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DEVELOPING
Developing Mentoring Program
                       PROGRAM
    www.humanikaconsulting.com



      www.humanikaconsulting.com
“In Greek mythology (The
Odyssey), Mentor was a man who
befriended and advised
Telemachus, the son of Odysseus.
The goddess Athena would assume
Mentor’s form when she visited
Telemachus.”
• A mentor is an individual with expertise who can
  help develop the career of a mentee. The mentor
  guides, trains, advises, and promotes the career
  development of the mentee.
• A mentor is an experienced guide, trustworthy
  advisor, a personal champion, a constructive critic, a
  motivator, a listener. A mentor wants the protégé to
  succeed!
Mentoring schemes can support :
• Specifically identified groups
  · Development and workbased
• Learning programmes
  · Individuals or organisations through
  change or transition.
  · Improved effectiveness of
  organisations and individuals.
Facilitated mentoring schemes may be
  introduced for a variety of reasons
                          •   Identify potential more effectively
                          •   Induct new staff more quickly
                          •   Improve the retention of staff
                          •   Encourage and support high flyers
                          •   Encourage and support ethnic minority and
                              disadvantaged groups
                          •   Encourage and support women to break through the
                              glass ceiling
                          •   Support selfdevelopment and workbased
                          •   Encourage and support mentoring in community
                              initiatives such as mentoring capable but disadvantaged
                          •   Support organisational change
                          •   Encourage personal development
                          •   Help individuals cope with transitions such as moving
                              into a new job or role.


 (Jones & Jowett, 1997)
Mentoring Functions in Career

Helping the mentee learn the ropes and prepare for
career advancement.
   – Coaching
   – Challenging assignments
   – Exposure and visibility
   – Protection
Mentoring Functions in Psychososial

             Helping the mentee develop a
             sense of competence and clarity
                of identity.
                – Role-Modeling
                – Acceptance and confirmation
                – Counseling
                – Friendship
The Benefits of Mentoring
Values And Principles of Mentoring
•   Recognising that people are okay (Hay, 1995)
•   Realising that people can change and want to grow (Hay, 1995)
•   Understanding how people learn
•   Recognising individual differences
•   Empowering through personal and professional development
•   Encouraging capability
•   Developing competence
•   Encouraging collaboration not competition
•   Encouraging scholarship and a sense of enquiry
•   Searching for new ideas, theories and knowledge
•   Equal opportunities in the organisation
•   Reflecting on past experiences as a key to understanding
•   Looking forward (Reflexion) and developing the ability to transfer learning and
    apply it in new situations
•   Realising that we can create our own meaning of mentoring (Hay, 1995 & Jowett,
    Shaw & Tarbitt, 1997)
Stages of Mentoring
       INITIATION STAGE

       CULTIVATION STAGE

       SEPERATION STAGE

       REDEFINITION STAGE

      Outcomes of Relationship

  Mentor     Protege      Institution
Initiation Stage

      • Initiation is the phase where
        the mentoring relationship is
        established.
      • Mentors and protégés
        introduce themselves, define
        goals, and begin sharing
        information. Two-way
        learning takes place in this
        phase.
      • It is a shorter phase of the
        mentoring relationship.
Mentoring Checklists
                 •   Why have I become a mentor/mentee?
                 •   What do I offer/ what do I want?
                 •   What significant issues might arise?
                 •   What do I feel strongly about?
                 •   Which are the areas where I prefer my mentor/mentee to
                     ‘match’ me; over which I am neutral; which I would like us to be
                     different?
                 •   What about issues of trust and respect?
                 •   What are my own psychological/ personal/ thinking/ working
                     styles?
                 •   How do they affect the way I interact with others?
                 •   What mentoring skills do I want my mentor to have?
                 •   How much time will we have?
                 •   Where will we meet?
                 •   What mutual contacts are we likely to have? How might that
                     affect the mentoring?
                 •   What is my attitude towards self development?
Hay (1995)       •   Who has been mentor to me. What did I gain?
                 •   Who else is involved in this process (eg senior management,
                     Human Resource Division,mentee’s manager)?
Developing mentoring program
Cultivation Stage




