1. basically, someone who in addition to his other duties can
refer the person to the exact
bulletin to get his
information and never tells him another thing.
(6905C29) 2. the
instructor in
charge of a
course and its students.
(HCOB 19 Jun 71 III) 3. a
course must have a
supervisor. He may or may not be a graduate and experienced practitioner of the
course he is supervising but he must be a
trained Course
Supervisor. He is not expected to teach. He is expected to get the students there, rolls called, checkouts properly done, misunderstoods handled, finding what the
student doesn't
dig and getting the
student to
dig it. The
supervisor who tells students answers is a waste of
time and a
course destroyer as he enters out
data into the
scene even if
trained and actually especially if
trained in the
subject. The
supervisor is not an "
instructor," that's why he's called a
supervisor. A
supervisor's
skill is in spotting
dope-off,
glee and other
manifestations of misunderstoods, and getting it cleaned up, not in knowing the
data so he can tell the
student.
(HCO PL 16 Mar 71R) 4. the Course
Supervisor oversees all
Course Department activities and is directly responsible for
producing course income, the
training of students and graduating auditors at a high
level of
technology and good will. (
HCO PL 18
Dec 64,
Saint Hill Org Board)