I've been helping people develop mentoring skills
for a long time. I've also provided tools. And, I've observed and thought about
why formal and informal mentoring succeeds and why it doesn't. My conclusion is
that there is something beyond skills and tools - as important as they are -
that makes mentoring work.
For want of a better term, I called it mindset.
Then I started to think about what that term really meant. I reflected on what
I'd learned over the years from the many mentoring partnerships I'd seen and
read about and what participants had shared of their experiences. This led me
to develop some beliefs and as I explored them I realized what they were.....
values.
Specifically, I believe that the mentoring
mindset is an approach based on five core values: personal courage, being
constructive, valuing difference, self-responsibility and dialogue.
This mindset - you might call it a philosophy or
principles - guides you when you are mentoring. If you have this mindset,
mentoring is easy and natural. You don't need a lot of rules, you make
decisions and take actions that are congruent with the values.
1 comment:
Hello Ann,
One could not disagree with the ideas you put forward.
Without those core values then it means the difference between being a great mentor or just satisfactory.
There are probably other aspects that could also be included but as the base criteria, then spot on the money.
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