• Cultivation begins as the mentor provides advice and
  guidance to the protégé.
• The protégé will develop skills and gain a broader
  understanding of his or her role, career path, and
  professional development.
• The protégé works toward a goal and the mentor
  supports the protégé in their efforts.
Developing mentoring program
Example Review Questions (1)
Example Review Questions (2)
Example Review Questions (3)
Separation Stages

 • Goals will be reached. Knowledge will be
   shared. Priorities and availability may change.
 • The time will come for the mentoring
   relationship to come to an end.
 • It may be initiated by either the mentor or the
   protégé, or it could be by mutual decision.
 • During this phase, open and honest
   communication is critical and will help the
   individuals move through this transition stage.
 • Two-way communication and learning that
   was established during the initiation phase can
   help support the two-way communication that
   should occur during this phase.
Developing mentoring program
Reasons for ending include
• Scheme/project/placement
  completes its term
• One or other partner moves
  away to another job or role
• Inappropriate matching
• Personality clash/lack of
  bonding
• The relationship is not fulfilling
  the needs particularly of the
  mentee
• Partners do not fulfil their
  commitment to turn up for
  meetings
Redifinition Stage

       • The mentor and protégé roles
         will not exist indefinitely.
       • Two professionals will
         become more like peers.
       • This last phase of the
         mentoring relationship aims
         to redefine the roles of the
         individuals into a new,
         professional relationship that
         may continue indefinitely.
Learning Process
4 stages in the learning cycle (Lewis, 1996)
The Activist who is comfortable at the experience
stage and enjoys getting involved in new
experiences and doing things
The Reflector who likes to take time and think
things through from various angles before acting
The Theorist who assimilates, integrates,
synthesises information into rational schemes,
systems, theories, principles, logic or concepts for
explanation.
The Pragmatist who values new ideas, wants to see
if they work in practice and enjoys problem solving
Mentoring skills
A Mentor is ...
teacher/ educator    diagnostician     expert
 translator and decoder      critic    energiser
   confidante organisational culture and values      sponsor
                          counsellor        guide    taskmaster
                                         interpreter sounding board
                                                   motivator devil’s advocate
                                                       time manager learning consultant
                                                       protector process consultant
                                                     planner   facilitator ·
                                                   coach   role model
                                            problemsolver
                                           friend
                                          catalyst
                                         adviser
                                       target setter
Good Mentoring:
Set Specific, Realistic Goals and Deliverables


• Many agencies manage by milestones
• Setting specific goals, deliverables, and
  promotes concrete activity
• Achieving modest, short term goals
  promotes sense of progress
• Frequent review of goals and timeline is a
  valuable reality check; allows for
  adjustments and re-focusing
Mentoring Scheme (Conway, 1994)
Building Contract

      Contracting can be viewed as having
      four components (Hay, 1995):
      • The procedural contract
      • The professional contract
      • The personal contract
      • The psychological contract
Mentee Needs
• Guidance in a general or specific
  professional area
• Series of questions or issues
• Broad career development
• Early career development
• Ethical and moral guidance
• Assistance in navigating
  professional seings, institutions,
  structures, and politics
• Professional identity development
  guidance
Advice to Potential Mentees
          • Get mentors! Internal mentors
            help with current organizational
            issues. External mentors help with
            larger career issues and future
            organizational moves.
          • One mentor is unlikely to fulfill all
            developmental needs
          • Be proactive
          • Adopt a learning orientation
          • Set SMART developmental goals
             – Specific
             – Measurable
             – Attainable
Role of Mentees
• Seek counsel and advice, not a supervisor who directs
  actions.
• Be aware of potential pitfalls: Overbearing mentor,
  mentor exploitation of mentee’s work.
• Be sensitive to the difference between asking for
  help/advice from your mentor and demanding favors from
  your mentor.
• Synthesize lessons learned from all mentors – become
  your own person.
• Recognize dynamics of relationship.
Developing mentoring program
Advice to Potential Mentors



