Add To Cart

BCS Title

Course Learning Objectives/Outcomes

By the end of the course, the Counselor, Marriage and Family Therapist, Social Worker or Psychologist will be able to:
-Name three reasons for clinical supervision.
-Identify five benefits of creating a supervision contract.
-Name four parts of reflective practice in supervision.
-Name three perspectives in multicultural counseling.
-Name seven points regarding supervisee self-evaluation.
-Describe ten steps in suicide-related training.
-List three responses for client sexual behaviors.
-Name the six levels in Bloom's Taxonomy hierarchy that provide essential skills for supervisees wishing to become critical thinkers. 
-Explain how is the solution-focused approach based in a constructivist epistemology.
-Explain is "scientific thinking" a valuable component in helping counselors-in-training process information about specific clients in complex ways. 
-Name the four phases representing the developmental process of counseling supervision in reflective learning-based supervision. 
-Explain insufficient data do many supervision evaluations focus on to measure success. 


"The instructional level of this course is introductory, intermediate, or advanced depending on the learners clinical area of expertise."