FreeVideoSupervision
Explaining the why turns supervision from a checklist into training
When you say what you're observing and why, supervision becomes training that builds reasoning — not a silent checklist that breeds anxiety.
Unexplained supervision raises a technician's anxiety, lowers honesty, and trains them to follow instructions instead of building clinical reasoning. The fix is three pieces named out loud before the observation: the skill you're watching, why it matters for this child, and what you'll do with what you see. The episode gives a worked example for intraverbal targets — "I want to see if the prompt hierarchy is still working at this level, and after we'll decide together whether to keep it or change it." Press play for the full 60 seconds and steal the script.