1 / 28

Mentoring

Discover the importance of having a mentor early in your career and how it can make a difference between success and failure. Learn about the roles of a mentor, how to find one, and tips for both mentors and protégés. Explore the benefits of mentoring in different settings, such as academic and workplace environments. Join a mentoring program at the University of Alberta Libraries and be part of a supportive community.

fburnham
Download Presentation

Mentoring

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mentoring Jeanette Buckingham

  2. Jeanette Buckingham, John W. Scott Health Sciences Library, University of Alberta • Dagmara Chojecki, Knowledge Utilization Studies Program, Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta • Deborah Hicks, Humanities and Social Sciences Library, University of Alberta

  3. What is a mentor? Ithacan noble whose disguise the goddess Athena assumed in order to act as the guide and adviser of the young Telemachus…an experienced and trusted counselor (OED)

  4. My Mentor

  5. “Having a good mentor early in one’s career can mean the difference between success and failure in any career.” “Those who are good mentors get incalculably more out of it than they put into it.” FromNature’s Guide for MentorsNature 2007, 447: 791-797

  6. Mentor Roles • Teacher/coach • Interpreter/adviser • Guide to a new culture • Mentor for professional development—research, service—open new doors • Role model • Advocate • Supporter/cheerleader

  7. How do I get one? • Intentional mentoring vs informal mentoring • Ideally, you find your own mentor—you’re not assigned one

  8. Main categories of mentoring: • Youth->personal, emotional, cognitive, personal growth • Academic->support & guidance on academic & other issues: fosters psychological adjustment & professional identity • Workplace->personal & professional growth—occurs in the workplace

  9. First days at work after graduation

  10. Work vs school • Theory > practice • Personal vs. organizational goals • 360°appraisal—not just grades • Multiple roles • Contract—union or prof. assoc, contract • Org chart—hierarchy • Relation to supervisor—delegation • Interpersonal skills matter • New social cohort • Oral communication is the norm • Tacit knowledge—org culture • Collaboration, cllegiality, teamwork • Workflow & cycle • Keeping up—life-long learning

  11. Mentoring program for interns at the University of Alberta Libraries • Institutional—Kathleen Delong- Associate Director for Human Resources: orientation program, continuous supportive resource • Supervisory—Direct supervisor (head of unit library, etc.) • Informal mentor (senior librarian, outside intern’s unit library)—assigned at the beginning of internship and continuing throughout—and often beyond.

  12. What I do as Mentor Mom • Meet the interns—find out what their interests are, what kind of people they are • Think about appropriate mentors for them—matchmaking! • Have Associate Director-HR vet my prospective list • Contact mentors’ supervisors for permission • Contact prospective mentors and twist arms, cajole, etc. • Send a note to both the mentor and intern, with a small amount of literature on what a mentor is and does and how to make the relationship work. • Sit back and trouble shoot—advise both mentors and interns; check in periodically to see how they are doing; check at the end of the year to see you things worked.

  13. Tips for mentors • Be available • Regular meetings • On call – drop what you need to drop—always be available • Emotionally/intellectually available as well as physically available • Be confidential – be trustworthy • Be positive, optimistic, encouraging • Balance direction/self-direction (where are you between micromanagement and “sink or swim”?) • Be respectful — of different goals, values, backgrounds, methods — of everyone • Be nurturing

  14. Tips for mentors-continued… • Be questioning — ask questions and more questions and more questions… • Listen • Foster skills • Read widely — share what you find • Encourage research and publication – encourage “evidence-based librarianship” • Celebrate • Build community – help build a network

  15. And still more tips for mentors… • Know your way around the organization • Know the contract • Know the power structure • Know benefits • Know services • Know who knows • Understand that the culture of librarianship and work is different from student culture — be a guide to the new culture

  16. Should we train mentors? • ARL SPEC Kit, Mentoring workshops • ALA Workshops • Bibliography

  17. Preparing for the Mentor/Protégé Relationship

  18. Mentor Think about your own strengths & weaknesses Think about your best professional relationships and why they work Think about how you communicate Think about your professional ethics Look for ways to start to build a comfortable and trustful relationship Be excited about the opportunity to mentor Protégé Think about questions you have about your new job Be prepared to share information openly about yourself Think about how you communicate Think about your professional ethics Think about how this relationship will help you Get ready to be an effective

  19. Mentor What is your professional vision? What shaped your vision? How has it changed over the years (if it has)? Encourage your protégé to develop a professional vision—suggest some resources to help Protégé Explore and cultivate your professional expectations Why did you become a librarian? Are your thoughts as a student borne out at work? Are there disconnects between dreams and reality? Develop a vision of you as a librarian. Share your professional philosophy

  20. Mentor Choose your words--be *supportive *engaged *confident *honest *credible Listen -- be empathetic and focused Be open to differences of opinion Take the time to resolve conflicts Protégé Be open and candid Describe concerns as objectively as you can (but vent if you need to!) Don’t be afraid to disagree – your fresh perspectives are a gift to your mentor Always ask questions Take the time to resolve conflicts Cultivate on-going communication

  21. Mentor Make sure protégé is aware of the nature and sources of institutional support, community support if from out of town. Introduce protégé to established colleagues who might be helpful. Acquaint protégé with authority structure—who’s who in the organization Protégé Freely ask for help Get to know others in the library and larger organization Attend meetings and as many social functions as possible Develop a support network

  22. Mentor Don’t underestimate what you know! Protégé Don’t underestimate what you know! Share professional knowledge

  23. Mentor Ask about your protégé’s work, projects and ambitions Work out plans, routes, and timelines together Share tips and strategies Protégé Freely share your projects, ideas, and ambitions—and concerns Accept your mentor’s help in working out a plan of attack Share tips and strategies Plan together

  24. Mentor Always be available for emergencies Remember (and remind your protégé) that your relationship is confidential and that it is safe to share concerns Help the protégé focus on the roots of the problem and on finding a practical solution Help with efforts to implement solutions > monitor progress Protégé Know that your mentor is always there for you Honestly assess the problem and its causes Consider possible solutions, their pros and cons Be open to other perspectives and be prepared to cooperate, collaborate, and compromise. Keep mentor apprised. Solve problems together

  25. Self-evaluation: how do you know if you are/have been a good mentor?

  26. Do mentorship programs work? • Evaluation studies • outcome measures (behavior, attitude, health, career progression) • personal opinion surveys • Meta-analyses/systematic reviews • Small (but statistically significant) improvements (performance, helping, satisfaction, psychological stress, interpersonal relations, motivation) or positive opinions • Qualitative studies • sharing control and fairness major elements in establishing trust, plus the personal efforts of mentors

  27. Do you need a mentorship program? • For interns • For new Staff • For the institution

More Related