• Recognize that mentee may be uncomfortable
  asking for help – break ice by sharing some of your
  career experiences
• Stay in your zone of expertise/experience
• Be clear that mentee sets pace of relationship
• Advise, do not manage
• Extend mentee’s developmental network – suggest
  additional mentors to address unique needs
Roles and Characteristics of Mentors
•   Acts as an experienced role model
•   Provides acceptance, encouragement, and moral support
•   Provides wisdom, advice, counsel, coaching
•   Acts as a sponsor in professional organizations, supports networking
•   efforts
•   Assists with the navigation of professional se������ ings, institutions, structures,
•   and politics
•   Facilitates professional development
•   Challenges and encourages appropriately to facilitate growth
•   Provides nourishment, caring, and protection
•   Integrates professional support with other areas such as faith,
•   family, and community
•   Accepts assistance from mentee in mentor’s professional
•   responsibilities within appropriate limits
•   Enjoys the opportunity to pass on their wisdom and knowledge
•   and collaboration with early career professionals
Mentor Attributes
                                               Negative
Positive                                       • Unavailable
                                               • Poor Feedback
•   Available
                      • Willing to spend       • Insensitive
•   Intelligent          extra time with       • Arrogant
•   Challenging          students              • Disorganized
•   Innovative        • Offers opportunities   • Not funded
•   Invites to Field     for community         • Fails to offer constructive
                         outreach                criticism
•   Personable
                      • Similar political      • Expects too much
•   Renowned             views                 • Overworked
•   Enjoys Mentoring                           • Overly protective
•   Sets clear goals
•   Has necessary lab resources
•   Attends conferences with
    students
Good Mentor
Developing mentoring program
Relationship Types
•   Established career and early career
•   Professor to student
•   Professional to professional
•   Peer mentoring (same developmental
    level with specific
•   experiential differences)
•   Friendship
•   Parent-like features can be present
•   Task-focused versus relationship-based
•   Daily contact versus less frequent contact
•   Short- versus long-term mentorships
•   Collegial collaborations
Developing mentoring program
Advice for New Mentors
      •   Be a good listener
      •   Build a relationship
      •   Don’t abuse your authority
      •   Foster independence
      •   Provide introductions
      •   Be constructive
      •   Find your own mentors
Developing mentoring program
Four Potential Dysfunctions
                     in Mentoring Relationships
                             Psychosocial      Career-related

       Bad intent            Negative            Sabotage
       toward other          Relations (bullies, (revenge, silent
                             enemies)            treatment,
                                                 career damage)
       Good intent           Difficulty          Spoiling
       toward other          (conflict, binds) (betrayal, regret,
                                                 mentor off fast
                                                 track)

Scandura, T. A. (1998)
Emerson writes:
“(A mentor) is a mind that startles
us, that elevates our feelings by
sharing our views of life.”
Differences Between Coaching & Mentoring

             Coaching     Mentoring
Goals        To correct   To support and
                          guide
Initiative   The coach    The mentee
Focus        Immediate    Long-term
             situation
Roles        Heavy on     Heavy on listening
             telling
TRADITIONAL MENTORING VS
DEVELOPMENTAL ALLIANCE

Traditional                 Developmental Alliance
1. The mentor is more       1. The mentor is more
    influential and            experienced in issues
    hierarchically senior      relevant to mentee’s
2. The mentor gives, the       learning needs
    protégé receives, the   2. A process of mutual
    organization benefits      growth
TRADITIONAL MENTORING VS
 DEVELOPMENTAL ALLIANCE

Traditional                    Developmental Alliance
3. The mentor actively         3. The mentor helps the
    champions and promotes        mentee to things for
    the cause of the protégé      themselves
4. The mentor gives the        4. The mentor helps the
    protégé the benefit of        mentee develop their own
    their wisdom                  wisdom
TRADITIONAL MENTORING VS
DEVELOPMENTAL ALLIANCE

Traditional                    Developmental Alliance
5. The mentor steers the       5. The mentor helps the
   protégé through the            mentee towards personal
   acquisition of experience      insights from which they
   and resources                  can steer their own
                                  development
6. The primary objective is
   career success              6. The primary objective is
                                  personal development
TRADITIONAL MENTORING VS
DEVELOPMENTAL ALLIANCE

Traditional                    Developmental Alliance
7. Good advice is central to   7. Good questions are
    the success of the            central to the success of
    relationship                  the relationship
8. Social exchange             8. The social exchange
    emphasizes loyalty            emphasis learning
Formal Mentoring Programs



• Program length is specified
• Purpose of program is to help early career psychologists
  establish and develop their careers
• Program participation is voluntary.
• Matching of mentors and mentees uses input from
  participants :
   – Interest areas in psychology
   – Demographics
   – Experiences
Formal Mentoring Programs



