes.
How do you develop a relationship with your client, and what do you do to protect it? Here’s my list.
This March in our clinical supervisions session we’ll be discussing empathy, and in particular cognitive, affective and compassionate empathy.
Let’s get on the same page as our clients! What do they want? What do we want for them? Are they the same things?
In our clinical supervision sessions this month, we’re discussing deliberate practice, which is a process to use in order to improve clinical skills. It’s effective, and fascinating.
Our client’s expectations, and our ability to create solid, positive expectations for treatment outcomes, go a long way in how things actually play out in our work.
Our ability to adapt our approach to our client’s culture will improve the outcomes of our work together.
This month in our clinical supervision sessions we’re discussing self-compassion based on Kristen Neff’s research.