Category: Assessment
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Roni Berger & Laura Quiros, “Supervision for Trauma-Informed Practice
This article sets out a series of principles for the supervision of trauma-informed practice. Trauma-informed supervision combines knowledge about trauma and supervision and focuses on the interrelationship between the trauma, the practitioner, the helping relationship, and the context of the work (Etherington, 2009). Ongoing supervision is a major protective factor against vicarious trauma. Supervision for…
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Linden Thomas & Nick Johnson, The Clinical Legal Education Handbook
This handbook is a practical guide for clinicians written by a group of clinicians, clinic professors, and lawyers in the United Kingdom. The handbook consists of seven parts: information regarding legal clinics, regulatory frameworks, assessments, and research on clinical legal education, including the emotional well-beingof clinic members, skill development, and other topics, including supervision. The…
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Gerald Corey et al, Clinical Supervision in the Helping Professions
This chapter, entitled “Becoming a Multiculturally Competent Supervisor”, explores the importance of ensuring that supervisors incorporate diversity perspectives into their supervision through a multicultural supervisory practice. This chapter goes on to provide practical suggestions for incorporating multicultural strategies into supervision. Culture, as applicable to supervision, has been described as such: “By defining culture broadly, to…
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Carol Boothby, “Supervising the Supervisors: What are the Challenges Inherent in Teaching in a Clinic Environment and how can Colleagues be Supported on the Transition from Practitioner to Practice-Informed Teacher and Researcher”
This PhD thesis centres the question of how clinicians understand their roles as lawyers/supervisors/academics, particularly in the transition from one role to another. It is wide-ranging and draws on a variety of research methods. The author tries to capture the unique role of the clinic supervisor, which bridges several roles and identities. “In many respects,…
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Susan L Brooks, “Using Therapeutic Jurisprudence to Build Effective Relationships with Students, Clients and Communities”
This article suggests that clinicians should adopt a therapeutic jurisprudence approach. There are several key principles integral to therapeutic jurisprudence that clinicians in legal clinics should utilize. These principles include: modelling (i.e., how communication impacts students and how supervisors’ interactions may lead students to mirror what they observed); boundaries and limit-setting; transference and counter-transference, the…
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Susan Bryant, Elliott Milstein & Ann Shalleck, Transforming the Education of Lawyers: The Theory and Practice of Clinical Pedagogy
This book examines how students are taught during their clinic experiences. In chapter 9, the authors set out a three-part supervision theory. The three-part supervision theory contains connected developmental processes that: teach students to be lawyers in their representation of clients; provide a structured method for viewing developments in client representation and in learning; and…
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S Ronald Ellis, Study of Parkdale (Toronto) Community Legal Services Clinic
This book sets out the particulars of the Parkdale (Toronto) Community Legal Services Clinic. In particular, it examines the supervisory system within the clinic, which included, at that time: S Ronald Ellis, Study of Parkdale (Toronto) Community Legal Services Clinic (Toronto: Osgoode Hall, 1979).
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Kenneth R Kreiling, “Clinical Education and Lawyer Competency: The Process of Learning to Learn from Experience Through Properly Structured Clinical Supervision”
This paper argues that clinical education should teach students a method which includes: how to develop theories of problem-solving by utilizing established lawyering theory and experience, how to apply these theories in practice, and how to analyze oneself to improve performance. The paper examines the nuance associated with the aforementioned teaching method, such as awareness…
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Nicholas Ladany, Yoko Mori & Kristen E Mehr, “Effective and Ineffective Supervision”
The authors seek to explore effective and ineffective supervision though qualitative and quantitative inquiries across supervision experiences of supervisees. Effective supervisor skills, techniques and behaviours included: encouraging supervisee autonomy including self-directed decision making and performance; a strengthened supervisory relationship by way of supervisor support, acceptance, encouragement, respect, trust, empathy and open-mindedness; open discussion in which…