Sias, ShariPerry, Vanessa M2016-08-252017-11-282016-082016-07-20August 201http://hdl.handle.net/10342/5902With a growing number of American households speaking languages other than English, the counseling profession must meet the counseling needs of non-English speaking clients. In turn, clinical supervisors and counselor educators must meet the needs of bilingual counselors. This existential phenomenological study examines the clinical supervision experience of Spanish-English bilingual supervisees. Participants' responses highlighted the compatibility or incompatibility of supervisor-supervisee knowledge and skills, the resilience and resourcefulness of Spanish-English bilingual supervisees, and the diversity of the Latino population. Overall, participants expressed the overwhelming desire to have a clinical supervisor that possessed cultural competence. The majority of participants also expressed interest in having a Spanish-English bilingual supervisor, although this proficiency was considered a luxury. Further research is needed to better understand the needs of Spanish-English bilingual supervisees.application/pdfenClinical supervisionBilingual supervisionMulticultural counselingPractice ManagementMultilingualismCultural CompetencyHispanic AmericansHumansLanguageA phenomenological investigation of Spanish-English bilingual supervisees’ experience in clinical supervisionDoctoral Dissertation2016-08-25