Style differences of beginning supervisors: An interactional analysis. |
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Authors: | Holloway, Elizabeth L. Wolleat, Patricia L. |
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Abstract: | An interactional analysis system, A. Blumberg's (1970) system for analyzing supervisor–teacher interaction (BIA), adopted from research in teacher education, was used to characterize beginning supervisory style. Two dimensions were considered: (a) the amount of variance in supervisory interaction behaviors in a group of beginning supervisors and (b) the stability of interactional behavior of individuals across 2 interviews, each with 2 trainees. 24 supervision interviews, each with 2 trainees from each of 12 beginning doctoral students, were videotaped and later analyzed with the BIA. A repeated measures 2-way ANOVA was used to analyze the BIA scores. Results indicate that the interview content differed significantly between supervisors on 7 of the 11 BIA variables and that individuals differed significantly across 2 interviews on 3 of the variables. It is concluded that beginning supervisors have individual predilections for supervisory behaviors that are stable across interviews with different trainees. (8 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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