Clinical Supervision
Supervision is more than oversight. It is a space for growth, reflection, and the development of your clinical voice.
Whether you are early in your training or deepening your work as an associate clinician, supervision offers an opportunity to slow down, think systemically, and engage your work with intention. It is where theory becomes lived practice, and where your identity as a therapist continues to take shape.
At Be Rooted Therapy, supervision is grounded in both clinical rigor and relational depth. We approach supervision as a collaborative process that supports skill development, ethical decision-making, and self-of-the-therapist awareness.
Our Approach to Supervision
Our supervision model integrates:
Systemic and Relational Supervision Models
Viewing clinical work through a systemic lens, including family dynamics, cultural context, and relational patterns.Developmental Models of Supervision (Stoltenberg & McNeill)
Tailoring supervision to your level of development, supporting growth from structure to autonomy.Reflective Supervision Practices
Creating space to explore emotional responses, countertransference, and the use of self in therapy.Culturally Responsive and Anti-Oppressive Frameworks
Attending to power, identity, and context within both the therapy room and the supervisory relationship.
What Supervision May Include
Case consultation grounded in systemic conceptualization
Integration of theory into clinical practice
Support with documentation, treatment planning, and diagnosis
Ethical and legal decision-making
Exploration of therapist identity and use of self
Preparation for licensure and professional development
Who This Is For
Associate licensed therapists (LMFT-A, LPC-A, etc.)
Graduate-level trainees and interns
Clinicians seeking a relational and systemic supervision space
The Goal of Supervision
The goal is not just competency, but confidence, clarity, and integrity in your clinical work. Supervision is a place where you are supported in becoming a therapist who is both grounded in theory and responsive to the complexity of human experience.