• Advocate developmental networks
• Monitoring program: Relationships should end as soon as
  they become dysfunctional
• Evaluation of program
• Little research on formal mentoring programs. Available
  research supports informal mentoring as a stronger
  relationship with better outcomes. No current research
  examining quality of formal mentoring programs and their
  outcomes.
   (Wanberg, Welsh, & Hezlett, 2003)
Developer             Developer             Developer            Demo-                Profess-          Geograph-
  Matrix of Types of                                is org.               is org. peer          is org.              graphic              ional/            ical
  Developers and Development                        superior to           to the                subordinae           match                Interest          location
  Functions in Organizational                       the mentee            mentee                to the                                    area              match
  Socialization                                                                                 mentee                                    match

Career-related: Coaching mentee                                                                                      0                    +                 0
with strategies for meeting job                     +                     -                     -
expectations
                                                    +                                                                                                       0
Career-related: Challenging mentee                                                                                   0                    +
with stretch assignments/goals                                            -                     -
Career-related: Enhancing the                       +                     +                                          +                    +                 +
mentee’s exposure and visibility                                                                -
                                                    +
Career-related: Protection of mentee                                      +                     +                    +                    +                 +
from potentially negative contacts
with other org. members.

Career-related: Sponsorship of                      +                                                                0                    0                 0
mentee’s career development                                               -                     -
Psychosocial: Role Modeling                         +                     +                                          +                    +                 +
                                                    +                     +
                                                                                                -                                         +
Psychosocial: Counseling with work                                                              +                    +                                      +
relationships                                                                                                                             +
Psychosocial: Counseling on                         +                     +                                          0                                      0
developing work/career-related                                                                  -
competencies
                                                    0
Psychosocial: Counseling with work-                                       0                     0                    +                    0                 +
family balance
Psychosocial: General acceptance                    +                     +                     +                    +                    +                 +
and confirmation
  (Chao, in press)

  “+”= likely function for this type of developer, “0” = possible function for this type of developer, “-” = unlikely function for this type of developer
Meetings
• Regular meeting schedule
• Set agenda for meetings
• Know what is expected of you
• Actively inform what you are doing
• Listen actively
• Ask questions
Multiple Mentors: Necessity
• Ways to make it work:
– Clear roles and expectations
– Good relationship among
mentors
– Complementary experience
• Potential problems
– Unclear expectations
– Disagreement or
competition
– Inefficient/overlap
Distance Mentoring

 • How to use e-mail
   – Use e-mail to set up meetings (face-to-
     face or phone), clarify plans/goals, pose
     non-time urgent questions, review plans,
     maintain contact.
   – Don’t use e-mail to give critical or complex
     feedback, provide impressions of other’s
     behavior, provide impressions of third
     parties, exchange sensitive information.
Distance Mentoring

• Communication Challenges
   – Listen for nonverbal cues
     (e.g., pregnant pauses,
     voice tone, tempo, volume)
   – Push for specific
     information, clarify
     meanings
   – Summarize agreements
POTENTIAL PROBLEM AREAS
Mismatch of mentor/mentee
• Mismatch of expectations
• Reluctant mentor/mentee
• Over zealous mentee
• Relationship not valued in the
  organisation                     Broken confidentiality
                                   Conflicting roles manager/
• Gender mismatch
                                   assessor/mentor
• Cultural mismatch                Impact on others
• Race mismatch                    Obstructions from/conflicts of others,
• Emotional involvement            eg mentees line manager, colleagues,
                                   partners
                                   Parameters/boundaries not agreed in
                                   advance
Other Problems (NBS, 1999)
 • Personal incompatibility of
   mentor and mentee
 • Frustration of time
   constraints/workload
 • Impact of shift pattern and
   difficulty with access between
   mentor/mentee
• Difficulty in sustaining sufficient numbers of mentors
• Danger that mentorship becomes a paper exercise
• Lack of cooperation
• from colleagues
Problems With Cross-Gender Mentoring


           • Most common form of business
             mentoring:
             male mentor and male mentee.
           • Other forms:
             – Male mentor and female mentee
               (most common)
             – Female mentor and male mentee
             – Female mentor and female
               mentee (rare)
Advice for Same-Gender
     and Cross-Gender Mentoring
• Keep relationship
  professional
• Be sensitive to other
  people’s reactions and
  potential rumors
• Avoid perception of
  personal relationship
   – Meet in public venues
   – Transparency of
     relationship
After the Program Ends



• Many relationships come to a natural end when a mentee
  learns enough to be independent from specific mentors.
• New mentoring relationships with others may be more
  beneficial than continuing an exhausted relationship.
• Program end may not mean the end of the relationship –
  informal mentoring can continue if both parties agree.
• Pilot program will assess how mentoring met needs of both
  mentees and mentors.
The APA’s Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct
     : five general principles and 10 standards (APA, 2002).

