{"title":"西班牙社区心理学实践的能力:社会干预的标准、质量和挑战","authors":"I. Maya","doi":"10.7728/0704201607","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In this paper, competencies for community psychology practice are examined within the Spanish context, based on the experience of a Master in Psychology of Social and Community Intervention in the University of Seville. The list of competencies was developed specifically for monitoring the practicum of master students, and it was developed in a portfolio format, following the usual pattern in the European accreditation process \"EuroPsy,\" designed by the professional associations of psychology. The portfolio consists of 29 generic professional competencies, grouped in seven blocks: needs specification, evaluation, product development and services, psychological intervention, assessment of psychological interventions, communication, and enabling competencies. At the national level, we analyze the impact that the new system of training and accreditation of psychologists who perform health activities is having on the professional recognition and the role of community psychologists. At the international level, we compare the EuroPsy proposal with the list of 18 competences proposed by Dalton and Wolfe (2012) and approved by the Society for Community Research and Action, APA Division 27. Finally, we discuss the advantages and limitations of a generic model of competency assessment, focused on the professional practice of psychology. EuroPsy is a system of accreditation of professional psychology in Europe, which has been implemented since 2010 with the coordination of the European Federation of Psychologists' Associations (EFPA). The European certificate of psychology aims to improve standards of professional practice, increase transparency and facilitate internal mobility of professional psychologists (Lunt, Peiró, Poortinga & Roe, 2015). EuroPsy is based on a shared competencies model that contributes to greater convergence in the training of psychologists and serves as a guide for the evaluation of professional practice. It is therefore a tool that promotes the search for common standards and a shared definition of the profession of psychology in Europe (Peiró & Lunt, 2002). Currently this recognition system is used in 20 countries, while 36 members of the EFPA approved their implementation and are eligible for the application of the certificate. One of the central elements of the EuroPsy system consists in defining core competencies that professional psychologists should develop. Those competencies include both the actual psychological content of the professional practice as well as the general capabilities that allow providing effectively a professional service of any kind (EuroPsy, 2015). The European certificate distinguishes four professional contexts: namely, clinical and health psychology; work and organizational psychology; educational psychology; and \"other\" (to be specified), among which may be included psychology of social and community intervention. There are also two types of expertise currently recognized by EuroPsy that result in specialization: psychotherapy and work and organizational psychology. In both cases (the professional contexts and specialties) the profile of community research and action appears to be less established in the professional field. Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2016 Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, http://www.gjcpp.org/ Page 3 In the Master in Psychology of Social and Community Intervention at the University of Seville (Spain) we carried out one of the first experiences in implementing the EuroPsy model of competencies in the field of community research and action (MayaJariego, 2009). Specifically, we rely on the \"guidelines for the evaluation of skills through supervised practice\" designed by professional associations of psychology in Spain (Consejo General de Colegios Oficiales de Psicólogos, 2008) to propose a monitoring system of the practicum in community intervention for Master’s students. In this case, the EuroPsy model provides the generic competency framework, while the guide of the Master specifically adapts the content to the characteristics and usual activities of psychologists of social and community intervention1. Thus, it was intended to fill a gap in the definition of professional profiles of psychology and thereby contribute to greater recognition of this area of practice. In this article, we briefly describe the use of the EuroPsy competencies model in the training of psychologists