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<strong>Clinical</strong> <strong>Supervision</strong> <strong>Handbook</strong><br />

In another study, Constantine, Warren and Miville (2005) present and discuss the use<br />

of the multicultural case conceptualization ability exercise, a tool and coding system<br />

used to determine the extent to which clinicians are able to integrate salient cultural<br />

issues into two different conceptualizations of a client case.<br />

Finally, Pope-Davis and colleagues (2000) describe the development and validation<br />

of the Multicultural Environmental Inventory—an instrument designed to measure<br />

the degree to which graduate counselling programs address multicultural issues in<br />

their curricula, clinical supervision, climate and research. The instrument was condensed<br />

from 53 to 27 items based on the results of factor analyses, and showed promise<br />

in its ability to assess change over time, as well as good validity and reliability. Although<br />

designed for academic settings, it may be useful to test either the instrument as a whole,<br />

or the supervision subscale, as a way to evaluate clinical supervisors’ effectiveness in<br />

addressing and promoting cultural competence in clinical supervision groups.<br />

Cultural and diversity competence is now being addressed in a more rigorous fashion<br />

in clinical supervision settings. This reflects a growing awareness of their importance,<br />

and of the need for ways to assess and identify gaps in knowledge and skills (both in<br />

clinical supervisors and in front-line clinicians).<br />

CLINICAL SUPERVISOR EVALUATION<br />

Providing and accepting clear and concrete feedback, identifying strengths and areas<br />

for improvement, and specific concerns with respect to good clinical care can be<br />

difficult for both clinical supervisor and clinician. Yet “when supervisees reflect on<br />

their supervision, what comes to mind most often is the quality and quantity of<br />

feedback they received” (Bernard & Goodyear, 1998). Therefore, clinical supervisors<br />

need to evaluate the extent to which they are providing constructive and salient<br />

feedback to clinicians.<br />

Heckman-Stone (2003) carried out a pilot study with 40 graduate students from<br />

three training programs (counselling psychology, clinical psychology and masters<br />

degree in counselling). She used a scale of 10 items rated on a seven-point, Likert-type<br />

scale, where 1= strongly disagree, 4 = neutral, and 7 = strongly agree. In addition,<br />

the author included four open-ended items designed to elicit examples of positive<br />

and negative feedback in clinical supervision, and the characteristics of good<br />

and poor use of feedback and evaluation by clinical supervisors. An example of<br />

the instrument, adapted for use with more experienced clinicians—as opposed to<br />

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