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1 Ιαν 2011 · The authors’ review of the mentoring literature describes how the construct has changed since Kram’s influential work in the early 1980s, the implications of such changes for the field, and...
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17 Απρ 2021 · This paper identifies the core conceptual differences between traditional and critical theories of undergraduate peer mentorship and advances a grounded, critical framework for undergraduate...
Traditional mentoring begins with the assumption that the school, as the site of student learning and growth, is either value-neutral or yields unilaterally positive impacts on students. In traditional approaches, the school is understood as little more than a container in which a generalized process of development is carried out.
We recognize the significance of mentoring as an important form of socialization (see Chao, Chapter 7) that changes mentors and protégés in physiological, mental, emotional, and perhaps even spiritual ways (see Boyatzis, Chapter 18).
An effective mentoring relationship is one in which the mentee feels holistically supported by their mentor as they grow towards achieving their goals. Honest and regular communication between mentor and mentee allows for trust-filled conversations surrounding expectations, goal-setting, evaluations, and more to flourish organically.
General consensus proposes that mentoring is, in its most basic form, a developmental relationship grounded in and molded by philosophical, historical, and sociologi cal factors (Clutterbuck, Kochan, Lunsford, Domínguez, & Haddock‐Millar, 2017; Mullen, 2012).
31 Ιαν 2020 · General consensus proposes that mentoring is, in its most basic form, a developmental relationship grounded in and molded by philosophical, historical, and sociological factors.