2009
DOI: 10.1177/0011000009339341
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Korean Supervisors’ Experiences in Clinical Supervision

Abstract: The demand for mental health services in Korea is increasing, and a corresponding rise in the number of trainees in counseling psychology results in a need for effective supervision. Using a grounded theory approach, this study explored Korean supervisors' experiences in supervision to better understand the current status of supervision practice in Korea. a model emerging from the data suggests that Korean clinical supervisors in mental health view teaching and explorations of supervisees' personal issues as t… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Some graduate programs incorporate practicum and internship opportunities for counseling psychology graduate students, but others do not. Moreover, there is no specialty accreditation system to monitor the type and quality of clinical training provided by graduate programs (Bang & Park, 2009). Whereas the certificate requirements include supervision experiences, some graduate programs do not provide a sufficient amount of supervision hours for supervisees to meet certificate requirements.…”
Section: Clinical Supervision In South Koreamentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Some graduate programs incorporate practicum and internship opportunities for counseling psychology graduate students, but others do not. Moreover, there is no specialty accreditation system to monitor the type and quality of clinical training provided by graduate programs (Bang & Park, 2009). Whereas the certificate requirements include supervision experiences, some graduate programs do not provide a sufficient amount of supervision hours for supervisees to meet certificate requirements.…”
Section: Clinical Supervision In South Koreamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because relationship behavior is culturally influenced, it should not come as a surprise that culture would affect supervisor-supervisee relationships as well (Bang & Park, 2009;Son, Ellis, & Yoo, 2013). Given the influence of culture and its potential importance to developing a more complete understanding of supervision processes, this study examined South Korean supervisees' perceptions of negative supervision events (NSE), how they responded to them, and their effects on supervisees and their clients.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The experiences of novice counselors are likely to vary across country, culture, and training site. For instance, Bang and Park (2009) observed that because of a strong cultural emphasis on saving face in Korea, counseling supervisees in Korea might be preoccupied with being perfect and avoid asking for help from their supervisors for fear of appearing incompetent. Additionally, the dynamics of the therapeutic relationship might vary across culture.…”
Section: Limitations and Directions For Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evidence suggests that supervisors operating within a variety of multicultural frameworks tend to focus on these "micro-skills" with novice trainees (Bang & Park, 2009;Gazzola & Theriault, 2007). In Hill's 3-stage model of helping, the emphasis for training is on the first stage, exploration, which focuses on establishing rapport with clients.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That focus: (1) appears to have been largely guided by efforts to make training and practice more accountable; and (2) has led to increasing attempts to set in place systems of competency definition and assessment for educational guidance and utilization. This push for competency definition and assessment has been evident across such disciplines as medicine, psychiatry, psychology, and social work, and has been international in its reach (Bang & Park, 2009;Epstein & Hundert, 2002;Falender & Shafranske, 2012;Frank, Snell, ten Cate, Holmboe, Carraccio, & Swing, 2010;Miller, Scully, & Winstead, 2003;Psychology Board of Australia, 2011;Roe, 2002;Swick, Hall, & Beresin, 2006;Tebes, Matlin, Migdole, Farkas, Money, & Shulman, 2011). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%