Date/Time
3 Supervision CEs
The experience of countertransference is ever present in clinical care, influencing everything from how a therapist establishes rapport with a client to how they manage the termination process.
Clinical supervisors equipped with a strong working knowledge of countertransference can offer supervisees a powerful tool for self-examination, insight into the skill and ethics of a supervisee’s practice and a process to examine how the supervisee’s unconscious bias, responses, reactions and feelings about clients can be useful in clinical insight and treatment.
Learning Objectives:
Identify and differentiate 3 different types of countertransference
Develop 3 strategies to address supervisees countertransference in their clinical work.
Assess potential uses of countertransference to enhance clinical care of clients.
Target Audience: Social Workers, LCPCs, and Psychologists, anyone interested in the subject matter
Location: Virtual
Sponsored By: University of Maryland School of Social Work
Cost: $90.00
For questions, email cpe@ssw.umaryland.edu