The importance of mindfulness-based supervision for teachers
Alison Evans, Executive Director and Supervision Lead for the Oxford Mindfulness Centre’s supervision partners, the Mindfulness Network, draws upon her experience as a supervisee, supervisor, MBS trainer and researcher, to ask 'in what ways does MBS support teaching mindfulness?'
Mindfulness-based Supervision
Supervision and ongoing engagement with a personal mindfulness practice are named as the two key elements of good practice in the paper “What defines mindfulness-based programs? The warp and the weft.” Supervision is also named as part of ongoing good practice in mindfulness teacher guidelines e.g., Good Practice Guidelines set out by the British Association of Mindfulness-Based Approaches (BAMBA).
As a teacher begins to put what they have been learning through personal mindfulness practice and training into teaching – MBS is the space with the help of another to explore teaching and continue to build competence and confidence.
“… somebody who’s giving you pointers to really look to see what it means actually on the ground as you’re investigating.”
MBS is often a 1:1 relationship allowing for an in-depth inquiry into many different aspects of teaching. Supervisees can begin to apply what has been learned in their practice and training. They can get up close to their experience of teaching.
“The training is vastly important. But in terms of perspective, the training is broad, and the focus of the supervision is narrow but in a good sense, the spotlight rather than the floodlight.”
The What
There are many different aspects of teaching that are supported through MBS. Usually, the place that supervisees need to begin is learning the What of teaching – all the nuts and bolts, such as what to do when guiding a practice, what to do when facilitating an exercise, what timings to use, what fits where? – and many more questions as they begin to get a feel for the shape of the mindfulness-based program.
The How
Another core dimension of learning is the How – How to be in relationship with participants, how to embody the attitudinal foundations, how to stay steady in the midst of …? This way of being as a teacher is often a shift from how we have been in other roles in our life. It takes time to discover. The way that the supervisor embodies these dimensions and creates an atmosphere of patience and non-striving can allow the unfolding discovery of the How. Mindfulness practice within MBS and personal practice supports this shift to being.
The Why
Although mindfulness courses are taught with a strong lean towards the experiential, teachers still need to learn more about the Why of being a Mindfulness Teacher – why am I teaching in this way? – coming to know the intentions of the different aspects of the curriculum, knowing the links the theoretical underpinnings, why teach in this way? – knowing the pedagogy of mindfulness-based teaching.
Research participants perceived MBS to be a helpful part of learning and development as a mindfulness-based teacher, and they gave examples of how it helped with reassurance, checking, suggestions, resources, knowing the programme and discussing difficult moments. It supported growing confidence and finding their own authentic ways of teaching, to support all those who come to mindfulness-based courses. The process of an embodied relational inquiry was named as a pivotal process of MBS.
“… the embodied dialogue, the inquiry process, that experience of someone holding the space and facilitating a process of noticing direct experience, inquiring into what’s happening, what’s unfolding … what it feels like to trust in that process unfolding.”
The Mindfulness Network
Our supervision partners, the Mindfulness Network, have a range of supervisors who can support you with your mindfulness teaching at whatever stage of training or post-training you are at. You can search for available supervisors by the mindfulness-based programme you are teaching, the population you teach or the language spoken. View their database and find a supervisor here.
Over many years they have developed and facilitated mindfulness-based supervision training, in association with Bangor University. This training, which introduces a mindfulness-based supervision framework, is held online over three days and usually across two separate cohorts each year, subject to the number of applicants.
Learn more about supervision with the Mindfulness Network here.
Written by Alison Evans, Executive Director and Supervision Lead for the Oxford Mindfulness Centre’s supervision partners the Mindfulness Network