•   Beneficence and Nonmaleficence
•   Fidelity and Responsibility
•   Integrity
•   Justice
•   Respect for People’s Rights and Dignity
Advantages of Mentoring

• Advantages for the mentee:
  – Career advancement
  – Salary
  – Organizational/professional identification
• Advantages for the mentor:
  – Career enhancement
  – “Passing the torch to a new generation”
  – Learning from mentee – new technologies, new
    developments, important features of next
    generation
Disadvantages of Mentoring
• Disadvantages for the mentee:
  – Overdependence on the mentor
  – Micro-management from the
    mentor
  – Negative halo from mentor who
    fails
• Disadvantages for the mentor:
  – Mentee dependence on mentor
  – Time, energy commitment to
    mentee
  – Negative halo from mentee who
    fails
Developing mentoring program
Developing mentoring program

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Developing mentoring program

  • 1. DEVELOPING Developing Mentoring Program PROGRAM www.humanikaconsulting.com www.humanikaconsulting.com
  • 2. “In Greek mythology (The Odyssey), Mentor was a man who befriended and advised Telemachus, the son of Odysseus. The goddess Athena would assume Mentor’s form when she visited Telemachus.”
  • 3. • A mentor is an individual with expertise who can help develop the career of a mentee. The mentor guides, trains, advises, and promotes the career development of the mentee. • A mentor is an experienced guide, trustworthy advisor, a personal champion, a constructive critic, a motivator, a listener. A mentor wants the protégé to succeed!
  • 4. Mentoring schemes can support : • Specifically identified groups · Development and workbased • Learning programmes · Individuals or organisations through change or transition. · Improved effectiveness of organisations and individuals.
  • 5. Facilitated mentoring schemes may be introduced for a variety of reasons • Identify potential more effectively • Induct new staff more quickly • Improve the retention of staff • Encourage and support high flyers • Encourage and support ethnic minority and disadvantaged groups • Encourage and support women to break through the glass ceiling • Support selfdevelopment and workbased • Encourage and support mentoring in community initiatives such as mentoring capable but disadvantaged • Support organisational change • Encourage personal development • Help individuals cope with transitions such as moving into a new job or role. (Jones & Jowett, 1997)
  • 6. Mentoring Functions in Career Helping the mentee learn the ropes and prepare for career advancement. – Coaching – Challenging assignments – Exposure and visibility – Protection
  • 7. Mentoring Functions in Psychososial Helping the mentee develop a sense of competence and clarity of identity. – Role-Modeling – Acceptance and confirmation – Counseling – Friendship
  • 8. The Benefits of Mentoring
  • 9. Values And Principles of Mentoring • Recognising that people are okay (Hay, 1995) • Realising that people can change and want to grow (Hay, 1995) • Understanding how people learn • Recognising individual differences • Empowering through personal and professional development • Encouraging capability • Developing competence • Encouraging collaboration not competition • Encouraging scholarship and a sense of enquiry • Searching for new ideas, theories and knowledge • Equal opportunities in the organisation • Reflecting on past experiences as a key to understanding • Looking forward (Reflexion) and developing the ability to transfer learning and apply it in new situations • Realising that we can create our own meaning of mentoring (Hay, 1995 & Jowett, Shaw & Tarbitt, 1997)
  • 10. Stages of Mentoring INITIATION STAGE CULTIVATION STAGE SEPERATION STAGE REDEFINITION STAGE Outcomes of Relationship Mentor Protege Institution
  • 11. Initiation Stage • Initiation is the phase where the mentoring relationship is established. • Mentors and protégés introduce themselves, define goals, and begin sharing information. Two-way learning takes place in this phase. • It is a shorter phase of the mentoring relationship.
  • 12. Mentoring Checklists • Why have I become a mentor/mentee? • What do I offer/ what do I want? • What significant issues might arise? • What do I feel strongly about? • Which are the areas where I prefer my mentor/mentee to ‘match’ me; over which I am neutral; which I would like us to be different? • What about issues of trust and respect? • What are my own psychological/ personal/ thinking/ working styles? • How do they affect the way I interact with others? • What mentoring skills do I want my mentor to have? • How much time will we have? • Where will we meet? • What mutual contacts are we likely to have? How might that affect the mentoring? • What is my attitude towards self development? Hay (1995) • Who has been mentor to me. What did I gain? • Who else is involved in this process (eg senior management, Human Resource Division,mentee’s manager)?
