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Pre-Conference Workshops: 4 June 2013 2-day Conference: 5-6 June 2013 Conference Venue: Aerial UTS Function Centre, University of Technology Level 7, 235 Jones Street Ultimo, Sydney Sydney Australia: 4-6 June 2013 Advances in Clinical Supervision Innovation & Practice An interdisciplinary mental health conference promoting best practice in the delivery of clinical supervision in the workplace Conference Organiser: The New South Wales Institute of Psychiatry Conference Chair: Christine Senediak Postal Address: Locked Bag 7118 Parramatta BC NSW 2124 Sydney Australia Tel: +61 2 9840 3833 Fax: +61 2 9840 3838 Email: [email protected] Website: www.nswiop.nsw.edu.au/conference Facebook: nswiopeducation Twitter: nswiop Advances in Clinical Supervision: Innovation & Practice This interdisciplinary conference will bring together local, national and international mental health professionals and is open to psychology, social work, medicine, psychiatry, nursing, allied health, NGOs, counsellors, drug and alcohol clinicians, clergy, psychotherapists and managers to share expertise and perspectives on the application and delivery of clinical supervision in the workplace. The conference will have a practical and experiential focus and aims to promote examination of current issues in clinical supervision research and practice. Join us for plenary sessions, workshops, roundtable discussion, poster sessions and networking events. Visit the conference website for program updates, speaker bios, abstracts & registrations www.nswiop.nsw.edu.au/conference

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Page 1: Advances in Clinical Supervision · The teaching experience and capacity of psychiatry trainees Pack M: The relationship in clinical supervision: Models preferred by health social

Pre-Conference Workshops: 4 June 2013

2-day Conference: 5-6 June 2013

Conference Venue: Aerial UTS Function Centre, University of Technology

Level 7, 235 Jones Street Ultimo, Sydney

Sydney Australia: 4-6 June 2013

Advances in Clinical SupervisionInnovation & Practice

An interdisciplinary mental health conference

promoting best practice in the delivery of

clinical supervision in the workplace

Conference Organiser: The New South Wales Institute of Psychiatry

Conference Chair: Christine Senediak

Postal Address: Locked Bag 7118 Parramatta BC NSW 2124 Sydney Australia

Tel: +61 2 9840 3833 Fax: +61 2 9840 3838 Email: [email protected]

Website: www.nswiop.nsw.edu.au/conference Facebook: nswiopeducation Twitter: nswiop

Advances in Clinical Supervision: Innovation & Practice This interdisciplinary conference will bring together local, national and international mental health professionals and is open to psychology,

social work, medicine, psychiatry, nursing, allied health, NGOs, counsellors, drug and alcohol clinicians, clergy, psychotherapists and

managers to share expertise and perspectives on the application and delivery of clinical supervision in the workplace. The conference will

have a practical and experiential focus and aims to promote examination of current issues in clinical supervision research and practice.

Join us for plenary sessions, workshops, roundtable discussion, poster sessions and networking events.

Visit the conference website for program updates, speaker bios, abstracts & registrations

www.nswiop.nsw.edu.au/conference

Page 2: Advances in Clinical Supervision · The teaching experience and capacity of psychiatry trainees Pack M: The relationship in clinical supervision: Models preferred by health social

