member of ANSE. But how to draw up, and agree to guality standards in a
 culturally diverse field? To overcome the disparities arising from differing
 theoretical approaches and historical roots, and to at least establish the
 initial base for a cross border, professional understanding of supervision and
 coaching, long and intensive discussion proved necessary. But we succeeded in
 establishing consensus on a minimum level, representing the first important
 definition of quality criteria all concerned could agree to
 
Up till now, these initial ANSE standards have proved to be workable. But
 at a minimal level only.
 
Times are changing, however, and confronting us with more complex quality
 issues. Around the beginning of this century, the rise of coaching confronted
 the community of supervisors with new challenges. In intensive discussions on
 both policy and content level, ANSE and its members tried to clarify whether
 coaching could be an option for supervisors. Clearly, there appeared to be more
 under the sun than just reflecting on the dyad ‘person and work’. An so, the
 appearance of coaching, thus far mainly applied to the support of managers,
 forced the community of supervisors to face the role of organisational matters
 within supervisory processes in a new way, and challenged them to self¬
 reflect: is our traditional approach still ‘state of art’? Do we act on behalf of
 the supervisee, on behalf of the organisation or on behalf of both, managing
 tensions and contradictions within the supervisory process?
 
Yet, partly because of these discussions — and the heightened awareness
 of the system character of supervision they brought with them - the recent
 decades may be seen as a success story of theoretical and practical development
 of supervision and — in later years — of coaching as well; supervision influencing
 coaching as much as the other way round. So far, the provisional conclusion
 of the ongoing discussion on the interaction between “Person — Work —
 Organisation” is that supervision and coaching have assumed an important and
 relevant role in a world of rapid changes and developments in the workplace,
 offering critical reflection together with task orientation.