Time has been transformed, and we have changed; it has advanced and set us in motion; it has unveiled its face, inspiring us with bewilderment and exhilaration.
“The Vision: Reflections on the Way of the Soul”. Book by Kahlil Gibran, translated by Juan R. I. Cole. Chapter “Children of Gods, Scions of Apes”, 1994. Tweet
By noticing these phenomena through supervision, the coach may bring this into the coaching client’s awareness. In my experience this has highlighted the need for self-care, for both coaches and coaching clients. This relates to the supportive element modelled in the supervision triangle model and Triangle Coaching model.
In Behaviorally Based Coaching: A Cross-Cultural Case Study, Noer, D.M. (2005), the author describes the development of the Triangle Coaching Model which used The Center for Creative Leadership’s leadership development as a reference. The leadership development process took the form of coaching and comprised three elements; assessment (measurement, feedback and benchmarking), support (non-judgmental facilitation and empathy) and challenge (action panning and goal setting). Noer’s coaching model was a development of each element into behavioural components, with the support element comprising attending, inquiring, reflecting, and affirming. These four behaviours were derived from five critical skills in Dennis Kinlaw’s Superior Coaching Model.
Supervisors, coaches and managers can apply the relevant models or their philosophies, within their own contexts. For supervisors, a humanistic approach through the use of empathy, attention and listening will serve to ground the coach enough that they can recognise their own emotions and somatic experiences, working through their confusion to make sense of what is happening in the coaching, with the clients and themselves. For coaches, relief comes from understanding that the transactional aspects of coaching and the client’s life present less of a need, giving space for attending, inquiring, reflecting, and affirming, which are also humanistic in nature. Coaching clients then too feel whole enough make sense of their own experiences and needs. Leaders and managers who apply non-judgmental facilitation and empathy will build rapport with stressed employees, and opening up a space for conversations on their most relevant needs.
Below I diagram a conceptual relationship between the Supervision Triangle Model and Noer’s Triangle Coaching Model. I pair the support, development and management elements of the Supervision Triangle with the support, challenging and assessing elements of Noer’s model, respectively. The colours in each model indicate the relationships between the elements, the choice of colour representative of the philosphy behind each element.