of social and community intervention, from the specific case of the University of Seville (Spain). The European accreditation model is compared with the 18 competencies for community psychology practice recognized by the Society for Community Research and Action (SCRA) (Dalton & 1 The Master in Psychology of Social and Community Intervention was designed following the requirements of the accreditation system of academic titles during the course of 2008-2009. The official title was established by the Agreement of the Council of Ministers of 12 November 2010 (BOE of 16 December 2010). The University of Seville published the curriculum of the Master with the Resolution of 20 July 2011. The guide for supervised practice was applied experimentally during the first three years of implementation of the title (2010-2011, 2011-2012 and 2012-2013). Wolfe, 2012). This allows us to reflect on the international validity of the 18 core competencies as well as the need to strengthen the role of the community psychologist in Europe. The professional competencies of psychology in the EuroPsy certificate The EuroPsy model proposes 20 primary competencies and 9 enabling competencies in the professional practice of psychology (Table 1). The primary competencies correspond to the workflow of psychologists in a sequence in which a) the customer request is received, b) evaluation or diagnosis are performed, c) services based on psychological theories are developed, d) interventions are designed and implemented, e) the actions carried out are valued and, finally, f) the results are reported (EuroPsy Team, 2009, cited in Peiro & Tetrick, 2011). This is a generic framework of capabilities that are deployed specifically depending on the professional context of intervention, whether this is clinical, educational, organizational or otherwise. The model implies the classic cycle of action research (Lewin, 1946), with a process of planning, action, and observation. Secondly, enabling competencies are general skills that contribute to the proper exercise of any profession. Professionals benefit from proper career planning, as well as the ability to stay current in their discipline knowledge, to develop relationships with colleagues or clients, and to reflect on professional practice itself, among others. Although they are not competencies specific of the psychologist, they are considered also necessary for professional practice. Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2016 Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, http://www.gjcpp.org/ Page 4 Professional roles Primary competencies Goal specification Needs analysis Goal setting Assessment Individual assessment Group assessment Organizational assessment Situational assessment Development Service or product definition & requirements analysis Service or product design Service or product testing Service or product evaluation Intervention Intervention planning Direct person-oriented intervention Direct situation-oriented intervention Indirect intervention Service or product implementation Evaluation Evaluation planning Evaluation measurement Evaluation analysis Communication Giving feedback Report writing Enabling competencies Professional development Professional strategy Continuing professional development Professional relations Research and development Marketing and sales Account management Practice management Quality assurance Self-reflection Table 1. The 29 competencies of psychologists in the EuroPsy model Source: EuroPsy (2015), <http://www.europsy.cop.es/>. The competencies of the European certificate of psychology not only differ in content from the skills recognized by the SCRA (Dalton & Wolfe, 2012), but also in the assumptions and mode of operation. Specifically, the EuroPsy model, unlike the 18 competencies of the SCRA, (1) proposes generic skills of professional psychology, which develop transversely in different contexts of application, (2) is designed as part of a system of accreditation and professional recognition, and (3) includes some skills applicable in any professional activity (not only for psychologists). This Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2016 Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, http://www.gjcpp.org/ Page 5 makes it a meta-model that needs to be completed with the content that refer to a practice and a specific intervention context. The guide for supervised practice in psychology of social and community intervention The European certificate of psychology establishes as a requirement the realization of \"at least one year of supervised professional practice full time, or equivalent.