24-25 April, 2015 Károli Gáspár University Budapest, VIII. Reviczky str. 4.
Inspire and be inspired!
We are very happy to report that ANSE (Association for National Organisations of Supervision in Europe) in cooperation with
KRE – Károli-Gáspár University of the Reformed Church, Budapest, MSZCT (Hungarian Association of Supervisors and Supervisor-Coaches) and DGSv (Deutsche Gesselschaft für Supervision e.V., Germany) organized a highly successful International Research Conference on Supervision and Coaching. The event took place in Budapest, in the main building of KRE Faculty of Humanities.
How important research on supervision and coaching is hardly needs explanation. All over Europe, supervisors and coaches – as well as their clients and constituents – feel the need to strengthen the evidence base of their trade, and so to enhance its credibility, reliability and legitimacy. And not to forget: to raise the quality of our practice.
What was our purpose?
To present researchers, scholars, practitioners and board members in the field of supervision and coaching an opportunity to meet and be informed about past current and future research on supervision and coaching in different European countries.
To present contributors a platform to exchange, discuss and debate their experiences with design, methodology and findings of their respective research programs.
To enhance the cross border knowledge base of research on supervision and coaching, and to enable participants to network.
Contributors and participants arrived from 14 countries (Austria, Czech Republic, Estonia, Germany, Greece, Georgia, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Netherlands, Norway, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland).
During the two days of the conference 22 contributors presented the results of their most relevant researches. After the presentations there had been time also to answer questions, share reflections and ideas.
Participants found the conference a great opportunity to meet, get to know each other’s most recent works and establish new international cooperation.
ANSE is planning to publish a book of the Conference’s presentations.
Organising Committee:
Barbara Baumann (ANSE board member)
Brigitte Greißler-Piltz (DGSv President)
Eva Nemes (ANSE board member, KRE, MSZCT)
Sijtze de Roos (ANSE President)
Detailed program of the ANSE Research Conference
Presentations of the ANSE Reserarch Conference
Presentation on Friday
Brigitte Schigl, Austria – The Complexity of Supervision Research: Risks and Side effects of Supervision
Heidemarie Müller-Riedlhuber, Austria – How do we describe what we are doing? Supervision and Coaching in the context of European competence orientation
Tone Haugs, Norway – The use of Essay as a tool in supervisors professional development
Kristine Martinsone, Latvia – Supervision in different professional groups in Latvia: results of a pilot study
Carmen Wolf , Germany – Pattern states in coaching and changing them in self-ecoaching
Maja Drazic, Slovenia – Supervision as an Appropriate Form of Internal Monitoring within European Union Cooperation Development Projects
Marketa Vanclová, Czech Republic – Clinical supervision challenging the nursing environment?
Zuzana Havrdová, Czech Republic – Supervision in the Czech Republic
Brigita Rupar, Slovenia – Effects of the Supervision Process on Teachers’ Selfregulation
Tiina Merkuljeva, Estonia – Supervision experience and expectation of child protection workers in Estonian municipalities
Ola Ravndal Bjørnestad, Norway – Supervisory challenges in Norwegian public healthcare surroundings
Jutta Müller, Elmar Schwedhelm, Germany – The potential of video-interaction-analysis in coaching and consulting of teams
Presentation on Saturday
Frank Austermann, Germany – Do acceleration and boundless work lead to an accelerated and boundless coaching?
Silja Kotte, Germany – Research and Practice in Coaching and Supervision: How to Build on an Ambivalent Relationship?
Katrin Oellerich, Heidi Möller, Germany – Negative effects of coaching and their causes from the perspective of organizations
Heidi Möller, Denise Schubert, Germany – Why do coaches (not) participate in coaching research?
Volker J. Walpuski, Germany – ‘Always on’ – Dealing with a Constant Availability
Anja Appel, Austria – Supervision and Coaching in Non-Govermental Development Organizations
Yasmin Aksu, Germany – Using the micro-level perspective of conversation analysis to improve communication in supervision
Katalin Hankovszky, Hungary/Switzerland – Understanding of learning in a “new profession”: coach on their own learning
Noah Artner, Austria – Research Methods and Results of Masterthesis on Supervision-Subjects (poster presentation / poster