FocusShop
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

 

Integrating the experiential awareness of Focusing into clinical and management supervision sessions offers an elegant way to get below unhelpful patterns and stuck relationships.

While an employee or supervisee recounts their work the body quite naturally re-creates how that person lives in the situation. Paying attention to how the body responds brings real change in how the situation feels in the future.

FocusShop trains supervisors to work from an embodied approach, making supervision sessions more evocative and effective. Our supervision relies upon phenomenological investigations so that we work from more than the generalities of theory.

See Writing for articles on this method of supervision as it is applied to coaching, psychological and counselling practice.

 

 

"Through continuing post-registration supervision, personal attributes of the practitioner, their preconceptions and unique life experiences are explored in order to ascertain how they might be affecting the client's process. It is thus accepted as essential for the competent practice of psychologists, counsellors, coaches and psychotherapists and it is a requirement in the codes of ethics and practice guidelines for the main professional registering bodies. The term ‘supervision’ typically covers both training supervision and continuing practice ‘consultation’ after training is complete". Greg Madison, Evocative Supervision, 2009

Greg is a founding member of the Register of Applied Practitioner Psychologist Superivors (BPS)


Executive Business Coaching Communication Training Team Awareness Globalization Psychology Cross Cultural Counseling Migration Relocation Counselling Supervision Coaching Clinical Management Supervision Training Focusing Supervision Embodied Coaching Management Supervision Gendlin