  • 14. Cultivation Stage • Cultivation begins as the mentor provides advice and guidance to the protégé. • The protégé will develop skills and gain a broader understanding of his or her role, career path, and professional development. • The protégé works toward a goal and the mentor supports the protégé in their efforts.
  • 19. Separation Stages • Goals will be reached. Knowledge will be shared. Priorities and availability may change. • The time will come for the mentoring relationship to come to an end. • It may be initiated by either the mentor or the protégé, or it could be by mutual decision. • During this phase, open and honest communication is critical and will help the individuals move through this transition stage. • Two-way communication and learning that was established during the initiation phase can help support the two-way communication that should occur during this phase.
  • 21. Reasons for ending include • Scheme/project/placement completes its term • One or other partner moves away to another job or role • Inappropriate matching • Personality clash/lack of bonding • The relationship is not fulfilling the needs particularly of the mentee • Partners do not fulfil their commitment to turn up for meetings
  • 22. Redifinition Stage • The mentor and protégé roles will not exist indefinitely. • Two professionals will become more like peers. • This last phase of the mentoring relationship aims to redefine the roles of the individuals into a new, professional relationship that may continue indefinitely.
  • 23. Learning Process 4 stages in the learning cycle (Lewis, 1996) The Activist who is comfortable at the experience stage and enjoys getting involved in new experiences and doing things The Reflector who likes to take time and think things through from various angles before acting The Theorist who assimilates, integrates, synthesises information into rational schemes, systems, theories, principles, logic or concepts for explanation. The Pragmatist who values new ideas, wants to see if they work in practice and enjoys problem solving
  • 25. A Mentor is ... teacher/ educator diagnostician expert translator and decoder critic energiser confidante organisational culture and values sponsor counsellor guide taskmaster interpreter sounding board motivator devil’s advocate time manager learning consultant protector process consultant planner facilitator · coach role model problemsolver friend catalyst adviser target setter
  • 26. Good Mentoring: Set Specific, Realistic Goals and Deliverables • Many agencies manage by milestones • Setting specific goals, deliverables, and promotes concrete activity • Achieving modest, short term goals promotes sense of progress • Frequent review of goals and timeline is a valuable reality check; allows for adjustments and re-focusing
  • 28. Building Contract Contracting can be viewed as having four components (Hay, 1995): • The procedural contract • The professional contract • The personal contract • The psychological contract
  • 29. Mentee Needs • Guidance in a general or specific professional area • Series of questions or issues • Broad career development • Early career development • Ethical and moral guidance • Assistance in navigating professional seings, institutions, structures, and politics • Professional identity development guidance
  • 30. Advice to Potential Mentees • Get mentors! Internal mentors help with current organizational issues. External mentors help with larger career issues and future organizational moves. • One mentor is unlikely to fulfill all developmental needs • Be proactive • Adopt a learning orientation • Set SMART developmental goals – Specific – Measurable – Attainable
  • 31. Role of Mentees • Seek counsel and advice, not a supervisor who directs actions. • Be aware of potential pitfalls: Overbearing mentor, mentor exploitation of mentee’s work. • Be sensitive to the difference between asking for help/advice from your mentor and demanding favors from your mentor. • Synthesize lessons learned from all mentors – become your own person. • Recognize dynamics of relationship.
  • 33. Advice to Potential Mentors • Recognize that mentee may be uncomfortable asking for help – break ice by sharing some of your career experiences • Stay in your zone of expertise/experience • Be clear that mentee sets pace of relationship • Advise, do not manage • Extend mentee’s developmental network – suggest additional mentors to address unique needs
