Affiliation:
1. Department of Counselor Education and Family Studies Liberty University Lynchburg Virginia USA
Abstract
AbstractCorrective feedback can be a difficult endeavor in supervision. This article focuses on the following six principles of humanistic education that can facilitate corrective feedback: a nonthreatening environment, affective bias, self‐evaluation, connectedness, self‐determination, and personal growth orientation. These principles offer a framework for providing culturally sensitive supervision and corrective feedback. Implications for counseling supervision are included.