“This book is well-written, well-organized, and presented in a rational and systematic manner. The subject matter of the book is well-grounded in theory and a superb analysis of the literature is presented. The literature review is comprehensive, well-integrated, and provides a substantive synthesis of a voluminous body of published material. It makes important contributions to professional supervision practice and research in human service organizations.”

—Roosevelt Wright, Jr., Ph.D., University of Oklahoma

“Graduate students, upper level undergraduate students, and college-educated practitioners would find this text both accessible and interesting. The discussion questions at the ends of the chapters are very helpful in further allowing immediate application of the ideas that were presented. It is a well-designed and well-written text.”

—Miriam Johnson, University of South Carolina

Supervision as Collaboration in the Human Services: Building a Learning Culture integrates the latest thinking in the human services to provide supervisors and those preparing to become supervisors with a new approach to the important skills and knowledge needed for effective practice in the 21st century. While it builds upon past efforts to define the principles and practices of supervision in the human services, it seeks to chart new territory that reflects the changing nature of organizational life. Supervision as Collaboration in the Human Services uses a framework that features the key aspects of a learning culture, the process of organizational learning, and the roles that supervisors can play in transforming traditional human service organizations into learning organizations. Chapter authors are authorities in their respective areas of practice and have shaped their chapters around this framework.

The editors have divided the experientially focused chapters into sections that feature the collaborative and interactional nature of supervision, the managerial nature of the supervisory role, the analytic nature of supervisory practice, and the unique practice settings that affect the nature of supervision. The chapters include case vignettes and discussion questions.

This book is ideally suited as an essential core text for graduate and undergraduate students of social work and counseling, as well as a much-needed reference for human services supervisors and practitioners.

Defining the Learning Organization

Defining the learning organization
Michael J.AustinKaren M.Hopkins

This chapter begins with the concepts used to describe learning organizations and learning cultures and identifies the key functions and core tasks of learning organizations. The chapter concludes with a discussion of supervisory roles and skills that are examined more closely in subsequent chapters. The current business management literature emphasizes the concepts and practices of knowledge management and its interrelated components, learning organizations and organizational learning. These concepts and practices are beginning to emerge in the nonprofit management literature and are espoused in some human service organizations (Bies, 2002; Cherin, 1998; Hawkins & Shohet, 2000; Lewis, Lewis, Packard, & Souflee, 2001; Lipshitz & Popper, 2000). Many organizations are adopting an organizational learning framework as a response ...

  • Loading...
locked icon

Sign in to access this content

Get a 30 day FREE TRIAL

  • Watch videos from a variety of sources bringing classroom topics to life
  • Read modern, diverse business cases
  • Explore hundreds of books and reference titles