CONFERENCE DAY 1: Wednesday 5 June 2013

3.30-4.00

3.00-3.30

4.00-5.00

5.00-5.15

5.15-6.15

CLOSE & CONCLUDING REMARKS - END OF DAY ONE CONFERENCE DRINKS

MORNING TEA: 10.15-10.45

LUNCH: 12.45-1.30

AFTERNOON TEA: 3.00-3.30

REGISTRATION: 8.00-8.40

1.30-3.00

12.45-1.30

10.15-10.45

8.45-8.50

8.50-9.00

8.40-8.45

8.00-8.40

9.00- 9.30

9.30-10.15

10.45-11.15

11.15-12.45

INVITED SPEAKER INVITED SPEAKER INVITED SPEAKERHARRIS ROOM JONES ROOM BROADWAY ROOM

Martin Cohen: Using models of

supervision in the retention of psychiatry

registrars

Phillip Hilder: Supervision for

counsellors working with complex

presentations

Frank Meumann: Freedom to conjecture

within the Balint group

SUBMITTED PAPERS SUBMITTED PAPERS WORKSHOPHARRIS ROOM JONES ROOM BROADWAY ROOM

Nash L & Hickie C:The teaching experience and capacity of

psychiatry trainees

Pack M: The relationship in clinical

supervision: Models preferred by health

social workers who work with traumatic

disclosures from clients

Shafer A: Observation: The cornerstone

of psychodynamic supervision

Milne D, Gonsalvez C & Watkins C International Advances in Clinical

Supervision

Gonzalez R & Tomlinson P: A

trauma informed approach to clinical

supervision

Bailey P, Bambling M, Dorries V & O’Donovan A: The art and craft of

assessing clinical supervisors

Barker G: When supervision resembles

a train wreck

SUBMITTED PAPERS SUBMITTED PAPERS WORKSHOPHARRIS ROOM JONES ROOM BROADWAY ROOM

Crow N: Who off ers the best supervision? Olds K & Hawkins R: Conceptualising

the generic competencies required to

provide clinical supervision to Australian

psychologists

Lamont L: A supervision story - a tale

of two cities and three generations

- maintaining good practice and

wellbeing in times of change

Froggat T & Duncan J: Introducing

clinical supervision in an acute mental

health setting

Hill H, Crowe T & Gonsalvez C: Piloting

a refl ective practice intervention based

on videos of supervision: Evaluation and

experiences of supervisors and supervisees

Saxby C, Wilson J & Newcombe P: Does

best practice clinical supervision lead to better

outcomes? Findings from a Queensland study of

community allied health professionals

Hawkins R & Olds K: Challenges and

responses to the changed rules for

supervision in applied psychology

HARRIS/JONES ROOM: OFFICIAL OPENING: John Feneley, NSW Mental Health Commissioner

HARRIS/JONES ROOM: WELCOME TO CONFERENCE: Christine Senediak, Conference Chair, NSW Institute of Psychiatry

HARRIS/JONES ROOM: ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF COUNTRY: Joan Tranter, Elder in Residence, Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning, UTS

HARRIS/JONES ROOM: OPENING ADDRESS: Brin Grenyer, Prof Clinical Psychology, Uni of Wollongong: The Value of Clinical Supervision

HARRIS/JONES ROOM:HARRIS/JONES ROOM: KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Maurizio Andolfi : Challenging issues in supervision: How to increase therapists’ competence

and self-confi dence with client empowerment

HARRIS/JONES ROOM: KEYNOTE SPEAKER: David Denborough: Narrative approaches to supervision

HARRIS/JONES ROOM: PANEL DISCUSSION: Chris Ryan (Chair), Maurizio Andolfi , David Denborough, Brin Grenyer: Navigating ethics,

obstacles and the relationship in supervision: how to ensure a safe supervisory relationship

11.1

5-11

.45

1.30

-2.0

02.

00-2

.30

2.00

-2.3

0

2.30

-3.0

0

2.30

-3.0

01.

30-2

.00

11.1

5-11

.45

11.1

5-12

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1.30

-3.0

0

10.4

5-11

.15

10.4

5-11

.15

10.4

5-11

.15

11.4

5-12

.15

11.4

5-12

.15

12.1

5-12

.45

12.1

5-12

.45

Advances in Clinical Supervision Conference Program

PRE CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS: Tuesday 4 June 2013

Workshop 2: Elisabeth Shaw: The philosophy

and pragmatics of ethics in

supervision

Workshop 3: Sue Foley and Jenny Rose: Beyond

face to face models of clinical

supervision

Workshop 4: Frank Meumann & Laurie Lovell Simons: Freedom

to conjecture within the Balint group:

powerful supervision for mental

health professionals

Workshop 5: Craig Gonsalvez: The use of

videotapes in clinical supervision:

Principles & practice based on a

competency-based approach

Workshop 6: David Denborough: Narrative

approaches to responding to

suff ering: Building the capacity of

workers and community

MORNING WORKSHOPS RUNNING CONCURRENTLY: 9.30-12.30 (REGISTRATION FROM 9.00) AFTERNOON WORKSHOPS RUNNING CONCURRENTLY: 1.30-4.30 (REGISTRATION/LUNCH FROM 12.30)

Workshop 1: Christine Senediak: Eff ective

Clinical Supervision: Making

supervision work for supervisor

and supervisee

LUN

CH: 1

2.30

-1.3

0

WORKSHOP FULL

Page 3: Advances in Clinical Supervision · The teaching experience and capacity of psychiatry trainees Pack M: The relationship in clinical supervision: Models preferred by health social

4.45-5.00

MORNING TEA: 10.30-11.00

LUNCH: 12.30-1.15 (includes Poster Presentations below)

