- News
- About Us
- Membership
- Resources
- NP training/ practicum
- International Nurses Day 2020
- State of the World’s Nursing report
- COVID-19 Resources
- Continuing Nursing Education CNE - Goodfellow Unit
- Continuing Nursing Education (CNE) Template
- CNA(NZ) Press Releases
- Endorsement Application Form
- Guidelines and Professional Position statements
- Healthy People Healthy Planet
- Interim Report of the Health & Disability System Review
- IQN Orientation Guidelines
- Links of Interest
- Managing Bullying & Fostering Health Work In Nursing
- National Nursing Consortium
- National Nursing Leaders Group Repository
- Understanding bias - Wiki Haumaru Tūroro | Patient Safety Week 2019
- Ngā aratohu maimoa hauwarea | Frailty care guides
- Nursing Praxis in NZ
- Primary Health Care Resources
- Professional Support Guides
- RHANZ
- Self Employment
- Submissions
- Te Puawai - Read Online
- Te Puawai Archives
- Workshops
- NPNZ
- NPNZ Conference 2024 Awards
- NP training/ practicum
- NPNZ Conference 2019
- Meet the Executive
- Terms of Reference
- Members List
- MoH Primary Care Program (Mental Health & Addictions)
- Join NPNZ
- NPNZ Forum
- NPNZ Executive Forum
- What is a NP?
- Do you want to become an NP in New Zealand?
- Information for Employers
- Scholarships Available
- Supervisors for NP Interns Resource Toolkit
- Examples of NP Job Descriptions & Business Case Proposals
- Research
- NP Resources
- Frequently Asked Questions for NPs
- Submissions
- NPNZ Minutes -members only
- Pānui
- NPNZ Useful Documents
- Nurse Practitioners in the News
- Job Vacancies
- Conferences & Events
- Social Media
- Nursing Praxis
What is supervision?
Supervision is a regular, ongoing relational practice that provides practitioners with a safe space for reflection: harnessing what goes well; unpacking challenges; developing professional goals; and recognising connections and strategies to resource and sustain self-care and care ethics. Fundamental to supervision is recognition that safe practice begins with self-awareness. Culturally safe supervision in Aotearoa includes the capacity to work in partnership with Māori, with awareness of te Tiriti o Waitangi, Māori health, (in)equities, and social justice.
Who is this course for?
The course is designed to enable nurses, NPs and other health professionals who already have a strong grounding in their profession to be able to offer supervision to colleagues. The course is most suited to those who value empathic and courageous conversations and who want to support others in their career development.
What’s this course about?
This two-day highly interactive short course provides a community of supportive practice to explore a toolkit that equips health professionals with frameworks and key communication skills to facilitate professional supervision. The confidential small group context provides an excellent opportunity to experiment with all the components of supervision. This course does not include role-plays (acting out imagined scenarios) –participants in pairs share anonymised real-life situations. Participants are provided with a soft-copy manual and are emailed relevant readings. This two-day short course with the additional readings amounts to 22 hours of professional development. A Certificate of Completion will be issued.
DATE & LOCATION
27 & 28 February 2025
West Plaza, 110 Wakefield Street, Te Aro, Wellington 6011
8.45am - 4pm
Cost: $800 including gst covers morning and afternoon tea and lunch
*College member rate $750 including gst
SUPERVISION LEARNING OUTCOMES
Through participation in this course, you will be able to:
Cultivate an optimal relational climate for supervision
Facilitate critical reflection in supervision
Draw on strengths-based approaches and appreciative inquiry
Integrate activities that explore all dimensions of supervision practice
Identify the scope and boundaries of the supervisory role
Critically reflect on te Tiriti o Waitangi, Māori health, diversity, and social justice within professional supervision practice
Identify the importance of Kaupapa Māori supervision and cultural supervision
Connect the significance of professional regulation to supervision
ABOUT THE FACILITATOR
CATHERINE COOK (SHE/HER)
RN, RM, PhD M.Counselling
Catherine identifies as a Pākehā on a tangata Tiriti journey. After decades of clinical practice as a nurse, midwife, and counsellor she moved to an academic role and is currently an Associate Professor, teaching and researching in the School of Clinical Sciences at AUT. She has a strong interest in care ethics, human factors in healthcare and the role of critical reflection in enhancing communication and service-user safety. She has decades of experience providing professional supervision to a range of health professionals as part of her consultancy work. These supervision workshops, offered numerous times, have been evolving since 2014. Her commitment to adult teaching and learning principles ensures that this short course provides an engaging and supportive environment full of practice opportunities. Catherine’s facilitation approach to learning embraces the tuakana-teina concept, where we are all co-learners and co-teachers journeying together.