\" It is a form of professional training that can be performed as part of the external practices of the Degree in Psychology or working under the supervision of a licensed psychologist. In this context, the General Council of Associations of Psychologists published three \"guides for supervised practice\" to monitor the practical training of psychologists in the clinical, educational and organizational fields (Consejo General de Colegios Oficiales de Psicólogos, 2008). Each is a portfolio with concrete examples illustrating the type of activities, methods, and common strategies in each application context. Both psychologists in training and supervisors can use it as a model for detailing the activities they have done, justify the procedure followed in professional practice, and provide evidence of its realiz","PeriodicalId":87260,"journal":{"name":"Global journal of community psychology practice","volume":"16 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-12-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Competencies for Community Psychology Practice in Spain: Standards, Quality and Challenges in Social Intervention\",\"authors\":\"I. Maya\",\"doi\":\"10.7728/0704201607\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"In this paper, competencies for community psychology practice are examined within the Spanish context, based on the experience of a Master in Psychology of Social and Community Intervention in the University of Seville. The list of competencies was developed specifically for monitoring the practicum of master students, and it was developed in a portfolio format, following the usual pattern in the European accreditation process \\\"EuroPsy,\\\" designed by the professional associations of psychology. The portfolio consists of 29 generic professional competencies, grouped in seven blocks: needs specification, evaluation, product development and services, psychological intervention, assessment of psychological interventions, communication, and enabling competencies. At the national level, we analyze the impact that the new system of training and accreditation of psychologists who perform health activities is having on the professional recognition and the role of community psychologists. At the international level, we compare the EuroPsy proposal with the list of 18 competences proposed by Dalton and Wolfe (2012) and approved by the Society for Community Research and Action, APA Division 27. Finally, we discuss the advantages and limitations of a generic model of competency assessment, focused on the professional practice of psychology. EuroPsy is a system of accreditation of professional psychology in Europe, which has been implemented since 2010 with the coordination of the European Federation of Psychologists' Associations (EFPA). The European certificate of psychology aims to improve standards of professional practice, increase transparency and facilitate internal mobility of professional psychologists (Lunt, Peiró, Poortinga & Roe, 2015). EuroPsy is based on a shared competencies model that contributes to greater convergence in the training of psychologists and serves as a guide for the evaluation of professional practice. It is therefore a tool that promotes the search for common standards and a shared definition of the profession of psychology in Europe (Peiró & Lunt, 2002). Currently this recognition system is used in 20 countries, while 36 members of the EFPA approved their implementation and are eligible for the application of the certificate. One of the central elements of the EuroPsy system consists in defining core competencies that professional psychologists should develop. Those competencies include both the actual psychological content of the professional practice as well as the general capabilities that allow providing effectively a professional service of any kind (EuroPsy, 2015). The European certificate distinguishes four professional contexts: namely, clinical and health psychology; work and organizational psychology; educational psychology; and \\\"other\\\" (to be specified), among which may be included psychology of social and community intervention. There are also two types of expertise currently recognized by EuroPsy that result in specialization: psychotherapy and work and organizational psychology. In both cases (the professional contexts and specialties) the profile of community research and action appears to be less established in the professional field. Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2016 Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, http://www.gjcpp.org/ Page 3 In the Master in Psychology of Social and Community Intervention at the University of Seville (Spain) we carried out one of the first experiences in implementing the EuroPsy model of competencies in the field of community research and action (MayaJariego, 2009). Specifically, we rely on the \\\"guidelines for the evaluation of skills through supervised practice\\\" designed by professional associations of psychology in Spain (Consejo General de Colegios Oficiales de Psicólogos, 2008) to propose a monitoring system of the practicum in community intervention for Master’s students. In this case, the EuroPsy model provides the generic competency framework, while the guide of the Master specifically adapts the content to the characteristics and usual activities of psychologists of social and community intervention1. Thus, it was intended to fill a gap in the definition of professional profiles of psychology and thereby contribute to greater recognition of this area of practice. In this article, we briefly describe the use of the EuroPsy competencies model in the training of psychologists of social and community intervention, from the specific case of the University of Seville (Spain). The European accreditation model is compared with the 18 competencies for community psychology practice recognized by the Society for Community Research and Action (SCRA) (Dalton & 1 The Master in Psychology of Social and Community Intervention was designed following the requirements of the accreditation system of academic titles during the course of 2008-2009. The official title was established by the Agreement of the Council of Ministers of 12 November 2010 (BOE of 16 December 2010). The University of Seville published the curriculum of the Master with the Resolution of 20 July 2011. The guide for supervised practice was applied experimentally during the first three years of implementation of the title (2010-2011, 2011-2012 and 2012-2013). Wolfe, 2012). This allows us to reflect on the international validity of the 18 core competencies as well as the need to strengthen the role of the community psychologist in Europe. The professional competencies of psychology in the EuroPsy certificate The EuroPsy model proposes 20 primary competencies and 9 enabling competencies in the professional practice of psychology (Table 1). The primary competencies correspond to the workflow of psychologists in a sequence in which a) the customer request is received, b) evaluation or diagnosis are performed, c) services based on psychological theories are developed, d) interventions are designed and implemented, e) the actions carried out are valued and, finally, f) the results are reported (EuroPsy Team, 2009, cited in Peiro & Tetrick, 2011). This is a generic framework of capabilities that are deployed specifically depending on the professional context of intervention, whether this is clinical, educational, organizational or otherwise. The model implies the classic cycle of action research (Lewin, 1946), with a process of planning, action, and observation. Secondly, enabling competencies are general skills that contribute to the proper exercise of any profession. Professionals benefit from proper career planning, as well as the ability to stay current in their discipline knowledge, to develop relationships with colleagues or clients, and to reflect on professional practice itself, among others. Although they are not competencies specific of the psychologist, they are considered also necessary for professional practice. Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2016 Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, http://www.gjcpp.org/ Page 4 Professional roles Primary competencies Goal specification Needs analysis Goal setting Assessment Individual assessment Group assessment Organizational assessment Situational assessment Development Service or product definition & requirements analysis Service or product design Service or product testing Service or product evaluation Intervention Intervention planning Direct person-oriented intervention Direct situation-oriented intervention Indirect intervention Service or product implementation Evaluation Evaluation planning Evaluation measurement Evaluation analysis Communication Giving feedback Report writing Enabling competencies Professional development Professional strategy Continuing professional development Professional relations Research and development Marketing and sales Account management Practice management