This postgraduate certificate program provides intensive training on social work supervision of direct practice across the life course.

Skilled Supervisors Strengthen the Workforce

Supervisors play pivotal roles in the quality of services delivered by the teams they support. In their roles as teacher and manager, they are the first to whom line workers turn for guidance in their direct practice with challenging clients. Social workers are key players in the health and mental health services provided to individuals and their families. Quality delivery of the vital services they provide depends upon the support and mentoring of skilled and knowledgeable supervisors. Successful supervisory leadership is crucial to effective service delivery, staff retention and the success of our service organizations—especially nonprofit health, mental health, and human service agencies.

Educational Model

The educational model is based on tested theories of adult learning and small group instruction and other proven educational approaches. The program calls for interactive workshops taught by academic and practice-based experts utilizing brief didactic presentations, group learning activities, discussions of cases and supervision experiences, and the provision of extensive educational materials.

With a curriculum based on supervisory best practices, the SWPF program is delivered through training workshops scheduled bi-weekly over the course of three months. The program utilizes interactive group learning tasks and expert instruction through our partnership with designated universities, accepting cohorts of 20-25 licensed social work supervisors from the sites’ local practice communities. This model has previously been implemented and tested, demonstrating significant and enduring practice changes among participating supervisors.

Overview and Learning Objectives

Social Work Practice Fellows (SWPF) is a premier tuition-based professional development program for MSW supervisors from community-based agencies. The educational model, which has been proven effective, calls for interactive workshops taught by academic and practice-based experts utilizing brief didactic presentations, group learning activities, discussions of cases and supervision experiences, and the provision of extensive educational materials. SWPF is delivered by the continuing education departments of participating schools of social work and its workshops are led by expert social work practitioners and faculty scholars.

Cohorts of 20-25 MSW supervisors convene for scheduled learning sessions to receive 36 hours of training on supervisory best practices and are awarded 36 continuing education units to apply toward their state licensure for practice. SWPF also facilitates the creation of much-needed peer support for participating supervisors who are known to experience professional isolation and to benefit from peer networking. SWPF is offered in multiple communities and each new cohort of graduates will join a growing professional network of alumni with whom they can connect for mutual support.

Become a Partner School: Filling an Educational Gap

Social Work Practice Fellows partners with universities to deliver the program to social work supervisors to service their local communities. 

Social Work Practice Fellows is a model training program for social work supervisors from a broad range of local community organizations. Partnering in this approach with Adelphi University’s Center for Nonprofit Leadership are the continuing education departments of Schools of Social Work which maintain relationships with the vast communities of practice in their regions and understand the unique strengths and needs of local providers.

In 2018, Social Work Practice Fellows was established adapting the educational model for supervisory training developed in previous programs. It was further adapted for virtual delivery during the time of the COVID-19 pandemic and was as positively reviewed by participants as earlier in-person programs.

Partner schools work to identify the best local social work supervision experts and faculty scholars to lead the program’s workshops. Instructors design their workshops upon a framework of common learning objectives and are provided additional centralized support and curricular materials from the Social Work Practice Fellows team. Additional educational offerings and networking opportunities are available to the program’s growing alumni network.

If you are a university interested in becoming a Social Work Practice Fellow partner, please fill out the form.

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Become a Fellow: Enhance Your Skills and Join Our Peer Network

There is little information or training on supervision offered to social work students, yet early-career social workers are often promoted to supervisory roles in the organizations in which they practice. There are few continuing education programs addressing social work supervision. Many social work supervisors report feeling isolated in their professional roles. These challenges illustrate a clear need for supervision-focused education, professional development, and networking.

Social Work Practice Fellows was created as an innovative effort to fill this gap in an intensive interactive setting. This sophisticated continuing education program for social work supervisors capitalizes on a distinct conceptual framework for confronting the problems of population-focused and setting-specific silos of social work practice. Social Work Practice Fellows is unique in both its curriculum and content while building upon previously established models of effective educational approaches.

As a fellow, you will enhance and broaden your supervision skillset.

Curriculum

This workshop teaches new supervisors and updates those who are experienced about the range of skills involved in individual and group supervision in an array of service contexts. Supervisors are guided in structuring regularly scheduled supervisory sessions in accordance with the learning styles of supervisees and the appropriate use of individual versus group meetings. Emphasis is placed on supporting staff in self-assessment with careful attention to diversity, inclusion, and equity issues within the service context.

