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Displaying 1 - 25 of 99 ResourcesTitle | Resource Category | Summary/Description |
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Mentorship Guidance | The paper examines the experiences of academic mothers with mental health and physical disabilities navigating academia and parenthood during the COVID-19 pandemic. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Generic teaching evaluations focused on student satisfaction are more about accountability and marketing than improving teaching and learning. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Although women comprise an increasing proportion of US medical school faculty, they are underrepresented at higher ranks. Lack of effective mentoring may contribute to this disparity. We examined the role of academic rank, research focus, parenting, and part-time work on mentoring importance, needs, and gaps. |
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Mentorship Guidance | This handbook provides a comprehensive guide to academic writing and publishing, covering the structure and components of academic articles as well as other academic genres. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Academic writing practices are changing due to new forms of governance, digital resources, and internationalization in higher education. |
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Mentorship Guidance | The paper discusses how technology can be used to improve accessibility and support students with disabilities in higher education. |
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Mentorship Guidance | The paper discusses challenges in student-staff partnerships for co-creating learning and teaching in higher education, and provides suggestions for addressing resistance, navigating institutional norms, and ensuring inclusivity. |
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Mentorship Guidance | The book discusses the challenge of ensuring an inclusive campus culture for the increasing number of students with disabilities in higher education. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Mentoring is often identified as a crucial step in achieving career success. However, not all medical trainees or educators recognize the value of a mentoring relationship. Since medical educators rarely receive training on the mentoring process, they are often ill equipped to face challenges when taking on major mentoring responsibilities. This article is based on half-day workshops presented at the 11th Ottawa International Conference on Medical Education in Barcelona on 5 July 2004 and the annual meeting of the Association of American Medical Colleges in Boston on 10 November 2004 as well as a review of literature. Thirteen medical faculty participated in the former and 30 in the latter. Most participants held leadership positions at their institutions and mentored trainees as well as supervised mentoring programs. The workshops reviewed skills of mentoring and strategies for designing effective mentoring programs. Participants engaged in brainstorming and interactive discussions to: (a) review different types of mentoring programs; (b) discuss measures of success and failure of mentoring relationships and programs; and (c) examine the influence of gender and cultural differences on mentoring. Participants were also asked to develop an implementation plan for a mentoring program for medical students and faculty. They had to identify student and faculty mentoring needs, and describe methods to recruit mentors as well as institutional reward systems to encourage and support mentoring. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Racially underrepresented female faculty navigate the challenges of tokenism, identity taxation, and intellectual segregation in academia. |
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Mentorship Guidance | The paper presents teaching strategies, activities, and assignments to develop equity, diversity, and inclusion skills across academic disciplines. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Academia needs to build structures that support women professors as they navigate the complexities of pregnancy, postpartum, and caregiving demands. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Campus-community partnerships can leverage resources to address community issues, involving interpersonal relationships between campus and community members. |
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Mentorship Guidance | The changing role of higher education involves boundary spanners who can help address complex societal problems. |
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Mentorship Guidance | To explore the mentor–mentee relationship with a focus on determining the characteristics of effective mentors and mentees and understanding the factors influencing successful and failed mentoring relationships. Method The authors completed a qualitative study through the Departments of Medicine at the University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine and the University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine between March 2010 and January 2011. They conducted individual, semistructured interviews with faculty members from different career streams and ranks and analyzed transcripts of the interviews, drawing on grounded theory. Results The authors completed interviews with 54 faculty members and identified a number of themes, including the characteristics of effective mentors and mentees, actions of effective mentors, characteristics of successful and failed mentoring relationships, and tactics for successful mentoring relationships. Successful mentoring relationships were characterized by reciprocity, mutual respect, clear expectations, personal connection, and shared values. Failed mentoring relationships were characterized by poor communication, lack of commitment, personality differences, perceived (or real) competition, conflicts of interest, and the mentor’s lack of experience. Conclusions Successful mentorship is vital to career success and satisfaction for both mentors and mentees. Yet challenges continue to inhibit faculty members from receiving effective mentorship. Given the importance of mentorship on faculty members’ careers, future studies must address the association between a failed mentoring relationship and a faculty member’s career success, how to assess different approaches to mediating failed mentoring relationships, and how to evaluate strategies for effective mentorship throughout a faculty member’s career. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Mentoring of junior faculty members continues to be a widespread need in academic pharmacy in both new programs and established schools. The American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy (AACP) Joint Council Task Force on Mentoring was charged with gathering information from member colleges and schools and from the literature to determine best practices that could be shared with the academy. The task force summarized their findings regarding the needs and responsibilities for mentors and proteges at all faculty levels; what mentoring pieces are in existence, which need improvement, and which need to be created; and how effective mentoring is defined and could be measured. Based on these findings, the task force developed several recommendations as well as the PAIRS Faculty Mentorship Checklist. Academic institutions can benefit from the checklist whether they are planning to implement a faculty mentorship program or are interested in modifying existing programs. Keywords: mentor, faculty development |
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Mentorship Guidance | The Offices of the Senior Vice President for Faculty Affairs and Career Development at CUMC and the Vice Provost for Faculty Diversity and Inclusion developed this guide in collaboration with the Provost’s Advisory Council for the Enhancement of Faculty Diversity. This guide was developed to help academic leaders and faculty members who wish to use mentoring as a strategy to facilitate faculty success. |
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Mentorship Guidance | In this paper we philosophically explore the notion of darkness within higher education teaching and learning. Within the present-day discourse of how to make visible and to explicate teaching and learning strategies through alignment procedures and evidence-based intellectual leadership, we argue that dark spots and blind angles grow too. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Outstanding faculty mentors exhibit personal qualities, act as career guides, make strong time commitments, support work-life balance, and model good mentorship. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Mentoring is being increasingly used by companies as a means of fostering employee learning and development. Limited research exists from the perspective of the mentor on these relationships. This article presents the results of a qualitative study that investigated the characteristics that the ideal mentor should possess and ways that both mentors and proteges can make mentoring relationships most effective. Findings from the study are used to frame suggestions for future research and practice. |
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Mentorship Guidance | How do faculty and universities benefit from mentoring, and what sorts of mentoring programs and policies are most effective? This article reviews existing research on mentoring in higher education and develops a conceptual framework that captures a theory of change regarding expectations about the impact of mentoring on faculty career development and scholarly productivity. We surveyed faculty in U.S. public affairs programs to learn about individual and institutional experiences with mentoring and mentoring programs. We found that informal mentoring is prevalent, as are formal mentoring programs. In line with previous research, we found that both mentees and mentors believe that mentoring is useful for helping mentees with teaching, research, and career planning and that visible support for mentoring is important for its success. Guided by our findings, we offer recommendations for developing and sustaining effective faculty mentoring programs |
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Mentorship Guidance | How do faculty and universities benefit from mentoring, and what sorts of mentoring programs and policies are most effective? This article reviews existing research on mentoring in higher education and develops a conceptual framework that captures a theory of change regarding expectations about the impact of mentoring on faculty career development and scholarly productivity. We surveyed faculty in U. S. public affairs programs to learn about individual and institutional experiences with mentoring and mentoring programs. We found that informal mentoring is prevalent, as are formal mentoring programs. In line with previous research, we found that both mentees and mentors believe that mentoring is useful for helping mentees with teaching, research, and career planning and that visible support for mentoring is important for its success. Guided by our findings, we offer recommendations for developing and sustaining effective faculty mentoring programs. |
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Mentorship Guidance | Disabled academics in Canadian universities face difficulties navigating neoliberal performance standards and medicalized conceptualizations of disability. |
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Mentorship Guidance | To determine the characteristics associated with having a mentor, the association of mentoring with self-efficacy, and the content of mentor–mentee interactions at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), we conducted a baseline assessment prior to implementing a comprehensive faculty mentoring program. |
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Mentorship Guidance | LGBTQ+ faculty in science and engineering face an unwelcoming academic climate, including invisibility, discomfort, and pressure to conceal their sexuality. |