AFTERNOON TEA: 3.15-3.45

8.30-9.00

CONFERENCE DAY 2 Thursday 6 June 2013

9.00-9.30

9.30-10.30

11.00-12.30

10.30-11.00

12.30-1.15

1.15-1.45

1.00-1.15

1.45-3.15

3.15-3.45

3.45-4.45

HARRIS/JONES ROOM: KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Craig Gonsalvez: Competency-based models of clinical supervision: Principles, applications, promises, challenges

HARRIS/JONES ROOM:HARRIS/JONES ROOM: KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Jane Stein Parbury: The long and winding road: Engaging mental health nurses in clinical supervision

SUBMITTED PAPERS SUBMITTED PAPERS SUBMITTED PAPERSHARRIS ROOM JONES ROOM BROADWAY ROOM

Hussein T & Rodriguez P: Multicultural

counselling competencies and

psychodynamic approaches: A model of peer

supervision to increase cultural competence

Cousins C: Good enough parenting: The

importance of exploring the disconnect

between best practice and reality

Egan R: Does the rhetoric match the

practice of supervision in Australia?

Weld N: Supervisors supporting self-

forgeivness around practice mistakes

Heath F, Ward S, Littledale N & Poole C: Making mirrors or opening curtains?

Supervision of supervision in a process

driven peer group context

Sheridan-Magro A: Creative

supervision: Sitting with ‘the grey’

SUBMITTED PAPERS SUBMITTED PAPERS WORKSHOPHARRIS ROOM JONES ROOM BROADWAY ROOM

Byrne N: Long distance supervision in

infant observation

Jimenez I, Kingston A, Aitken J & Thomson G: An eff ective clinical

supervision model for remote

professional counselling

Ryan S & Rycroft P: Systemic group

supervision

Warren B, Byrne N, Kowalenko N, Birch M & Solanki K: From course to

context: A symposium on supervision

in perinatal and infant mental health

Matthews J & Healey N: A new way

for a new workforce - supporting

Aboriginal outreach workers to develop

their community roles

Kingston A, Aitken J, Jimenez I & Thomson G: Practice issues for remote professional

counsellors - and how these can be effectively

addressed in clinical supervision

POSTER PRESENTATIONS: FOYER 1.00-1.15

INVITED SPEAKER INVITED SPEAKER INVITED SPEAKERHARRIS ROOM JONES ROOM BROADWAY ROOM

Paul Rhodes: Why refl ective practice:

Five studies in profi le

Kathryn Nicholson Perry: Supervising in a

new landscape: integrating recent changes

into the supervision of psychology students

Elisabeth Shaw: Shouldering all

burdens: managing the invitation to be

ethical backstop

SUBMITTED PAPERS WORKSHOP SUBMITTED PAPERSHARRIS ROOM JONES ROOM BROADWAY ROOM

Senediak C: Integrating refl ective

practice and therapist ‘awareness of

self’ in supervision

Hamilton S: Step outside the box:

Using creative methods in group

clinical supervision

Basa V: Education and training of

counselling supervision within the Australian

Qualification Framework and the provision of

ongoing supervisor supportCousins C: Probing eclecticism:

Assisting supervisees to uncover and

articulate theoretical infl uences

Hart B: Developing a culture of learning

and refl ective practice in a not for profi t

agency - an organisational development

perspectiveCrowe T: Parallel processing in clinical

supervision and development coaching

FORUM SUBMITTED PAPER INVITED SPEAKERHARRIS ROOM JONES ROOM BROADWAY ROOM

Bailey P & Ryan T: Creating the

Australian Clinical Supervision

Association?

Huang H: Constructing a care model for

daily living among disabled residents

targeting long-term care facilities

Joan Haliburn: On becoming a

psychotherapy supervisor: Triadic systems in

the microanalysis of the supervisory process

SUBMITTED PAPER SUBMITTED PAPER

Strasser A: Creating a Register for

Supervisors for PACFA (Psychotherapy &

Counselling Federation of Australia)

Karpetis G: Understanding clinical issues

in student supervision: A psychodynamic

practitioner researcher approach

CLOSE & CONCLUDING REMARKS: 4.45-5.00

10.0

0-10

.30

10.0

0-10

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10.0

0-10

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9.30

-10.