Learning Objectives (Supervisory Best Practices):

  1. Structure regularly scheduled supervisory sessions in accordance with the learning styles of supervisees
  2. Support supervisees in self-assessment and planning to advance their practice strengths, address challenges, and develop as professionals
  3. Teach supervisees to use an “evidence-informed” approach to empirically evaluating practice
  4. Model the behavior of striving for professional competence through ongoing education, supervision, and self-care
  5. Structure group supervision sessions focused on common practice themes and situations (e.g., ethical dilemmas)
  6. Utilize social work group facilitation skills to promote group process during group supervision

This workshop focuses on trauma-informed supervision through a social justice lens, an approach to supervision that begins with the personal and extends to the professional. Personal histories, identities, characteristics and psychological experiences of supervisors, as well as structural and environmental conditions of the organization, are considered in supervision. This perspective promotes the role of the supervisor as a leader in establishing a culture within their team that is responsive to and inclusive of the positionalities and unique experiences of clients and colleagues. Supervisors are encouraged to remain vigilant in their commitment to social justice by leading their teams and organizations in achieving truly inclusive diversity.

Learning Objectives (Supervisory Best Practices):

  1. Draw upon social work values to enact my commitment to social justice in my role as a leader within my organization
  2. Shape my interactions with supervisees by accounting for our positionalities and unique experiences
  3. Partner with my supervisees to critically discuss the culture of our organization
  4. In supervision, reflect on implicit bias and how it impacts the supervisory relationship and work with clients
  5. Seek knowledge and consultation to better understand my positionality and the impact my identity has on the supervisory relationship
  6. Discuss with supervisees the applications of trauma-informed perspectives in supervision and practice

This workshop offers the supervisor a multi-dimensional framework for teaching the practice skills required in work with individuals and families of all ages through the assessment and planning phases. Included are a review of the core content areas that need to be addressed in assessing the client/family situation including both strengths and challenges; the critical thinking required in collecting client data; and the ability to organize, interpret, and summarize these data. Supervisors will be encouraged to use interactive training techniques to teach the interviewing and communication skills that engage the client and family in assessment and planning. The special skills involved in working with the family as a social system will be discussed, as will the influence of the worker’s own cultural background on assessment and planning.

Learning Objectives (Supervisory Best Practices):

  1. Use a social work assessment/planning framework as a teaching tool to guide supervisees in direct practice with individuals and families
  2. Encourage critical thinking on the part of supervisees in the collection, organization, and summarization of client data
  3. Emphasize with supervisees the importance of documenting and supporting client strengths and setting measurable and attainable goals
  4. Help supervisees recognize the influence of their own background on the assessment process and be cognizant of the ethical dilemmas they may face
  5. Facilitate interactive training among supervisees on interviewing and communication skills that promote effective collaboration with clients and other stakeholders
  6. Emphasize with supervisees the importance of a family systems approach both in assessment and in planning

This workshop teaches supervisors how to support staff in planning to meet the needs of clients with mental illnesses and substance use across the life course. Included are supervisory considerations for supporting social service workers in the ongoing assessment of mental disorder symptoms and their potential impacts on clients and their families, building understanding of effective practice models as supported by research evidence, appreciating the complex nature of self-determination, and the intersections of these issues with cultural diversity.

Learning Objectives (Supervisory Best Practices):

  1. Encourage and partner with supervisees in reviewing symptoms of relevant mental look disorders and their potential impacts on clients and their families
  2. Support supervisees in the ongoing assessment of signs and symptoms of mental illness, substance use, and trauma among clients and their families
  3. Guide and partner with supervisees to evaluate how our beliefs on mental illness and substance use influence our ethical practice
  4. Assist supervisees in planning for how they can help to meet the needs of clients with mental illnesses or substance use (who often require more effort, time, advanced planning, and skill from their social service providers)
  5. Work with colleagues and social service teams to identify effective models of service delivery for clients with mental illness or substance use that are supported by contemporary research literature and which fit with agency goals and structures
  6. Support supervisees in addressing the complex nature of self-determination, accounting for legal status, age, and neurodiversity

This workshop helps supervisors to support social service staff in using evidence-informed approaches to common illness-related challenges that confront individuals and families across the life course. Included are supervisory considerations for supporting social service workers in helping clients with care transitions, acute health crises, management of chronic conditions, navigating health and long-term care systems, and the intersections of these issues with cultural diversity. Supervisors explore techniques for supporting teams in service planning, health education, and health advocacy.

