Guild supervision leaflet 2015 - the Guild of Psychotherapists

Guild supervision leaflet 2015 2_Guild leaflet final 15/03/2015 18:22 Page 1
Course Leader and Lecturers
Heather Pryce (Course Leader) came from a
medical background to train at the Guild of
Psychotherapists. She ran a psychosexual
counselling service for 8 years and still works in the
NHS. Additionally she has a private practice and
supervises for a number of therapy organisations.
Helen Morgan is a Fellow of the British
Psychotherapy Foundation; past chair of the British
Association of Psychotherapists and a training
analyst for the Jungian Analytic association within
the British Psychotherapy Foundation. She has
published a number of analytical papers.
Fiona Palmer Barnes is an analytical psychologist
in Bath, having recently moved from Herefordshire.
She teaches and provides supervision groups
within the NHS and private hospitals. In 1998 her
book Complaints & Grievances in Psychotherapy
was published by Routledge. She was Chair of
ethics for UKCP 1997–2001. She co-edited “Values
& Ethics in the Practice of psychotherapy &
Counselling” (2001) and wrote Ethics in Supervision
(“Vision and Supervision” 2009)
Lesley Murdin is a teacher, lecturer and supervisor
with a psychoanalytic psychotherapy practice in
Cambridge. Her books include How Much is
Enough? (2000) on endings in psychotherapy,
Setting Out (2000) on beginnings, Understanding
Transference (2010) and How Money Talks. She has
recently published her book Managing Difficult
Endings. An honorary fellow of UKCP, she was
National director of WPF therapy and is now
chair of the psychoanalytic section of the FPC.
Charles Brown trained at the Guild of
Psychotherapists and subsequently in supervision.
He works within a therapeutic community with men
and women who are in emotional, psychological
and social difficulties. He has a private practice
in South London and supervises groups and
individuals in a variety of settings. He is an
experienced addictions therapist.
David Richards is a psychodynamic
psychotherapist and supervisor. He has worked
extensively in the public and private sectors and
has particular experience of working with the LGBT
communities and with older adults. He has a wide
theoretical interest with particular focus on issues
of sexuality and identity.
Alan Corbett trained at the Guild of
Psychotherapists and the Portman Clinic, and
was previously director of Respond, and national
Clinical Director of the CARI (Children at Risk in
Ireland) Foundation. He works in private practice
and consults to organisations working in the field
of psychotherapy, training, sexual trauma and
intellectual disability. He wrote Disabling
Perversions: Forensic Psychotherapy with People
with Intellectual Disabilities (Karnac, 2014).
The Guild of Psychotherapists
47 Nelson Square
London SE1 0QA
t: 020 7401 3260
e: admin@guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk
www.guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk
Paul Gurney studied Philosophy & Politics at
Southampton University and Psychodynamic
Counselling at Goldsmiths’ College before training
as a psychoanalytic psychotherapist at the
Philadelphia Association. He is a member of the
Philadelphia Association & The Site.
Marie Maguire founded the Guild’s Supervision
Course and ran it for three years. She wrote Men,
Women, passion and Power: Gender Issues in
Psychotherapy (2004) and co-edited 2 other books.
including Psychotherapy with Women (1997). She
was on the Guild’s Training Committee for 17 years
and has a private practice as a psychoanalytic
psychotherapist and supervisor in South London.
Dr Stuart Stevenson is an organisational consultant
and psychoanalytic psychotherapist in private
practice. He consults to organisations around
conflict resolution, team processes, and the impact
of trauma and risk on organisational functioning.
He has researched and developed theory on the
impact of trauma and risk dynamics on professional
relationships.
Jean White is a psychoanalytic psychotherapist
and supervisor practising in London for well over
30 years. She lectures widely, both in London
(including the BJP Annual lecture 2007) and
internationally. She has published many journal
papers and a widely acclaimed book, Generation:
Preoccupations and Conflicts in Contemporary
Psychoanalysis (Routledge 2006).
Dr Deborah Wilde is a psychoanalytic
psychotherapist in private practice in Cambridge.
She trained with the Cambridge society for
Psychotherapy, after a number of years of teaching
and research in the biological sciences. She has
been a course tutor on the Postgraduate Diploma
in Counselling at Cambridge University.
The Guild of
Psychotherapists
Pluralist Supervision
Course for
Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapists
2015
Guild supervision leaflet 2015 2_Guild leaflet final 15/03/2015 18:22 Page 5
Pluralist Supervision Course for
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapists
Course Leader Heather Pryce
7 Saturdays from June 2015
to January 2016
27 June, 18 July, 12 September,
10 October, 14 November,
12 December, 16 January 2016
Times
27 June 9:30 – 4:45,
all other dates 10 – 4:45.
12 lectures
15 hours minimum individual
supervision of supervision
(to be paid for separately)
3 individual tutorials
Shared lunch
Small group supervision
Reading seminars
Optional 5,000 word essay
Fees
£1,575 for Guild members
£1,850 for students from other
organisations which includes 9
months’ membership of pepweb.
Fees exclude 15 hours individual
supervision of supervision (or
the equivalent in a group).
There is an administrative fee of
£75 for all applications.
Venue
The Guild of Psychotherapists
47 Nelson square, London SE1 0QA
The Course
Lectures
An innovative training,
concentrated into 7 days of
seminars, structured around
different theories about the history
and practice of psychoanalytic
supervision.
In-depth discussion of
transference, ethics, boundaries &
the constraints of working within
different settings.
Ongoing exploration of
differences including class, culture,
race and sexuality.
Emphasis on developing
practitioners’ own distinctive
supervisory style.
Suitable for experienced
supervisors and more recently
qualified clinicians.
Equips students to register with
the British Association of
Psychodynamic and Psychoanalytic
Supervisors. It is anticipated that
BAPPS will become an accrediting
member of UKCP & CPJA
Week 1: 27 June
Introduction; discussion on the
History of Psychoanalytic
Supervision
Heather Pryce
The Course Format
Each Saturday seminar: 2 morning
lectures or 1 longer presentation.
Afternoons: Small Supervision of
Supervision groups plus Reading
Group to study the psychoanalytic
literature on supervision.
Transference &
Countertransference in
Supervision: a Pluralist View
Jean White
Week 2: 18 July
Sexual Orientation & Identity
in Supervision
David Richards
Erotic & Perverse Transference
in Supervision
Marie Maguire
Week 3: 12 September
Supervision in an Organisational
Context
Stuart Stevenson
Parallel Process in Supervision
Deborah Wilde
Week 4: 10 October
The Effects of Difference of ‘Race’
& Colour in Supervision
Helen Morgan
Class in Supervision
Paul Gurney
Week 5: 14 November
Groups as a Medium of Supervision
Charles Brown
Supervision of non-Psychoanalytic
Workers
Alan Corbett
Week 6: 12 December
Ethics & Supervision
Fiona Palmer Barnes
Week 7: 16 January 2016
Endings in Supervision
Lesley Murdin
For further information and
application forms please contact
The Guild of Psychotherapists
47 Nelson Square
London SE1 0QA
t. 0207 401 3260
e. admin@guildof
psychotherapists.org.uk
Closing date for applications
31 May 2015