Clinical Supervision
For clinicians who are serious about the work — and serious about who they are becoming inside of it.
Clinical supervision is not simply a licensure requirement. At its best, it is the relationship that shapes who you become as a clinician — how you hold complexity, how you use yourself in the room, how you understand what is happening between you and the people you are trying to help.
I provide supervision that takes that seriously. I have 23 years of clinical experience across settings that most supervisees have not yet encountered — social services, healthcare, community mental health, inpatient, organizational leadership, and private practice. I have supervised clinicians at multiple career stages and across a wide range of specialty areas. I bring the same directness to supervision that I bring to clinical work: I will tell you what I observe, challenge the comfortable interpretation, and help you develop the internal architecture of a clinician who can hold difficult work without being undone by it.
I am particularly interested in supervising clinicians who are doing culturally affirming work — those working with BIPOC clients, immigrant populations, and communities that are underserved by mainstream mental health frameworks. I also supervise across a broad range of populations and presenting concerns. If you are uncertain whether my background is a good match for your clinical interests, the conversation itself will tell us.
Who I Work With
I provide clinical supervision for:
In New York: LMSW-licensed clinicians working toward their LCSW or LCSW-R designation.
In New Jersey: LSW-licensed clinicians working toward their LCSW.
In Washington State: LSWAIC-designated clinicians working toward their LICSW.
I work with clinicians across settings and career stages — private practice, community mental health, organizational contexts, and everything in between. I am a strong fit for those working with culturally complex populations, navigating trauma, family systems, identity, or relational dynamics — and for those who want supervision that actually shapes how they think, not just what they document.
I welcome clinicians who are still developing their clinical voice as much as those who are ready to refine one. What matters more than setting or specialty is a genuine appetite for the work — and a willingness to be challenged, not just supported.
If you are looking for meaningful engagement and real clinical development, let's talk. If hours and signatures are the primary goal, I am likely not the right fit.
Format
Individual Supervision
One-on-one sessions of 50–60 minutes, meeting weekly or bi-weekly depending on your hour requirements and caseload. Individual supervision provides close, consistent attention to your specific cases and your clinical development. This format counts toward licensure hours in all three states. In New Jersey, supervision must occur at minimum once per week for at least one hour — individual supervision fulfills this requirement directly.
Group Supervision
A small cohort of 4–6 clinicians meeting for 90 minutes bi-weekly. Group supervision offers the experience of learning from other clinicians' cases, developing systemic thinking, and building collegial relationships that sustain a career. It is more affordable than individual supervision and provides something individual supervision cannot: the dynamics of the group itself become a learning environment.
A note on state-specific group supervision rules: In New Jersey, group supervision groups may consist of up to four LSW supervisees. In Washington State, group supervision hours count toward the required 130 direct supervision hours. Group supervision cohorts at this practice are composed intentionally — not open enrollment — to ensure the group dynamic supports the work.
Documentation
I provide written verification of supervision hours, quarterly progress reports where required by state regulation, and maintain appropriate records for licensure purposes in all three states. New Jersey supervisees will receive the quarterly written progress reports to both supervisee and employer as required by N.J.A.C. 13:44G-8.1.
Investment
Individual Supervision: Starting at $150 per session
Group Supervision: $85–$100 per clinician per session
Supervision is a private-pay arrangement and is not billable to insurance. Payment is due at the time of each session. I ask for a minimum three-month commitment when we begin — supervision is most effective when it is consistent, and a short engagement rarely allows for meaningful clinical development.
I do not offer significant sliding-scale arrangements for supervision. If the investment is not workable at this time, I am glad to refer you to colleagues whose supervision practice may be a better fit financially.
What to Expect
"The best supervision I received did not make me feel more certain. It made me more comfortable with uncertainty — and more precise about what I was doing with it."
In our supervision, you can expect me to:
Ask you what you noticed in the room — before I tell you what I notice in your telling of it. Challenge formulations that are technically correct but clinically incomplete. Name what is happening in the supervisory relationship itself, when it is relevant to your development. Hold your clinical mistakes with the same directness I would want you to eventually hold your clients' — not to shame, but to learn from. Help you develop a clinical identity that is yours, not a copy of a framework you were trained in.
I will not simply validate your work. I will engage with it. And I will expect you to bring the same seriousness to this relationship that you bring to the people sitting across from you in session.
How to Apply for Supervision
The process begins with a brief 20-minute consultation — to discuss where you are in your training, what you are looking for in supervision, and whether my background and approach are the right match. There is no obligation following the consultation.
I typically work with 4–6 supervisees at any given time. If I do not have current availability, I will let you know and, where possible, suggest colleagues whose supervision practice may be a good fit.
To request a supervision consultation, complete the form below. Please include your current license designation and state, your clinical setting, and a brief description of the populations you are working with.

