Title: Mentoring in Early Childhood Settings
1Mentoring in Early
Childhood Settings
- Pauline Harris
- Faculty of Education
- University of Wollongong
- pharris_at_uow.edu.au
2Workshop Overview
- What is mentoring?
- Why implement mentoring in early childhood
settings? - How is mentoring undertaken?
- What makes up a mentoring program?
- What are the key steps in planning a
mentoring program?
3What is mentoring?
- To value the growth and development of children,
we must value our own growth and development as
early childhood practitioners. - Soave McCormick Ferguson, 2005
4Workshop Activity 1
- What does mentoring mean to you?
- Reflect, record and share in your group
5Definitions of Mentoring
Not any one thing
A sharing experience and a sharing of
experience
A creative friendship
?
A partnership of mutual benefit
A learning relationship
A long-term engagement whereby you are working
with the same people and changing or enhancing
that level of engagement over time. It is not a
linear process
When two people find space in their working
lives to reflect on their work and practice
6Definitions of Mentoring
An alliance of two people that creates a space
for dialogue that results in definition, action
and learning for both. (Rolfe-Flett, 2001)
Typically, it is a one-to-one relationship
between a more experienced and a less experienced
employee. It is based upon encouragement,
constructive comments, openness, mutual trust,
respect and a willingness to share. (Spencer,
1999)
What lies behind us and what lies before us are
tiny matters compared to what lies within us.
(Oliver Wendell-Holmes)
7What mentoring is and is not
- Mentoring is not supervision
- Mentoring is not only role-modelling
- Mentoring involves direct assistance of career
planning and professional development through
teaching, counselling, role-modelling, providing
support, protecting, promoting and/or sponsoring.
8Role of the Mentor
- To commit themselves to the mentoring program and
their mentee - Encourage exploration of ideas
- Encourage risk-taking
- Listen when mentee has a problem
- Provide appropriate and timely advice
- Provide access to appropriate skills training
- Assist mentee to identify solve problems
- Help mentee to shift and broaden their
perspectives - Confront negative intentions or behaviours
9Role of the Mentee
- Commit themselves to the mentoring program and
their mentor - Take on new challenges and responsibilities
- Seek and be receptive of feedback
- Accept responsibility for their own growth and
development - Be willing to take risks
10Why implement mentoring in early childhood
settings?
- Create a collaborative learning culture where
teamwork and mentoring become normal social
practices through informed, reflective practice
that infuses interactions and deliberations
and by taking advantage of, rather than
resisting, the natural power of complexity. - Davis Pratt, 2005, Early Childhood Educators
11Benefits to Mentors
- Develop a close working relationship with mentee
- Personal growth and professional development
- Different perspectives on issues
- Enhanced communication and leadership skills
- Deepened insights into workplace complexities
- Receive public recognition
- A way of making a contribution
- Revitalised interest in their work
- Opportunity to exert influence in an organisation
12Benefits to Mentees
- Personal growth and self-development plans
- Support in developing and implementing targeted
development activities - Enhance likelihood for success
- Development of specific skills and knowledge
- Deepened understanding of organisation
- Expanded vision
- Extended networks and support systems
- Enhanced communication and interpersonal skills
- Improved promotion opportunities
- Enhanced status and sense of standing
13Benefits to Organisation
- Increasing ability to attract and retain talent
- Discovery of latent talent
- Improved employee commitment
- Enhanced motivation for managers
- Retaining corporate knowledge
- Increased organisational capacity for
professional development - Enhanced organisational culture and image
- People feeling valued through recognition of
individual contributions
14Workshop Activity 2
- Reflect on the benefits of mentoring that have
been presented. Which of these in particular
apply to your setting? - Share and discuss with your group.
15How is mentoring undertaken?