00

11.0

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11.3

0-12

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12.0

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11.0

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11.0

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2.15

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3.4

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3.45

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Advances in Clinical Supervision Conference Program

Page 4: Advances in Clinical Supervision · The teaching experience and capacity of psychiatry trainees Pack M: The relationship in clinical supervision: Models preferred by health social

Vivid Sydney: 24 May-10 June 2013

What’s on?What’s on in Sydney during the Conference? Vivid Sydney: 24 May 2013-10 June www.vividsydney.comSydney Film Festival: 5-19 June www.sydneyfi lmfestival.com.auFor more information on Sydney visit: www.sydney.com

Aerial UTS Function CentreUniversity of Technology, Level 7

235 Jones St (Bldg 10) Ultimo Sydney

www.aerialutsfunctioncentre.com.au

Conference Venue AccommodationSpecial Conference Rate: 15% discount at Novotel

Darling Harbour & Ibis Darling Harbour for Delegates

attending Advances in Clinical Supervision.

Visit www.nswiop.nsw.edu.au/conference for info

Contact UsConference Organiser: The New South Wales Institute of Psychiatry

Conference Chair: Christine Senediak

Postal Address: Locked Bag 7118 Parramatta BC NSW 2124 Sydney Australia

Tel: +61 2 9840 3833 Fax: +61 2 9840 3838 Email: [email protected]

Website: www.nswiop.nsw.edu.au/conference Facebook: nswiopeducation Twitter: nswiop

Maurizio Andolfi is a Family Therapist, who started as a Child Psychiatrist. Andolfi is Professor of Psychology at La Sapienza-University of Rome, Director

of the Accademia di Psicoterapia Familiare in Rome and Editor-in-Chief of the Italian family therapy journal: Terapia Familiare. In 1999 he was the winner of

an American Association of Marital & Family Therapy award for Special Contribution to Marital and Family Therapy. He was the founder and President of the

Foundation Silvano Andolfi and he was the Co-Founder of the European Family Therapy Association and the past-President of the Italian Family Therapy Society.

He has published widely in English and several other languages.

David Denborough (PhD) works as a teacher and writer/editor for Dulwich Centre Publications and a community practitioner for the Dulwich Centre

Foundation. Recent books/publications include: Collective narrative practice: Responding to individuals, groups, and communities who have experienced

trauma; Family therapy: Exploring the fi eld’s past, present and possible futures; and Trauma: Narrative responses to traumatic experience. Recent teaching/

community assignments have included Bosnia, Rwanda, Uganda, Canada, Israel, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Iraq, Palestine, South Africa and a number of

Aboriginal Australian communities. David’s songs in response to current social issues have received airplay throughout Australia and Canada.

Craig Gonsalvez is currently Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of Wollongong. Craig has considerable experience as a clinical psychologist,

clinical supervisor, and academic. He has been actively involved in clinical psychology training over several years and has been at the forefront of developments in clinical

supervision in Australia during the last decade. He designed and coordinated the course ‘Clinical Supervision and Practice’ for doctoral students at the University of

Wollongong. He is also leader and principal investigator of several, recently awarded supervision grants including a large Australian Learning and Teaching Council grant to

evaluate and improve fi eld supervisor assessments of trainee competence in clinical psychology, and a Health Workforce Australia funding grant to develop eSupervision.

Jane Stein Parbury is Professor of Mental Health Nursing in the UTS Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery and Health and Director of the Area Professorial

Mental Health Nursing Unit for South Eastern Sydney Local Health District. Currently, she is a Chief Investigator in an NHMRC funded study implementing

person-centred care for dementia in residential settings where she takes a lead role in training in person-centred care. Widely recognised for her expertise in

interpersonal communication, Jane is particularly well known for her best-selling textbook, Patient & Person: Interpersonal Skills in Nursing, now in its 4th

edition. She has more than 35 years’ experience in mental health as a registered nurse, in acute care, in consultation liaison services and academia.

Keynote Speakers

For full program, information on speakers & abstracts and registration info visit the conference website:

www.nswiop.nsw.edu.au/conference

Registration & Costs - Download registration form at: www.nswiop.nsw.edu.au/conference

Package (AUD$)* Dates Early Bird Full Fee pay by 6 May 13 pay after 6 May 132 day conference 5-6 June 2013 $675 $745

Pre conference morning workshop 4 June 2013 $170 $185

Pre conference afternoon workshop 4 June 2013 $170 $185

Gold Pass incl 2 day conf & 2 workshops 4-6 June 2013 $975 $1115

*All fees are in AUD$. Registration fee includes lunch, morning

tea, afternoon tea, complimentary welcome reception

and full conference documentation. Does not include

accommodation or transfers. Early Bird: payments received

on or before Monday 6 May 2013 (17:00 AEST)

SponsorshipThere are a range of sponsorship and exhibition

opportunities at the Conference for organisations

wishing to advertise or hold a display booth.

Visit www.nswiop.nsw.edu.au/conference for info