Quality assurance Self-reflection Table 1. The 29 competencies of psychologists in the EuroPsy model Source: EuroPsy (2015), <http://www.europsy.cop.es/>. The competencies of the European certificate of psychology not only differ in content from the skills recognized by the SCRA (Dalton & Wolfe, 2012), but also in the assumptions and mode of operation. Specifically, the EuroPsy model, unlike the 18 competencies of the SCRA, (1) proposes generic skills of professional psychology, which develop transversely in different contexts of application, (2) is designed as part of a system of accreditation and professional recognition, and (3) includes some skills applicable in any professional activity (not only for psychologists). This Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2016 Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, http://www.gjcpp.org/ Page 5 makes it a meta-model that needs to be completed with the content that refer to a practice and a specific intervention context. 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引用次数: 5
摘要
在本文中,社区心理学实践的能力在西班牙的背景下进行了检查,基于塞维利亚大学社会和社区干预心理学硕士的经验。这份能力清单是专门为监督硕士学生的实习而制定的,它是以档案形式制定的,遵循了欧洲认证程序“EuroPsy”的通常模式,由心理学专业协会设计。该组合包括29项一般专业能力,分为7个部分:需求说明、评估、产品开发和服务、心理干预、心理干预评估、沟通和使能能力。在国家层面,我们分析了从事健康活动的心理学家的培训和认证的新制度对专业认可和社区心理学家的作用的影响。在国际层面上,我们将EuroPsy提案与Dalton和Wolfe(2012)提出的18项能力清单进行了比较,这些能力清单得到了社区研究与行动学会(APA Division 27)的批准。最后,我们以心理学专业实践为重点,讨论了能力评估通用模型的优点和局限性。EuroPsy是欧洲专业心理学认证体系,自2010年起在欧洲心理学家协会联合会(EFPA)的协调下实施。欧洲心理学证书旨在提高专业实践标准,增加透明度,促进专业心理学家的内部流动(Lunt, Peiró, Poortinga & Roe, 2015)。EuroPsy基于共享能力模型,有助于心理学家培训的更大融合,并作为专业实践评估的指南。因此,它是一种工具,促进了对欧洲心理学专业的共同标准和共同定义的探索(Peiró & Lunt, 2002)。目前,该认证系统在20个国家使用,而36个EFPA成员批准了他们的实施,并有资格申请证书。EuroPsy体系的核心要素之一是定义专业心理学家应该发展的核心能力。这些能力既包括专业实践的实际心理内容,也包括能够有效提供任何类型专业服务的一般能力(EuroPsy, 2015)。欧洲证书区分四种专业背景:即临床和健康心理学;工作与组织心理学;教育心理学;“其他”(待定),其中可能包括社会和社区干预心理学。目前,EuroPsy还认可两种专业知识:心理治疗和工作与组织心理学。在这两种情况下(专业背景和专业),社区研究和行动的概况似乎在专业领域不太确定。全球社区心理学实践杂志第7卷,第4期2016年12月全球社区心理学实践杂志,http://www.gjcpp.org/第3页在塞维利亚大学(西班牙)的社会和社区干预心理学硕士课程中,我们开展了在社区研究和行动领域实施EuroPsy能力模型的首批经验之一(MayaJariego, 2009)。具体来说,我们依靠西班牙心理学专业协会设计的“通过监督实践评估技能的指导方针”(Consejo General de Colegios officales de Psicólogos, 2008),为硕士生提出了社区干预实习的监测系统。在这种情况下,EuroPsy模型提供了通用的能力框架,而硕士指南则专门根据社会和社区干预心理学家的特点和日常活动对内容进行了调整。因此,它旨在填补心理学专业概况定义的空白,从而促进对这一实践领域的更大认识。在这篇文章中,我们从塞维利亚大学(西班牙)的具体案例,简要描述了EuroPsy能力模型在社会和社区干预心理学家培训中的应用。欧洲认证模式与社区研究与行动协会(SCRA)认可的18项社区心理学实践能力进行了比较(道尔顿& 1)社会和社区干预心理学硕士是在2008-2009年期间根据学术头衔认证制度的要求设计的。 官方名称由2010年11月12日部长理事会协议(BOE of 2010年12月16日)确定。塞维利亚大学在2011年7月20日的决议中公布了硕士课程。《监督实习指南》在标题实施的前三年(2010-2011年、2011-2012年和2012-2013年)进行了实验应用。乌尔夫,2012)。这使我们能够反思18项核心能力的国际有效性,以及加强欧洲社区心理学家作用的必要性。EuroPsy模型在心理学专业实践中提出了20个主要能力和9个使能能力(表1)。主要能力对应于心理学家的工作流程,其中a)接收客户请求,b)进行评估或诊断,c)基于心理学理论开发服务,d)设计和实施干预措施,e)评估所采取的行动,最后,f)报告结果(EuroPsy Team, 2009,引自Peiro & Tetrick, 2011)。这是一个能力的通用框架,具体取决于干预的专业背景,无论是临床、教育、组织还是其他方面。该模型暗示了典型的行动研究循环(Lewin, 1946),包括一个计划、行动和观察的过程。第二,使能能力是有助于适当行使任何职业的一般技能。专业人士受益于适当的职业规划,以及保持最新学科知识的能力,发展与同事或客户的关系,以及反思专业实践本身,等等。虽然它们不是心理学家特有的能力,但它们也被认为是专业实践所必需的。全球社区心理学实践杂志第7卷第4期2016年12月http://www.gjcpp.org/第4页专业角色主要能力目标说明需求分析目标设定评估个人评估小组评估组织评估情景评估开发服务或产品定义与需求分析服务或产品设计服务或产品测试服务或产品评估干预干预计划直接以人为本直接以情境为本间接干预服务或产品实施评估评估计划评估测量评估分析沟通给予反馈报告写作使能能力专业发展专业战略持续专业发展专业关系研究与开发营销与销售客户管理实践管理质量保证自我反思表1资料来源:EuroPsy(2015),。欧洲心理学证书的能力不仅在内容上不同于SCRA所认可的技能(Dalton & Wolfe, 2012),而且在假设和操作模式上也不同。具体来说,与SCRA的18项能力不同,EuroPsy模型(1)提出了专业心理学的通用技能,这些技能在不同的应用环境中横向发展,(2)被设计为认证和专业认可系统的一部分,(3)包括适用于任何专业活动的一些技能(不仅适用于心理学家)。《全球社区心理学实践杂志》第7卷,2016年12月第4期,《全球社区心理学实践杂志》http://www.gjcpp.org/第5页,使其成为一个元模型,需要与实践和特定干预背景相关的内容一起完成。社会和社区干预心理学监督实践指南欧洲心理学证书要求实现“至少一年的全职监督专业实践,或同等学历。”这是一种专业培训形式,可以作为心理学学位外部实践的一部分,也可以在有执照的心理学家的监督下进行。在此背景下,心理学家协会总理事会出版了三本“监督实践指南”,以监督心理学家在临床、教育和组织领域的实践培训(Consejo General de Colegios officales de Psicólogos, 2008)。每一个都是一个组合,其中包含了具体的例子,说明了每个应用程序上下文中的活动、方法和通用策略的类型。
Competencies for Community Psychology Practice in Spain: Standards, Quality and Challenges in Social Intervention
In this paper, competencies for community psychology practice are examined within the Spanish context, based on the experience of a Master in Psychology of Social and Community Intervention in the University of Seville. The list of competencies was developed specifically for monitoring the practicum of master students, and it was developed in a portfolio format, following the usual pattern in the European accreditation process "EuroPsy," designed by the professional associations of psychology. The portfolio consists of 29 generic professional competencies, grouped in seven blocks: needs specification, evaluation, product development and services, psychological intervention, assessment of psychological