Abstract

This paper was presented at the April 2010 supervision conference in Auckland and is a sequel to ‘Loitering with intent – a model of practice for working in a New Zealand secondary school’, Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work 2009 Vol 21(3).Do we know what happens in supervision and how it matters? Through the process of preparing a conference presentation on another kaupapa, a fieldwork supervisor discovers a story that her supervisee wants to tell. This paper contributes to the growing body of knowledge about fieldwork supervision from a supervisee perspective. It highlights the effects of using learning styles to encourage the integration of practice and theory with a social work student. The presentation utilises a dialogue format to mirror what unfolded when the supervisor asked her supervisee ‘What was it about supervision that was so important to the success of the placement?’

Highlights

  • Do we know what happens in supervision and how it matters? Through the process of preparing a conference presentation on another kaupapa, a fieldwork supervisor discovers a story that her supervisee wants to tell

  • This paper contributes to the growing body of knowledge about fieldwork supervision from a supervisee perspective. It highlights the effects of using learning styles to encourage the integration of practice and theory with a social work student

  • As part of my Field of Practice paper I completed an assignment on Social Workers in Schools

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Summary

Helen Simmons and Charmaine Wheeler

Helen Simmons is a Professional Clinician in the Massey University Social Work Programme. Charmaine Wheeler moved to New Zealand five years ago with her husband and completed her Bachelor of Social Work in 2008. She commenced study for her Masters degree at Massey in 2010. Helen was the external supervisor for Charmaine’s fourth year placement, which was conducted at a New Zealand secondary school, having taught her in second and fourth year papers. This paper was presented at the April 2010 supervision conference in Auckland and is a sequel to ‘Loitering with intent – a model of practice for working in a New Zealand secondary school’, Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work July 2009 Vol XXI(3)

Introduction
How the presentation came about
Setting the scene
Negotiating learning styles and the video story
So how does this link with supervision?
External supervision
Sense of self
Discussion questions
Questions for consideration
Full Text
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