This professional is temporarily unavailable and will not be responding to enquiries until they return.
This professional is temporarily unavailable and will not be responding to enquiries until they return.
Supervision details
Supervision can be a place to gently inquire and untangle the broad range of experiences and dynamics that arise from the counselling process. I see the role of supervision as collaborative, supportive and expansive experience. A place for you to process, reflect and understand, feel seen and heard, think through interventions and monitor ethics, be encouraged, held and grow. The supervisor-supervisee relationship is unique and fluid. It is informed by you - what you are bringing to the session and what you are experiencing within your practice.
Supervision often falls into three main areas: formative (i.e. growth-based), normative (i.e. monitoring-based) and restorative (i.e. support-based). The supervision I offer is rooted in the person-centred approach and is informed by the Seven-Eyed Model (Hawkins and Shohet, 2012) and the Integrative Developmental Model (IDM; Stoltenberg and McNeill, 2010).
Alongside clinical supervision, I’m an online and outdoor therapist, my predominant approach is person-centred, however, I bring a sprinkle of different approaches and understandings from years of experience and practice. Similar to my counselling practice, I offer a blended approach to supervise sessions, providing online and outdoor supervision or mixed between the both depending on what works best for you.
COSCA is the professional body for counselling and psychotherapy in Scotland, and seeks to advance all forms of counselling and psychotherapy and the use of counselling skills by promoting best practice and through the delivery of a range of sustainable services. COSCA Counsellor Accreditation is a pathway to entry onto the UKRC. It is a requirement of all individual and organisational members of COSCA to abide by its Statement of Ethics and Code of Practice and be accountable to the Complaints Procedure. Accredited by the Professional Standards Authority.
Accredited register membership
The Accredited Register Scheme was set up in 2013 by the Department of Health (DoH) as a way to recognise organisations that hold voluntary registers which meet certain standards. These standards are set by the Professional Standards Authority (PSA).
This therapist has indicated that they belong to an Accredited Register.