interventions, communication, and enabling competencies. At the national level, we analyze the impact that the new system of training and accreditation of psychologists who perform health activities is having on the professional recognition and the role of community psychologists. At the international level, we compare the EuroPsy proposal with the list of 18 competences proposed by Dalton and Wolfe (2012) and approved by the Society for Community Research and Action, APA Division 27. Finally, we discuss the advantages and limitations of a generic model of competency assessment, focused on the professional practice of psychology. EuroPsy is a system of accreditation of professional psychology in Europe, which has been implemented since 2010 with the coordination of the European Federation of Psychologists' Associations (EFPA). The European certificate of psychology aims to improve standards of professional practice, increase transparency and facilitate internal mobility of professional psychologists (Lunt, Peiró, Poortinga & Roe, 2015). EuroPsy is based on a shared competencies model that contributes to greater convergence in the training of psychologists and serves as a guide for the evaluation of professional practice. It is therefore a tool that promotes the search for common standards and a shared definition of the profession of psychology in Europe (Peiró & Lunt, 2002). Currently this recognition system is used in 20 countries, while 36 members of the EFPA approved their implementation and are eligible for the application of the certificate. One of the central elements of the EuroPsy system consists in defining core competencies that professional psychologists should develop. Those competencies include both the actual psychological content of the professional practice as well as the general capabilities that allow providing effectively a professional service of any kind (EuroPsy, 2015). The European certificate distinguishes four professional contexts: namely, clinical and health psychology; work and organizational psychology; educational psychology; and "other" (to be specified), among which may be included psychology of social and community intervention. There are also two types of expertise currently recognized by EuroPsy that result in specialization: psychotherapy and work and organizational psychology. In both cases (the professional contexts and specialties) the profile of community research and action appears to be less established in the professional field. Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2016 Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, http://www.gjcpp.org/ Page 3 In the Master in Psychology of Social and Community Intervention at the University of Seville (Spain) we carried out one of the first experiences in implementing the EuroPsy model of competencies in the field of community research and action (MayaJariego, 2009). Specifically, we rely on the "guidelines for the evaluation of skills through supervised practice" designed by professional associations of psychology in Spain (Consejo General de Colegios Oficiales de Psicólogos, 2008) to propose a monitoring system of the practicum in community intervention for Master’s students. In this case, the EuroPsy model provides the generic competency framework, while the guide of the Master specifically adapts the content to the characteristics and usual activities of psychologists of social and community intervention1. Thus, it was intended to fill a gap in the definition of professional profiles of psychology and thereby contribute to greater recognition of this area of practice. In this article, we briefly describe the use of the EuroPsy competencies model in the training of psychologists of social and community intervention, from the specific case of the University of Seville (Spain). The European accreditation model is compared with the 18 competencies for community psychology practice recognized by the Society for Community Research and Action (SCRA) (Dalton & 1 The Master in Psychology of Social and Community Intervention was designed following the requirements of the accreditation system of academic titles during the course of 2008-2009. The official title was established by the Agreement of the Council of Ministers of 12 November 2010 (BOE of 16 December 2010). The University of Seville published the curriculum of the Master with the Resolution of 20 July 2011. The guide for supervised practice was applied experimentally during the first three years of implementation of the title (2010-2011, 2011-2012 and 2012-2013). Wolfe, 