ANTHROPOLOGICALLY CENTRED SUPERVISION IN THE CONTEXT OF THE PERSON-CENTRED PARADIGM OF SOCIAL WORK
Volume 92, Issue 1 (2024), pp. 181–192
Pub. online: 19 July 2024
Type: Article
Open Access
Published
19 July 2024
19 July 2024
Abstract
The article is devoted to the anthropologically centred supervision of social field specialists. The concept of supervision is based on the patristic anthropology of the Church, which is fundamentally person-centred in any professional activity. This approach to supervision is very modern, as it resonates with the current professional paradigm shift from a profession-centred approach to a person/client-centred approach. The article presents quantitative research, with the aim of showing the expediency of person-centred supervision from the attitude of social workers. It analyses the main methodological principles of person-centred (the author uses the term ‘anthropologically centred’) supervision, and their application in supervision: 1) the concept of a person; 2) the term ‘personality development’ or personality transformation; 3) the factor of high-quality communication or reciprocity.