Ulrike Maaß, Franziska Kühne, Destina Sevde Ay-Bryson, Peter Eric Heinze, Florian Weck
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACTSixty-nine psychology students (M = 24.93 years, 82.6% female, 81% B.Sc. level) were randomly assigned to live supervision or a control group in an experiment with two simulated therapy sessions. In Session 1, their task was to conduct the beginning of a cognitive-behavioral therapy session with a standardized patient. In Session 2, all students repeated the task, but only one group received live supervision from a licensed psychotherapist. Live supervision improved students’ (observer-based) skills (ds ≥0.91), and students were satisfied with the feedback. In terms of self-efficacy and self-assessed skills, live supervision had no significant advantage over merely practicing.KEYWORDS: Trainingpsychotherapybug-in-the-eyecognitive behavior therapyrole-playlive supervision AcknowledgmentsWe thank Dr. Brian Bloch for editing the English version, our student assistants Judith Tremöhlen and Anna Lorenz, and all other students supporting the study.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Supplementary materialSupplemental data for this article can be accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1080/07325223.2023.2267528Additional informationNotes on contributorsUlrike MaaßUlrike Maaß, PhD, is a licensed psychotherapist, researcher, lecturer, and CBT supervisor at the Division of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy at the University of Potsdam. She treats patients at the Psychologisch-Psychotherapeutische Ambulanz (PPA, University of Potsdam) and works as a teacher for psychotherapy trainees and supervisors at several training institutes in Germany and Switzerland. Her current research interests include psychotherapy training and supervision, psychotherapeutic competencies, and psychotherapy research.Franziska KühneFranziska Kühne is a licensed psychotherapist, researcher, lecturer, and a CBT supervisor at Psychologisch-Psychotherapeutisches Institute (PPI, University of Potsdam). She habilitated on psychotherapy competences and is head of the obsessive-compulsive disorder treatment program at the Psychologisch-Psychotherapeutische Ambulanz (PPA, University of Potsdam). Her current research interests include evidence-based psychotherapy, competency and training research, psychooncology, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.Destina Sevde Ay-BrysonDestina Sevde Ay-Bryson, PhD, is a researcher and lecturer at the Department of Rehabilitation Sciences at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. She is currently doing her psychotherapy training at Psychologisch-Psychotherapeutisches Institute (PPI, University of Potsdam).. Her research interests include evidence-based training, psychotherapy competence, and the standardized patient methodology.Peter Eric HeinzePeter Eric Heinze, PhD, is currently completing his psychotherapy training at Psychologisch-Psychotherapeutisches Institute (PPI, University of Potsdam). His research interests include psychotherapy preferences, psychotherapy and training research, and diagnostic procedures.Florian WeckFlorian Weck, PhD, is professor and chair of the Division of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, director of the Psychological Psychotherapeutic Outpatient Clinic at the University of Potsdam, research director of the Psychologisch-Psychotherapeutisches Institute (PPI) at the University of Potsdam), and a licensed CBT psychotherapist and supervisor. His current research interests include psychotherapy training, psychotherapy research, psychotherapeutic competencies, clinical supervision, and pathological health anxiety.
期刊介绍:
The Clinical Supervisor is the premier journal in the United States devoted exclusively to the art and science of clinical supervision. An interdisciplinary, refereed publication of the highest standards, the journal communicates the ideas, experiences, skills, techniques, concerns, and needs of supervisors in psychotherapy and mental health. You will find what you need to know about supervision to effectively supervise students and trainees. The Clinical Supervisor provides a unique forum for debate, historical analysis, new techniques, program description, theory, managed care and clinical practice issues, and other topics of vital interest to today"s supervisors.