Course Overview
This course examines supervisory decision-making as the foundation for consistent, equitable and defensible APS service delivery, particularly in systems where formal policies and procedures may be limited, evolving or unevenly applied.
Participants will explore how supervisory judgment influences intake prioritization, documentation quality, case progression, workload management and staff accountability. Emphasis is placed on applying social work supervision principles to manage risk, support ethical practice and reduce variability across units. Through applied scenarios and skill-based exercises, supervisors will strengthen their ability to coach staff, ensure compliance with statutory and program requirements and translate broad expectations into clear, actionable guidance during periods of high demand, staffing shortages or organizational change.
Learning Objectives
After attending this training, participants will be able to:
- Describe core supervisory responsibilities in APS social work practice, including intake prioritization, case progression oversight, documentation review and staff accountability.
- Explain how statutory mandates, program requirements, ethical principles and risk considerations inform supervisory decision-making in APS, particularly when written policies or procedures are limited or inconsistent.
- Identify supervisory practices that promote consistency, equity and accountability in APS social work services and distinguish them from practices that may unintentionally increase variability or risk.
- Apply a structured supervisory decision-making framework to guide intake prioritization and case assignment using APS-based practice scenarios.
- Analyze APS case documentation to determine whether it adequately supports supervisory oversight, ethical decision-making and program accountability, and identify areas for corrective action or staff coaching.
- Demonstrate effective supervisory coaching strategies that improve staff documentation quality and decision-making using clear, professional and defensible language consistent with APS expectations.
- Implement supervisory interventions to address performance concerns related to timeliness, documentation and case progression in a manner that is consistent, equitable and aligned with social work supervision standards.
- Translate general program expectations and ethical obligations into concrete guidance for frontline staff during periods of high workload, staffing challenges or organizational transition.
- Affirm the importance of consistency, transparency and accountability in supervisory decision-making as essential components of ethical APS social work practice and risk management.
- Recognize the supervisory role as a critical source of structure, clarity and professional support for social workers when formal policies or procedures are incomplete, evolving or unclear.