mentoring
(noun)
Acting as a teacher or guide; providing advice and direction for one less experienced.
Examples of mentoring in the following topics:
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How Businesses Benefit from Diversity
- An example of a company involved with creating diversity in the workplace is MentorNet, a nonprofit online mentoring organization that focuses on women and underrepresented minorities in the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) fields.
- MentorNet has used an algorithm to match over 30,000 mentor relationships since 1997.
- The organization gives students, especially women and underrepresented minorities, the chance to seek mentors to discuss how to overcome obstacles in their fields and eventually their workplace.
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Financial Rewards for Managers
- These may include coaching, higher education, mentoring, reflective supervision, technical training, and consultation.
- Mentoring – Mentoring is an excellent approach to enhance career success in which a manager matches two employees of different experience levels to learn from one another.
- Mentoring is usually accomplished by allowing an outside observer to evaluate and suggest improvements for newer employees who have had less time to develop in a particular role.
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Examples of Cognitive Apprenticeship in the Real World
- The communication tools provide channels for both synchronous and asynchronous collaboration with other students and mentors.
- The mentors provide coaching/scaffolding of the science practice.
- Cognitive apprenticeship practices include the use of coaching/scaffolding available in online journals and bulletin board discussion with mentors, modeling through access to prototypes, and articulation/reflection through online journaling.
- Cognitive apprenticeship practices include the use of coaching/scaffolding available in online journals and bulletin board discussion with mentors, modeling through access to prototypes, and articulation/reflection through online journaling.
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Mentor insights: the “Where the Rubber Meets the Road” spokes on the wheel
- Mentor insights are the lessons learned by the protégé/mentee.
- Understanding your mentor's driving philosophies is essential if you want to gain the wisdom that your mentors possess.
- Mentors come literally in all "styles, shapes and sizes".
- Mentor insights can come from a business executive or role model who you want to emulate.
- Mentor insights can also come from observations of others.
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Aligning employee career development with organizational growth
- The changing nature of careers and organizations has increased the significance of mentoring.
- Mentoring can be accomplished by immediate superiors, peers within one's own organization, individuals outside of one's organization, subordinates, and any number of other individuals (Baugh & Sullivan, 2005).
- They suggest that development primarily happens through a sequence of stretch jobs, coaching, and mentoring.
- Companies need to adopt and accelerate development by improving the frequency and candor of feedback and institutionalizing mentoring.
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Teaching High School Classes
- High school teachers not only serve as classroom educators, but also as mentors, advisors and counselors to young learners.
- High school teachers not only serve as classroom educators, but also as mentors, advisers and counselors who have a profound impact on the lives of young people inside and outside of the traditional classroom.
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Long-Term Development
- Some examples of approaches to professional development include the case study method, consultation, coaching, communities of practice, lesson study, mentoring, reflective supervision, etc.
- There are a variety of approaches to professional development, including consultation, coaching, communities of practice, lesson study, mentoring, reflective supervision and technical assistance.
- Mentoring - to promote an individual's awareness and refinement of his or her own professional development by providing and recommending structured opportunities for reflection and observation.
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The Small Business Administration
- In addition, the agency provides grants to support counseling partners, including approximately 900 Small Business Development Centers (often located at colleges and universities); 110 Women's Business Centers; and SCORE, a volunteer mentor corps of retired and experienced business leaders with approximately 350 chapters.
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Bloom - Biography
- Bloom's most recognized and highly regarded initial work spawned from his collaboration with his mentor and fellow examiner Ralph W.
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Applications
- These examples include field courses, study abroad, and mentor-based internships (Millenbah, Campa, & Winterstein, 2004).