Measuring competence in systemic practice: development of the ‘Systemic Family Practice – Systemic Competency Scale’ (SPS)
Published online on October 25, 2018
Abstract
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- "\n\nEnsuring that practitioners are competent in the therapies they deliver is
important for training, therapeutic outcomes and ethical practice. The development
of the Systemic Practice Scale (SPS) is reported – a measure to assess the competence
of students as trialed by Children and Young Person's Improving Access to Psychological
Therapies (CYP‐IAPT) training courses. Initial reliability assessment of the SPS
with twenty‐eight supervisors of systemic practice evaluating students’ competence
using an online recording of a family therapy session is detailed. The SPS was found
to be a reliable measure of systemic competence across training settings. Rating
variability was noted, with training and benchmarking to improve rating consistency
recommended. Further research using the SPS to further establish the reliability
and validity of the scale is required.\n\n\nPractitioner points\n\n\n\nSPS represents
an important tool, particularly for the supervision and development of more junior
staff or students\n\nInitial reliability for use of the SPS as a formative tool
has been established. Further benchmarking is required if using the tool in a summative
manner \n\n\n\n"
- Journal of Family Therapy, EarlyView.