- Mentoring is so much more challenging than I
expected it to be. I thought I would meet my
mentee, we'd become instant friends and then we'd
chat about early childhood education together. It
takes lots of experience and support to become a
good mentor. - An early childhood educator in Klinger, 2003
16Types of Mentoring
- One-to-one mentoring
- Close hierarchical relationship
- Expensive on time
- Limits matchings between mentor and mentee that
can be made - Provides guaranteed commitment of mentor to
mentee
17Types of Mentoring
- Mentoring hubs
- Mentor working with a number of mentees at once
- May work with each mentee individually and with
all mentees as a group - Allows and encourages mentees to coach each other
and develop significant peer relationships - Increases number of matchings that can be made
- Requires a large time commitment of mentor
- Difficult to guarantee equal commitment to each
mentee - Mentee needs to be more self-reliant and
take more responsibility for their
own development
18Types of Mentoring
- On-site mentors
- Readily available for ad hoc meetings, informal
shadowing and counselling - Might be difficult to identify an appropriate
mentor who is more senior than the mentee but not
the mentees immediate supervisor - The mentor usually is more senior but can also be
a more experienced peer
19Types of Mentoring
- Off-site mentors
- Mentee has opportunity to see variety of ways of
working management styles - Mentor is separate from mentees direct line
manager - Mentoring must be organised and formal, removing
opportunities for informal ad hoc coaching and
counselling - One-site workplaces can work in
co-operation with other work
sites
20Workshop Activity 3
- What type of mentoring do you think would best
suit your early childhood workplace and team
needs? Why? - Reflect, share and discuss with your group
21Mentoring Functions
- Some perceptions of mentoring
- Fill the empty vessel
- Nurture the seed
- Fix up the patient
- Help climb the ladder
- Facilitate discovery of anothers
career path
22Mentoring Functions
- Some effective strategies
- Shadowing
- Mentee follows mentor around in daily work,
observing and discussing observations to identify
ways to improve own performance - Trialling
- Mentee chooses an idea or process and sets up a
situation in which it can be piloted and
reflected upon with mentor
23Mentoring Functions
- Some effective strategies
- Job rotation
- Mentee gains experience in various tasks and
divisions of a workplace or organisation - Project work
- Mentee becomes part of a project team set up or
related to learning goals, to learn specific
skills related to project and team work
24Mentoring Functions
- Some effective strategies
- Coaching
- Mentee seeks out or is matched with people with
specific technical skills - Counselling
- Mentor helps mentee to identify and resolve their
own problems
25Mentoring Functions
- Some effective strategies
- Visits off-site
- Mentee looks at examples of good practice in
other workplaces, and discusses this experience
with mentor to clarify the learning and suggest
improvements in their own practices - Research
- Mentor provides ideas on professional reading and
other professional development through manuals,
videos/DVDs, workshops, conferences and so on
26Workshop Activity 4
- To what extent do you have opportunity to be
involved in these mentoring functions in your
early childhood setting, as mentor and/or mentee?
- Which of these would you like to be involved in,
why, and how might you initiate such involvement? - Share and discuss with your group.
27Mentoring Relationships
- Trust
- Honesty
- Good will
- Good questions
- Confidentiality
- Respect
- Reciprocity
- Encouragement
- Active listening
- Chemistry
- Time
28Phases in Developing a Mentoring Relationship
Maturity
Disengagement
Development
Initiation
Redefinition
(Rolfe-Flett, 2002)
29What makes up a mentoring
program?
- One of the things that I've been privileged to
have in my own career is some really great
mentors who have encouraged me in my work - who
supported me as I took risks and stretched the
boundaries to help achieve my goals, and I'd like
to do the same for others. - Anne Glover, Early Childhood Educator
30Components of a Mentoring Program
- Information kits about the program
- Purpose
- How it will work
- Who will be involved
- Other details
- Training support and workshops
31Components of a Mentoring Program
- Mentoring meetings between mentor and mentee/s
- Debriefing and review meetings of all mentors and
mentees - Discuss achievements, challenges, questions and
concerns - Networking
- Opportunities to form supportive alliances and
obtain information
32Components of a Mentoring Program
- Informal/social activities
- Foster group interaction
- Workbooks and journals
- Provide structure and resources for the program
- Newsletters
- Provide information and updates and maintain
interest - Evaluation
- Monitor progress and evaluate program outcomes
and participant feedback - Ongoing and responsive, e.g., meetings,
questionnaires
33Structure in a Mentoring Program
Too little structure
Too much structure
Initial enthusiasm wanes Lack of
direction Meetings are without purpose,
continuity or outcome Few mentoring partnerships
continue Disillusionment occurs Mentoring
dismissed as fad
Contrived and stilted Inhibits mentoring
relationship Paperwork reporting takes up
time Management may seem like manipulation Mentori
ng is equated with performance appraisal
(Rolfe-Flett, 2002)
34Structure in a Mentoring Program
- Minimum of structure would include
- Overall mentoring objectives
- General guidelines that include mentoring policy
but leave scope for mentors and mentees to make
their own arrangements - Occasional phone contact by program co-ordinator
to monitor program - A short questionnaire at end of program to
evaluate results - (Rolfe-Flett, 2002)
35Structure in a Mentoring Program
- Additional strategies
- Conduct a SWOT analysis with participants
- Strengths
- Weaknesses
- Opportunities
- Threats
- Provide checklists, pro formae and guides and
allow participants option of using them or not - Facilitate group discussions during training
sessions
36Workshop Activity 5
- What kind of structure would you see as feasible
and desirable in your early childhood setting? - What elements would you want to include and why?