2012). This allows us to reflect on the international validity of the 18 core competencies as well as the need to strengthen the role of the community psychologist in Europe. The professional competencies of psychology in the EuroPsy certificate The EuroPsy model proposes 20 primary competencies and 9 enabling competencies in the professional practice of psychology (Table 1). The primary competencies correspond to the workflow of psychologists in a sequence in which a) the customer request is received, b) evaluation or diagnosis are performed, c) services based on psychological theories are developed, d) interventions are designed and implemented, e) the actions carried out are valued and, finally, f) the results are reported (EuroPsy Team, 2009, cited in Peiro & Tetrick, 2011). This is a generic framework of capabilities that are deployed specifically depending on the professional context of intervention, whether this is clinical, educational, organizational or otherwise. The model implies the classic cycle of action research (Lewin, 1946), with a process of planning, action, and observation. Secondly, enabling competencies are general skills that contribute to the proper exercise of any profession. Professionals benefit from proper career planning, as well as the ability to stay current in their discipline knowledge, to develop relationships with colleagues or clients, and to reflect on professional practice itself, among others. Although they are not competencies specific of the psychologist, they are considered also necessary for professional practice. Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2016 Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, http://www.gjcpp.org/ Page 4 Professional roles Primary competencies Goal specification Needs analysis Goal setting Assessment Individual assessment Group assessment Organizational assessment Situational assessment Development Service or product definition & requirements analysis Service or product design Service or product testing Service or product evaluation Intervention Intervention planning Direct person-oriented intervention Direct situation-oriented intervention Indirect intervention Service or product implementation Evaluation Evaluation planning Evaluation measurement Evaluation analysis Communication Giving feedback Report writing Enabling competencies Professional development Professional strategy Continuing professional development Professional relations Research and development Marketing and sales Account management Practice management Quality assurance Self-reflection Table 1. The 29 competencies of psychologists in the EuroPsy model Source: EuroPsy (2015), . The competencies of the European certificate of psychology not only differ in content from the skills recognized by the SCRA (Dalton & Wolfe, 2012), but also in the assumptions and mode of operation. Specifically, the EuroPsy model, unlike the 18 competencies of the SCRA, (1) proposes generic skills of professional psychology, which develop transversely in different contexts of application, (2) is designed as part of a system of accreditation and professional recognition, and (3) includes some skills applicable in any professional activity (not only for psychologists). This Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2016 Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, http://www.gjcpp.org/ Page 5 makes it a meta-model that needs to be completed with the content that refer to a practice and a specific intervention context. The guide for supervised practice in psychology of social and community intervention The European certificate of psychology establishes as a requirement the realization of "at least one year of supervised professional practice full time, or equivalent." It is a form of professional training that can be performed as part of the external practices of the Degree in Psychology or working under the supervision of a licensed psychologist. In this context, the General Council of Associations of Psychologists published three "guides for supervised practice" to monitor the practical training of psychologists in the clinical, educational and organizational fields (Consejo General de Colegios Oficiales de Psicólogos, 2008). Each is a portfolio with concrete examples illustrating the type of activities, methods, and common strategies in each application context. Both psychologists in training and supervisors can use it as a model for detailing the activities they have done, justify the procedure followed in professional practice, and provide evidence of its realiz