  • 34. Roles and Characteristics of Mentors • Acts as an experienced role model • Provides acceptance, encouragement, and moral support • Provides wisdom, advice, counsel, coaching • Acts as a sponsor in professional organizations, supports networking • efforts • Assists with the navigation of professional se������ ings, institutions, structures, • and politics • Facilitates professional development • Challenges and encourages appropriately to facilitate growth • Provides nourishment, caring, and protection • Integrates professional support with other areas such as faith, • family, and community • Accepts assistance from mentee in mentor’s professional • responsibilities within appropriate limits • Enjoys the opportunity to pass on their wisdom and knowledge • and collaboration with early career professionals
  • 35. Mentor Attributes Negative Positive • Unavailable • Poor Feedback • Available • Willing to spend • Insensitive • Intelligent extra time with • Arrogant • Challenging students • Disorganized • Innovative • Offers opportunities • Not funded • Invites to Field for community • Fails to offer constructive outreach criticism • Personable • Similar political • Expects too much • Renowned views • Overworked • Enjoys Mentoring • Overly protective • Sets clear goals • Has necessary lab resources • Attends conferences with students
  • 38. Relationship Types • Established career and early career • Professor to student • Professional to professional • Peer mentoring (same developmental level with specific • experiential differences) • Friendship • Parent-like features can be present • Task-focused versus relationship-based • Daily contact versus less frequent contact • Short- versus long-term mentorships • Collegial collaborations
  • 40. Advice for New Mentors • Be a good listener • Build a relationship • Don’t abuse your authority • Foster independence • Provide introductions • Be constructive • Find your own mentors
  • 42. Four Potential Dysfunctions in Mentoring Relationships Psychosocial Career-related Bad intent Negative Sabotage toward other Relations (bullies, (revenge, silent enemies) treatment, career damage) Good intent Difficulty Spoiling toward other (conflict, binds) (betrayal, regret, mentor off fast track) Scandura, T. A. (1998)
  • 43. Emerson writes: “(A mentor) is a mind that startles us, that elevates our feelings by sharing our views of life.”
  • 44. Differences Between Coaching & Mentoring Coaching Mentoring Goals To correct To support and guide Initiative The coach The mentee Focus Immediate Long-term situation Roles Heavy on Heavy on listening telling
  • 45. TRADITIONAL MENTORING VS DEVELOPMENTAL ALLIANCE Traditional Developmental Alliance 1. The mentor is more 1. The mentor is more influential and experienced in issues hierarchically senior relevant to mentee’s 2. The mentor gives, the learning needs protégé receives, the 2. A process of mutual organization benefits growth
  • 46. TRADITIONAL MENTORING VS DEVELOPMENTAL ALLIANCE Traditional Developmental Alliance 3. The mentor actively 3. The mentor helps the champions and promotes mentee to things for the cause of the protégé themselves 4. The mentor gives the 4. The mentor helps the protégé the benefit of mentee develop their own their wisdom wisdom
  • 47. TRADITIONAL MENTORING VS DEVELOPMENTAL ALLIANCE Traditional Developmental Alliance 5. The mentor steers the 5. The mentor helps the protégé through the mentee towards personal acquisition of experience insights from which they and resources can steer their own development 6. The primary objective is career success 6. The primary objective is personal development
  • 48. TRADITIONAL MENTORING VS DEVELOPMENTAL ALLIANCE Traditional Developmental Alliance 7. Good advice is central to 7. Good questions are the success of the central to the success of relationship the relationship 8. Social exchange 8. The social exchange emphasizes loyalty emphasis learning
  • 49. Formal Mentoring Programs • Program length is specified • Purpose of program is to help early career psychologists establish and develop their careers • Program participation is voluntary. • Matching of mentors and mentees uses input from participants : – Interest areas in psychology – Demographics – Experiences
  • 50. Formal Mentoring Programs • Advocate developmental networks • Monitoring program: Relationships should end as soon as they become dysfunctional • Evaluation of program • Little research on formal mentoring programs. Available research supports informal mentoring as a stronger relationship with better outcomes. No current research examining quality of formal mentoring programs and their outcomes. (Wanberg, Welsh, & Hezlett, 2003)
