Individual and Triadic and Group: Supervisee and Supervisor
Perceptions of Each Modality
Researchers
L. DiAnne Borders
Laura E. Welfare
Paige B. Greason
Derrick A. Paladino
A. Keith Mobley
Jose A. Villalba
Kelly L. Wester
Source
Counselor Education
& Supervision, December 2012, Volume 51(4), p281-925
What was the purpose of this research?
The purpose of this study was to understand both
supervisors’ and supervisees’ perceived advantages and disadvantages of
individual, triadic, and group supervision.
If applicable, who were the participants, and what were they
asked to do?
Participants were doctoral and faculty supervisors and practicum
supervisees who participated in individual, triadic, and group supervision sessions
over the course of one semester. Thirty-one supervisees and 12 supervisors
participated in interviews in which they provided feedback about their
experiences in each modality, including advantages and disadvantages as well as
suggested changes.
Major findings or points:
Both supervisors and supervisees described individual
supervision sessions as deeper and more challenging than triadic or group
supervision sessions. As a result, supervisees expressed feeling safer and more
open in individual supervision sessions. Supervisors and supervisees expressed
an interest in having more individual supervision sessions, especially at the
beginning of the semester.
When asked about triadic supervision, participants generally
contrasted it to group supervision. Supervisees reported appreciating the
feedback in triadic supervision, saying it tended to be more in-depth,
challenging, and personal than in group supervision, often because they felt
safer and more comfortable with their peer than they did in the larger group
setting. Additionally, supervisees gained considerable knowledge by observing
their peers’ work in more depth and over time. Supervisors reported that it was
helpful in triadic supervision that one peer would often enhance the
supervisor’s feedback to the other peer. The major disadvantage of triadic
supervision reported by all participants was limited time. Finally, both
supervisors and supervisees mentioned peer mismatch as a challenge of triadic
supervision. For example, peers may be at different skill levels or prefer
different methods of receiving feedback. Supervisors must be able to manage
these session dynamics while making sure each supervisee receives appropriate and
needed feedback.
Group supervision was noted as providing multiple
perspectives to supervisees, particularly in regard to theoretical orientations
and counseling styles. Supervisees enjoyed the educational opportunities in
group supervision to learn about particular counseling skills, interventions,
or topics (e.g., grief and loss issues). A major disadvantage of group
supervision was that the feedback tended to be more limited, less constructive,
and less personal than feedback received in individual or triadic supervision.
Major caveats:
All participants were from one CACREP accredited counseling program.
In addition, all supervisees were in their first semester providing counseling,
and 9 of the 12 supervisors were new clinical supervisors (doctoral students).
Although the researchers found that there are distinct advantages for each
supervision modality, more effectiveness research is needed.
What does this research mean for counseling practice,
settings, and/or training?
Supervisors will want to balance the number of individual,
triadic, and group supervision sessions offered. Supervisees value personal,
in-depth feedback and report getting more of this in individual and triadic
sessions.
In triadic supervision, it is important for both supervisors
and supervisees to prepare for their roles in this modality. Supervisors can provide
a structure for feedback as well as a normalization of the ambiguity inherent
in triadic supervision. Supervisors should plan to rely on their skills in
group or couples counseling when facilitating triadic supervision in order to develop
strong rapport and encourage constructive feedback between peers. Supervisors
will likely want to allot 90 minutes for triadic sessions as time was
consistently a concern among participants for this modality.