The ICF continues to explore and expand its support for
Group Coaching Supervision: Benefits, Challenges, and Strategies - International Coaching Federation
This session will focus on how coaches can leverage this powerful support as they partner with clients in challenging times.
The session outlines how supervision supports coaches the following ways:
- Provides a confidential and reflective space to examine their ways of being as a coach.
- Partners with individuals to explore developmental coaching needs.
- Ensures coaches have a space to examine their emotions and reactions as they coach others in complex situations
- Provides a safe space for practitioners to navigate ethical coaching dilemmas.
- Works with coaches to ensure the quality of their practice is in service to their clients.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand how supervision provides growth opportunities and a deepening of practice.
- Explore the distinctions between coach supervision and coach mentoring
- Time to discuss ethical challenges and what makes a client difficult.
Presenter's Bio
Carrie Arnold, PhD, MCC, lives in Denver, Colorado, and is a faculty member for the Evidence-Based Coaching program at Fielding Graduate University. Carrie obtained her coach training at Georgetown University. She is an MCC and an accredited Coach Supervisor. She holds a B.A. in Psychology, an M.A. in Organizational Management, and a Ph.D. in Human Development. She is author of
Silenced and Sidelined: How women leaders find their voices and break barriers, and she runs her own coaching and consulting business, The Willow Group.
Carrie is passionate about helping professional coaches be their best selves in service to their clients.
Read more about her here:
About - The Willow Group
LinkedIn:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/carriearnold6/
Email:
carriearnold@willow-group.com