  • 51. Developer Developer Developer Demo- Profess- Geograph- Matrix of Types of is org. is org. peer is org. graphic ional/ ical Developers and Development superior to to the subordinae match Interest location Functions in Organizational the mentee mentee to the area match Socialization mentee match Career-related: Coaching mentee 0 + 0 with strategies for meeting job + - - expectations + 0 Career-related: Challenging mentee 0 + with stretch assignments/goals - - Career-related: Enhancing the + + + + + mentee’s exposure and visibility - + Career-related: Protection of mentee + + + + + from potentially negative contacts with other org. members. Career-related: Sponsorship of + 0 0 0 mentee’s career development - - Psychosocial: Role Modeling + + + + + + + - + Psychosocial: Counseling with work + + + relationships + Psychosocial: Counseling on + + 0 0 developing work/career-related - competencies 0 Psychosocial: Counseling with work- 0 0 + 0 + family balance Psychosocial: General acceptance + + + + + + and confirmation (Chao, in press) “+”= likely function for this type of developer, “0” = possible function for this type of developer, “-” = unlikely function for this type of developer
  • 52. Meetings • Regular meeting schedule • Set agenda for meetings • Know what is expected of you • Actively inform what you are doing • Listen actively • Ask questions
  • 53. Multiple Mentors: Necessity • Ways to make it work: – Clear roles and expectations – Good relationship among mentors – Complementary experience • Potential problems – Unclear expectations – Disagreement or competition – Inefficient/overlap
  • 54. Distance Mentoring • How to use e-mail – Use e-mail to set up meetings (face-to- face or phone), clarify plans/goals, pose non-time urgent questions, review plans, maintain contact. – Don’t use e-mail to give critical or complex feedback, provide impressions of other’s behavior, provide impressions of third parties, exchange sensitive information.
  • 55. Distance Mentoring • Communication Challenges – Listen for nonverbal cues (e.g., pregnant pauses, voice tone, tempo, volume) – Push for specific information, clarify meanings – Summarize agreements
  • 56. POTENTIAL PROBLEM AREAS Mismatch of mentor/mentee • Mismatch of expectations • Reluctant mentor/mentee • Over zealous mentee • Relationship not valued in the organisation Broken confidentiality Conflicting roles manager/ • Gender mismatch assessor/mentor • Cultural mismatch Impact on others • Race mismatch Obstructions from/conflicts of others, • Emotional involvement eg mentees line manager, colleagues, partners Parameters/boundaries not agreed in advance
  • 57. Other Problems (NBS, 1999) • Personal incompatibility of mentor and mentee • Frustration of time constraints/workload • Impact of shift pattern and difficulty with access between mentor/mentee • Difficulty in sustaining sufficient numbers of mentors • Danger that mentorship becomes a paper exercise • Lack of cooperation • from colleagues
  • 58. Problems With Cross-Gender Mentoring • Most common form of business mentoring: male mentor and male mentee. • Other forms: – Male mentor and female mentee (most common) – Female mentor and male mentee – Female mentor and female mentee (rare)
  • 59. Advice for Same-Gender and Cross-Gender Mentoring • Keep relationship professional • Be sensitive to other people’s reactions and potential rumors • Avoid perception of personal relationship – Meet in public venues – Transparency of relationship
  • 60. After the Program Ends • Many relationships come to a natural end when a mentee learns enough to be independent from specific mentors. • New mentoring relationships with others may be more beneficial than continuing an exhausted relationship. • Program end may not mean the end of the relationship – informal mentoring can continue if both parties agree. • Pilot program will assess how mentoring met needs of both mentees and mentors.
  • 61. The APA’s Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct : five general principles and 10 standards (APA, 2002). • Beneficence and Nonmaleficence • Fidelity and Responsibility • Integrity • Justice • Respect for People’s Rights and Dignity
  • 62. Advantages of Mentoring • Advantages for the mentee: – Career advancement – Salary – Organizational/professional identification • Advantages for the mentor: – Career enhancement – “Passing the torch to a new generation” – Learning from mentee – new technologies, new developments, important features of next generation
  • 63. Disadvantages of Mentoring • Disadvantages for the mentee: – Overdependence on the mentor – Micro-management from the mentor – Negative halo from mentor who fails • Disadvantages for the mentor: – Mentee dependence on mentor – Time, energy commitment to mentee – Negative halo from mentee who fails