In todays episode of the Ultimate Youth Worker Podcast “Supervision” Aaron speaks to us about the need for youth workers to have good professional supervision. As an industry that claims professional status it is ludicrous that most of our members do not receive a minimum of monthly professional supervision..
Supervision
In, the AYAC National Youth Work Snapshot 2013,
a survey of youth workers showed that 8.4% of surveyed youth
workers had never had a supervision session and around 51.7%
receive it less than once every three months. As an industry that
claims professional status this is appalling. It is no wonder that
the sector in Australia turns over staff at 23% every year.
Supervision is important to staff retention.
The best supervisors I have had came from both ends of the
qualification spectrum. One was a qualified Social Worker with over
a decade of experience who regularly attended courses on
supervision. The other was a Youth Worker who had no qualifications
but was an avid reader of supervision texts and attended every
professional development opportunity focused on supervision. The
skill set that both of these supervisors had in common was an eager
appetite to better their own practice as supervisors and a great
ability to listen and reflect. The styles they used were different,
the theoretical focus wide and varied and the outcomes specific to
the needs of myself and my clients.
Maidment & Beddoe (2012) believe that supervision must be
placed at the core of professional development for staff, “We want
to place supervision at the heart of professional development,
which is career-long and where, via diverse learning activities,
practitioners refine and augment their knowledge, develop skills,
and undertake supervision to enhance critically reflective
practice”.