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Appreciative coach-mentoring as inquiry in initial teacher education Sarah Fletcher Convenor for the Mentoring and Coaching Group for the British Educational Research ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Appreciative%20coach-mentoring%20as%20inquiry%20in%20initial%20teacher%20education


1
Appreciative coach-mentoring as inquiry in
initial teacher education
  • Sarah Fletcher
  • Convenor for the Mentoring and Coaching Group
    for the British Educational Research Association
  • Coach-mentor for educational research

2
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • No problem can be solved from the same
    consciousness that created it.
  • We must learn to see the world anew
  • Albert Einstein.
  • P.S. Dont look for problems as your starting
    point in undertaking research! Look for what you
    enjoy doing!

3
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • What do we already know about peer mentoring and
    undertaking research?
  • Why might we need to find out more about
    mentoring and doing research?
  • How might we use what we learn to improve our
    practice as educators?

4
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • What is Appreciative Peer-Mentoring?
  • What kinds of resources using web-based
    technology already exist to enable APM?
  • How can we use web-based technology to improve
    our APM and have fun on the way!

5
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • Mentoring is a dynamic process of interaction
    concerned with the easing transitions and
    enabling growth. This is a process of active
    creative engagement in education and not just
    finding evidence to support externally imposed
    standards of professional conduct
  • Fletcher, S. (2000) Mentoring in Schools

6
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • Your starting point as a mentor should be what
    your colleague or your student needs
  • Ask them how it feels to do research and let him
    or her discuss their emotions if they need to as
    well as what has taken place in research they
    have already undertaken.
  • You may decide to ask explorative questions but
    do so gently and listen to your colleagues or
    students reply.

7
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • Here are some questions you might like to use to
    scaffold your mentoring dialogue
  • What do you think went well?
  • Yes, I thought so too! What about?
  • Why do you think it went well?
  • How did you feel when that was happening?
  • What do you think didn't go quite as well as you
    planned?
  • What might you do differently next time?
  • I also liked how you. what do you think?

8
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • As artists we assist others and ourselves to
    learn. As mentors we
  • Actualise professional and personal potential as
    an adult learners.
  • Recognize, realise and celebrate capacity as
    collaborative professional knowledge creators.
  • Extend educative influence with others (children
    and colleagues) and in so doing define and refine
    values, skills as well as understandings and
    knowledge

9
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • What do I know about doing research?
  • What can I bring to being a peer mentor?
  • What do I know from being an artist that helps me
    to understand my own research?
  • How can disability enrich or impede study?
  • How might my own learning by self-study enable me
    to peer mentor someone else?

10
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • What is Appreciative Inquiry (Cooperrider)?
  • discover (people talk to one another to discover
    the times when the organisation is at its best)
  • dream (people are encouraged to invasion the
    organisation as if the peak moments discovered in
    the discover phrase was the norm rather than
    exceptional)
  • design (a small team is empowered to design ways
    of creating the organisation that has been
    envisioned) and
  • destiny (the final phase is to implement the
    changes.

11
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • Appreciative Inquiry is a form of action research
    starting from the basis of empowerment.
  • We can integrate Appreciative Inquiry into
    arts-based action research.
  • Appreciative mentoring empowers

12
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • As educators seeking to meet others needs we
    should embrace change and learn from our/others
    mistakes.
  • Old ways have their place and we should
    appreciate the good in them.
  • We must be ready to see ourselves as learners
    too...
  • Learning is a career long process.

13
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • Hazel Markus defines possible selves as
    representing individuals ideas of
  • what they might become,
  • what they would like to become
  • what they're afraid of becoming
  • Her model provides a conceptual link between
    cognition and motivation.
  • http//markus.socialpsychology.org/

14
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • Coach-Mentoring can usefully embrace the concept
    of possible selves by enabling adult learners to
    explore the world of imagination and dreams as
    they orientate themselves to adapt to changing
    workplace situations

15
Appreciative peer-mentoring
  • You have given me the self-belief to carry out
    research through being extremely positive and
    above all interested in both my personal and
    professional development.
  • Through action research, you have encouraged me
    to keep developing myself as well as my students
    as well as ensuring that people are aware of what
    I am up to (the broader community) and lots more
    besides
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