- Share, record and discuss with your group
37What are the key steps in planning a mentoring
program?
- Parents, children and staff are the
organizations priority supporting its
practitioners and valuing their contributions,
the organization believes that the creation of a
mentoring culture will increase quality and
produce an excellent standard of care for
children and their families. early childhood
staff is what have made, and will continue to
make, the organization successful. The
organization believes that their early childhood
staff is the means to achieving their
organizations ends. It holds the philosophy of
"what goes around comes around in the circle of
care ". - Partners in Practice
- Bringing a Mentoring Culture to Life Within A
Childs World Family Child Care Services in
Niagara
38Research
- Analyse individual and organisational
needs - eg., a SWOT analysis
- Identify desired outcomes
- Clarify issues to be addressed
- Eg., staff turnover, knowledge dissemination and
uptake, communication processes, career
management issues - Determine mentoring training needs
- Formulate evaluation criteria
39Program Design
- Plan what needs to be done
- Identify who will be involved
- Establish what resources will be required
- Create a time line
- Include a communication strategy that informs all
staff of the program - Develop procedures and processes for monitoring
and evaluating the program
40Training
- Ensure mentors and mentees have the necessary
skills for mentoring and being mentored - Develop shared understanding of
- Their own and each others roles and
responsibilities as mentor and mentee - Objectives and processes of the program
- Access to resources and assistance
- How the program is to be evaluated
41Pilot
- Plan and implement a small scale trial program
- Monitor and evaluate the trial
- Debrief participants on the evaluation and invite
discussion and ways forward - Identify refinements of the pilot program for
full-scale implementation
42Implement the Program
- Plan the mentoring program on a full scale
- Launch the program
- Monitor as an ongoing process
- Evaluate program at its end
- Manage the programs conclusion and exit
- Celebrate the programs successes and
participants achievements and contributions, and
reflect on the challenges and ways ahead.
43 Workshop Activity 6
- Identify a core issue in an early childhood
setting that a mentoring program could address. - Working through the planning steps that have been
outlined, identify and discuss ways you could - Research
- Design
- Train
- Pilot
- Launch and fully implement and evaluate
- a mentoring program to address a core issue that
you have identified.
44Workshop Activity 6
- Identify issues in an early childhood setting
that a mentoring program could address. - Analyse needs
- What is the core issue that you seek to improve?
- What are the related issues contributing to the
core issue? - Develop objectives
- What role could mentors take in addressing the
core and related issues? - What would be the objectives of the mentoring
program? - Identify skills and training requirements
- What knowledge, skills and attitudes would
mentors need to be effective in this role? - What training will participants need? How will it
be provided? - Develop a plan and timeline
- How will communication shared understanding of
the program be established? - What resources will be needed and used? How will
they be obtained? - How will training be provided?
- How will the program be co-ordinated, piloted ,
launched and evaluated?
45In Closing
- Mentoring cannot realize its true potential if it
is not an integral part of the early childhood
care system. It must be seen as a thread that
permeates the system and enriches all aspects of
early childhood. To truly have an impact on the
care provided to children in early childhood
practice, mentoring must be recognized for its
value by all stakeholders in the system including
practitioners, child care organizations, early
childhood care and education programs and funding
bodies. - Soave McCormick, 2005