What is a mentor?
Usually a mentor is defined as a wise and trusted teacher or counselor. In academia, mentors are usually senior faculty, sometimes chairs, who provide guidance to junior faculty. Mentoring often happens informally, but a formal mentorship can be extremely helpful in navigating the challenges of an academic career.
General Tips for Good Mentoring
Be proactive
Be proactive in asking questions and offering assistance, rather than waiting for your protégé to ask for your help. It is generally better to ask your protégé specific, rather than general, questions. Here are some examples of general and specific/proactive questions:
General: How's your teaching going?
Specific: How are you doing managing the large class environment?
General: How is grading going for you so far?
Specific: My students often don't participate much during class discussions. How are yours doing with that?
General: How's your research going?
Specific: You talked about searching for a grant to fund your research project. How's that going so far?
General: How's your P&T document going?
Specific: Your P&T document is due in a month; would you like me to take a look at a draft with you?
What questions might a mentor answer?
What benefits does mentoring provide to the protégé?
Tips for New Faculty Protégés
Changing mentors
A mentee should consider changing mentors if the mentor is clearly and consistently uninterested in them, if the mentor consistently depresses the mentee by undervaluing their abilities or questioning their motives, if the mentor displays any other signs of undermining the relationship (e.g. racial, sexual, ethnic or other prejudice), or if there is simply incompatibility. If a mentee has problems with a mentor, they should contact the CTLE director for assistance.
A mentee should consider adding a mentor if the current mentor is unfamiliar with areas in which the mentee needs guidance.
Discuss key university policies and initiatives as well as culture with your protégé.
Introduce your protégé to the annual review and promotion and tenure processes. Help establish an initial plan/timetable for working toward tenure, and discuss the second-year and fourth-year reviews. (In the case of instructors, this should focus on policies and planning for annual reports and merit pay.)
Help your protégé transition into a full-time teaching role at the university, and discuss their teaching with them. Point your protégé to campus resources, such as the CTLE, which can help with teaching concerns.
Discuss what “collegiality” means and the role of colleagues’ perceptions of the junior faculty member.
If appropriate, assist with the initial development of a research agenda and help locate funding and other resources to support that plan. Help your protégé identify potential collaborators, if appropriate.
Advise as needed on various professional issues, such as time management, navigating departmental politics, balancing teaching/research/service, balancing work/home life, etc.
Assist with networking. Introduce your protégé to faculty, staff, and administrators across campus.
Discuss how your protégé can begin to build his service profile by becoming a member of committees, along with when and how much committee work to do.
Discuss campus support for scholarship and creative activity (eg. REG, Faculty Development Leave, etc.)
Help your protégé develop good habits of time management, especially regarding scholarship and creative activity. Help your protégé learn how to protect her time for scholarship and creative activity by saying no, when appropriate, and which demands on her time she can safely say no to.
Be a welcoming and supportive ear for your protégé, providing them with a safe place to ask “dumb” questions.
Research and Resources
Collaborative Research
Publication
Service
Review Process
Teaching
Student Supervision
Personal Issues
Typical Issues
“Mentoring Guidelines and Suggestions for Supporting New and Early Career Faculty” Cornell University Advance.
Rockquemore, K. A. (August 12, 2013). “How to Be a Great Mentor: A Mentoring Manifesto.” Inside Higher Ed.com. Retrieved from
“The Successful Mentee” Cornell University Advance.
Thomas, R. “Exemplary Junior Faculty Mentoring Programs.” Yale University Women Faculty Forum.
For more information, please contact Dr. Ashley Dockens, Director of CTLE at CTLE@Lamar.edu.
CTLE support is available 8:00 AM until 5:00 PM, Monday through Friday. We are committed to the highest ideals of confidentiality in all matters.
Ashley L. Dockens | Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning Enhancement
For questions about the CTLE: dept_CTLE@lamar.edu
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