Good Supervision Matters presents

GROUP SUPERVISION FOR SUPERVISORS

Morning Session: 3hrs

Whole Day: 4.5hrs

Duration

In Person (Melbourne, Vic) + Via Zoom

(in-person location TBD, purchasers will be contacted with the location closer to the event date. Make sure to leave your email/ phone number at checkout. This webpage will also be updated with the location once determined)

Location

Morning Session: $250

Whole Day: $350

Cost

November 29th

Morning Session: 9:30am - 12:30pm

Whole Day: 1:30pm - 3pm

When

What’s on Offer?

In this workshop, you’ll see a live demonstration and work with a group process based on Kim-Oliver Tietze ‘Six phases of Peer Group Supervision’.

The process empowers participants to explore what’s happening in their supervision practice and bring hidden dynamics to light. The group environment fosters a sense of trust and genuine care where participants freely enter into the reflective process gaining insights and clarity.

Following this workshop, you’ll have the opportunity to join an ongoing peer supervision group facilitated by a member of the Good Supervision Matters team.

Remember the incredible learning you experienced doing group work in your training? Here’s an opportunity to reconnect with a supervision learning community facilitated by skilled supervision trainers.

Meet the Facilitators

  • Joan Wright Howie

    Joan Wright Howie

    Joan is a Uniting Church minister, spiritual director and professional supervisor with 30-year experience in congregations, synod, chaplaincy, NGO, project and educational contexts. She is a member of the Australian Association of Supervisor’s (AAOS) Board of Directors and trains supervisors and spiritual directors alongside her private practice.

  • Marcel Koper

    Marcel Koper

    Marcel has been a Mental Health professional/ therapist and supervisor for over 25 years and specialises in providing supervision for mental health professionals (Psychologists, therapists, supervisors, nurses, music therapists) and those in ministry settings of all types (ministers, priests, leaders, chaplains, pastoral carers, youth leaders and more) as well as other leaders, lawyers and school principals. He believes that if he is providing support for the one person, then he is supporting the hundreds that they are ministering/ offering care to directly or indirectly.

  • Julie McDonald

    Julie McDonald

    Having worked in diverse settings as a supervisor, therapist and educator I’m passionate about connecting people to what they think and feel, the way in which this shapes their lives and how they might wish to respond. I have a particular interest in compassionate ethics and the wisdom that can be acquired in coming to know ourselves and appreciating others.