CLINICAL SUPERVISION IN WASHINGTON STATE

Supervision For Social Workers & Therapists

Click here for referrals to other supervisors.

You’re looking for culturally responsive, trauma informed supervision

The difference between effective and ineffective supervision is crucial toward your development as a clinician.

Good supervision is the cornerstone of skill development, confidence building, and education once you graduate.

Good supervision should be reflective, supportive, attentive, educational, and insightful.

It’s important you find the right fit for your needs, goals, and values.

Not all supervisors will be a good fit and I may or may not be the best fit for what you are seeking.

As your supervisor, I am committed to helping you thrive and ask for equal commitment from you.

I will help you find ways to support your clients, your role in the therapeutic process, deepen your therapeutic orientation, become more comfortable with ambiguity, and ways to get unstuck when faced with challenges and difficult moments.

Supervision Framework

My framework for supervision is similar to how I am as a therapist and clinical social worker using the Integrative Developmental Model (IDM) of supervision incorporating multicultural and feminist frameworks.

The IDM highlights 3 stages of development.

Level 1: Early/Novice/New

  • Externally focused (seeks positive feedback, structure from supervisor)

  • Highly anxious (fearful and worried about making mistakes)

  • Highly motivated (wants to perfect therapy and do the right thing)

  • Unsure and worried about feedback and evaluation

  • Focused on self

  • Limited self-awareness


Level 2: Middle/Transition/Adjustment

  • Greater ability to focus on and empathize with client. However, balance is still an issue. Problem can be veering into enmeshment with the client

  • Supervisee vacillates between being very confident to self-doubting and confused

  • Supervisee experiences conflict between autonomy and dependency.

Level 3: Expert/Confidence/Competence/Ongoing

  • More structure provided by supervisee

  • More focus on personal and professional integration and career decisions

  • Increased desire to personalize orientation/approach/style

  • More independent/autonomous, better understands limitations

  • Focus begins to include self-reactions to client

Multicultural & Feminist Framework

  • Location of self context and intersectional identities

  • Increasing awareness of individual and systemic oppression and trauma

  • Promotion of advocacy and social change

  • Self reflection

  • Exploration of power and empowerment

  • A strong collaborative and working supervision relationship

Learn More About Supervision

Click on the boxes on the right to learn more.

My Commitment To You

There is no one right way to do things, and while I am happy to share my own thoughts and experience with similar situations, the best way I can serve you as a supervisor is to:

  • Support you toward growth, confidence, learning, and development through education, mentoring, and guidance;

  • Help you feel grounded in the principles and values of our work;

  • Find your genuine voice and style in your client-therapist relationships;

  • Be direct, but compassionate in my communication and feedback;

  • Affirm and validate you and your many strengths, stories, and identities; and

  • Co-create a space where we hold the many issues, concerns, challenges you bring in a thoughtful manner.

You Can Expect Me To:

  • Be a professional and follow the Social Work Code of Ethics and follow Washington State laws

  • Let you know if I receive a DOH board complaint therefore rendering your supervision hours with me uncounted/ineffective

  • Show up and be on time

  • To let you know if I will be unavailable to meet for our session at least 24-hours prior

  • Help you with a wide range of issues, concerns, and clients

  • Help you understand the legal and ethical standards for treatment

  • Help you feel more confident so you can be prepared for independent practice

  • Provide you with required primary supervision documents regularly (every 3-6 months) and monthly billing statements as secondary documentation

  • Provide you with feedback and an outside perspective to your work (diagnosis, assessment, clinical interventions, managing counter transference, etc.)

  • Hold our meetings with confidentiality (with the exception of preventing imminent danger)

  • Provide you with support outside of our scheduled supervision session (e.g. answering a quick question via email, answering a text or message, or scheduling an additional session for an urgent issue)

My Expectations Of You

  • Show up and be on time

  • Be proactive and have things to talk about and/or review

  • Ask for what you need, want to learn, and how you want to grow

  • Provide me feedback when things aren’t or are working for you

  • To let me know when you will be unavailable to meet at least 24-hours prior to our meeting

  • To let me know if you receive a DOH board complaint

  • To complete your own research around your intended profession (LICSW, LMFT, LMHC) in terms of legal requirements (hours, approved supervision, approved supervisor, continuing education, renewal, etc.)

  • Maintain documentation of your direct and indirect clinical hours & supervision hours/work completed

  • Maintain and retain proper documentation/notetaking, informed consent paperwork, etc.

  • Periodically submit documentation of supervision hours completed to the DOH

  • To honor your own boundaries and limits

  • To practice compassion for yourself

  • To take care of and engage in ongoing self-care and community-care

  • To be human; just be you and show up as you are (trust takes time and we go at the pace of trust)

Fees

Supervision offered for associate therapists in Washington State.

  • Individual Supervision

    • $150 per 60-minutes (associates in private/group practice)

  • Individual Supervision

    • $75 per 60-minutes (associates in community mental health, hospitals, schools & social services agencies)

  • Dyadic Supervision (split between 2 supervisees when you find another person willing to split supervision)

Supervision Blog

Learn more about what to expect in supervision with me, employment opportunities in Washington State, private practice resources, and more.

Here are the most helpful blog posts for new supervisees who have just graduated from their master’s programs:

Supervision Resources Step-By-Step

I’ve compiled the information below to save you time and to increase access into opening your own private practice and helping you on your journey toward independent licensure.

Knowledge is power and should be distributed freely.

In a capitalist culture, information is hidden and protected to focus on the benefit of a small population.

We need more quality and culturally responsive therapists whether they work in agencies or in private practice.

Click here for referrals to other supervisors.

Begin Supervision In 4 Steps

Step 1: Review Website

Review my website and watch my videos to see if we might be a good fit.

Click here to see if I have openings by clicking on First Session (60-Minutes) $270 - Washington State & California Residents Only Please.

Click here for referrals to other supervisors.

Supervision offered for associate therapists in Washington State.

Step 2: Complete Supervision Inquiry Form (At Bottom Of This Page)

Complete the supervision interest form at the bottom of the page.

If we might be a good fit, I will contact you to set up a 5-10 minute conversation to discuss what your goals are and how I might be able to help.

We’ll only move forward and work together if we both agree we’re a good fit.

Step 3: Complete Paperwork

Complete supervision paperwork (contract, agreement) on the client portal within 24-hours to confirm your first appointment.

Also upload a copy of your liability insurance adding me on as your supervisor. Let me know if you have any questions before signing.

Once you do, I’ll send you a copy of my license and provide you a signed Approved Supervisor Form for your records before our first meeting.

You’ll also receive monthly supervision billing statements as secondary documentation for proof of our supervision.

Step 4: End Supervision

We’ll end anytime we both find supervision unhelpful or unnecessary, you require a different type of supervisor, you require a different supervision approach, and/or you finally accrue enough hours toward licensure.

I’ll provide you all necessary signed documentation before we end.

Some supervisees continue our relationship through clinical consultation so they can continue to provide quality care to their clients, continue to engage in lifelong learning, and/or to have a space to process their own “stuff” that comes up in their work.

I Have More Questions

Start Online Supervision Today

Read through my website and watch my videos to learn more about me, my services, and if we might be a good fit.

I am wishing you the best on your journey toward independent licensure.

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If you want to learn how to open your private practice in Washington State, I recommend the following resource here which outlines step-by-step instructions at no cost.

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Click here for referrals to other supervisors.

To submit interest in working with me as your supervisor, click the form below.