Abstract
Existing research from the fields of education, cognitive science, neuroscience, and psychoanalytic psychotherapy points us
toward possibilities for the future of psychoanalytic supervision. This research suggests that we need to go beyond communicating
abstract knowledge and make our supervisory relationships more experiential, participatory, relationship-focused, and personal
in order to teach usable knowledge, develop complex psychotherapeutic skills, and facilitate emotional and relational development
in our supervisees. The author concludes that a relational model of supervision fits this pedagogical profile. After grappling
with our resistances to change, the author hopes that more psychoanalytic supervisors will make use of a relational model
of supervision, as well as drawing upon new technologies and neuroscience-based teaching techniques.
toward possibilities for the future of psychoanalytic supervision. This research suggests that we need to go beyond communicating
abstract knowledge and make our supervisory relationships more experiential, participatory, relationship-focused, and personal
in order to teach usable knowledge, develop complex psychotherapeutic skills, and facilitate emotional and relational development
in our supervisees. The author concludes that a relational model of supervision fits this pedagogical profile. After grappling
with our resistances to change, the author hopes that more psychoanalytic supervisors will make use of a relational model
of supervision, as well as drawing upon new technologies and neuroscience-based teaching techniques.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Category Original Paper
- Pages 1-10
- DOI 10.1007/s10879-011-9201-5
- Authors
- Joan E. Sarnat, 3030 Ashby Avenue, Suite 109B, Berkeley, CA 94705, USA
- Journal Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy
- Online ISSN 1573-3564
- Print ISSN 0022-0116