Learning Objectives (Supervisory Best Practices):

  1. Review with supervisees the common illness-related challenges that confront individuals and families across the life course (including care transitions, acute health crises, and navigating health and long-term care service systems)
  2. Support supervisees in the ongoing assessment of client health and illness, especially for clients with heightened vulnerability due to late-life frailty, neurological disorders, and co-occurring chronic conditions
  3. Encourage and partner with supervisees to seek contemporary literature to better understand the health challenges confronted by clients and their families (including chronic conditions, developmental disabilities, and acquired disabilities)
  4. Assist supervisees in assessing and planning to meet the health needs of their clients through client interviews, reviews of available client data, and the introduction of acceptable new measures
  5. Help supervisees to prepare for providing culturally-informed health education to clients and their families
  6. Support supervisees in empowering and joining with clients in health advocacy

Along with a 3-hour shortened module focus on health challenges (see above), partner schools will design or adopt an additional 3-hour module to address a supervision skillset that is of interest in the local practice community.  If adopting a module developed by one of the current partner schools, this may include either of the following:

Teaching and Implementing Self-Care and Professional Resilience

This workshop will assist supervisors in operationalizing the recent revisions to NASW’s Code of Ethics (2021) regarding professional self-care as it pertains to themselves, their supervisees, and their organizations. The global nature of vicarious trauma as well as the increase in exposure to trauma and its related impacts necessitate a fresh look at past, current and future self-care models to create actionable yet realistic plans. Learners will participate in a range of experiential activities focusing on stress mitigation, embodiment, reflection and nervous system regulation in addition to the exploration of evidence-based research on measures to reduce the impacts of stress, increase adoption of self-care practices, and reduce burnout symptoms.

Learning Objectives (Supervisory Best Practices)

  1. Assist supervisees in understanding NASW’s code of ethics (2021) as it pertains to the dynamic processes and impacts of burnout, compassion fatigue, and secondary traumatic stress
  2. Guide and partner with supervisees in identifying their own self-care strengths and challenges
  3. Engage in action planning for increased resilience in the personal, professional, supervisory, and organizational domains of practice

Advancing Supervisory Skills in Responding to Children and Families in Crisis

This workshop seeks to help social work supervisors to support staff working with children and families in crisis using various supervision models.  Supervisors will learn to guide their staff in assessing the diverse needs, strengths, and limitations of their clients. The workshop will also explore techniques to support staff in ethical practice and effective communication with children, family members and family groups.

Learning Objectives (Supervisory Best Practices):

  1. Support supervisees in understanding and recognizing signs and symptoms of mental illness in children and adolescents
  2. Teach supervisees to comprehensively assess the needs of children and their families in crisis
  3. Engage supervisees in collaborating with interprofessional teams to engage appropriate systems in response to clients’ needs
  4. Guide supervisees in developing effective communication with children and their families
  5. Support supervisees to use culturally informed, ethical, and equitable approaches to working with children and their families
  6. Assist supervisees in navigating complex issues of confidentiality and mandated reporting in service to children and families

This workshop highlights challenges supervisors may face including supervisees’ performance problems, organizational challenges, and ethical dilemmas in practice. Supervisors will collaborate in exploring strategies for addressing these challenges and promoting worker self-care to strengthen worker wellness and retention. Participants will seek to integrate lessons learned throughout the program.

Learning Objectives (Supervisory Best Practices):

  1. Communicate clearly and directly with supervisees about performance problems
  2. Teach and partner with supervisees to recognize and respond to ethical dilemmas
  3. Guide and partner with supervisees to identify practices which promote wellness among staff
  4. Engage in my own supervision and ongoing professional development
  5. Provide leadership within the organization to create a culture where supervision is sanctioned and necessary resources are allocated to assure staff learning
  6. Assist supervisees in understanding their roles and the roles of other team members, administrators, and clients in achieving collective and individual goals

Our Past Funders

  • The Health Foundation of Western and Central New York
  • The Florence V. Burden Foundation

Current Partner Schools

Social Work Practice Fellows partners with universities to deliver the program to social work supervisors serving their local communities.

  • Adelphi University, School of Social Work
  • Loyola University Chicago, School of Social Work
  • Syracuse University, Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics
  • University of Connecticut, School of Social Work

Social Work Practice Fellows (SWPF) Leadership Team

  • Daniel B. Kaplan, PhD, Director
  • Barbara Silverstone, PhD, Co-Director
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Location
Social Work Building, 240
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