Multicultural Orientation in Psychotherapy Supervision: Cultural Humility, Cultural Comfort, and Cultural Opportunities
Abstract
Issues in Multicultural Competence and Orientation
Is Multicultural Competence Enough?
MCO as Attitudes Additive
MCO and Psychotherapy Supervision
Reasoning by Analogy
MCO in Psychotherapy
Defining MCO
Why MCO Matters
Assumptions Underlying the MCO Perspective
The Three Components of MCO
MCO Research: What Do the Data Say?
MCO in Psychotherapy Supervision: Conceptualization and Application
The formal provision, by approved supervisors, of a relationship-based education and training that is work focused and which manages, supports, develops, and evaluates the work of colleague/s [and trainees]. The main methods that supervisors use are corrective feedback on the supervisee’s performance, teaching, and collaborative goal-setting. Supervision’s objectives are “normative” (e.g., quality control), “restorative” (e.g., encourage emotional processing), and “formative” (e.g., maintaining and facilitating supervisees’ competence, capability, and general effectiveness).
Defining MCO-S
Why MCO-S Matters
Assumptions Underlying the MCO-S Perspective
The Three Components of MCO-S
Cultural humility.
Cultural comfort.
Cultural opportunities.
A synergistic collective.
Two Supervision Case Examples
Case 1. Cultural Humility, Cultural Comfort, and Cultural Opportunities
Participants and setting.
Description of events.
Client: My girlfriend doesn’t seem to give me any room to be myself, and I don’t want to be in a situation that I don’t feel myself.
Therapist/Supervisee: That sounds really hard. To feel pressure to be someone that isn’t true to yourself.
Client: YES! I want to feel free, and she just doesn’t get me.
Therapist/Supervisee: I wonder if this feeling of being pressured to be “not you” is familiar?
Client: Well, yes, I feel like many people want me to be something different than what I am. My parents don’t understand why I am not dating a man—like I used to do. My friends feel like me dating a white person is also a thing. . . they never liked her either.
Supervisor: So, you stopped the recording here, what is going on for you? [A cultural opportunity is opened for discussion.]
Therapist/Supervisee: I am having a strong reaction about being pressured to be something that one is not. [Supervisee displays cultural comfort in sharing with supervisor.]
Supervisor: You are following the client’s narrative very well, and I am also interested in understanding your reaction. Do you feel comfortable to say more? [Gently facilitating cultural opportunity exploration, supervisor gauges supervisee cultural comfort in saying more.]
Therapist/Supervisee: I do, thanks. . . and I struggle with similar issues in my life. . . with my parents, and friends. I worry that is coming through here? [Supervisee cultural comfort leads to further treatment-specific sharing about countertransference concerns.]
Supervisor: I appreciate your concern, your own self-awareness, and that you are reacting in a way that is personal. All of this is normal and useful for helping this client and in finding your own voice as a therapist. [Supervisor normalizes both client and supervisee struggles and displays cultural humility.] I wonder what is sticking out to you in your reaction. [Supervisor continues focus on rendering cultural opportunity more concrete.]
Therapist/Supervisee: Yeah, I am not sure, can we replay the video?
Supervisor: Yes, of course, please stop the video when you first feel your internal reaction.
Therapist/Supervisee: OK, I think it comes down to this. I most identify with her with regard to parental disapproval, because her narrative triggers within me recollections of my own parents’ disapproval—them often wanting to know why I’m not married yet, often asking when is that going to happen. I feel that pressure, and it hurts. [Supervisee making most of cultural opportunity, clarifying via cultural comfort.]
Supervisor: Sure, very insightful. Again, I really appreciate your openness and willingness to push through with this. How might you be able to use your own feelings, your own understandings about your personal circumstances, to bring further clarity and understanding to the treatment situation with your client? [Supervisor specifically expanding realized cultural opportunity to therapy encounter.]
Case comments.
Case 2. Missed Opportunity and Cultural Discomfort
Participants and setting.
Description of events.
Case comments.
Empirical Possibilities for MCO-S Research
Conclusions
References
Information & Authors
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Keywords
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Competing Interests
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