Transcript Slide 1

“Refining Your Approach to
Mentoring to Maximize
Impact and Minimize
Miscommunication”
Rick McGee, PhD
Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine
A little bit about me…
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Biochemist/neurobiologist/pharmacologist for first 20 years of
career in medical school settings and NIH
Gradually more engaged with novel approaches to teaching and
learning, and especially training of laboratory and clinical
scientists – full time for last 20 years
Mentoring is the core element of all scientific training
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Very different from systematic teaching or training in professions
When it works, it’s a thing of beauty – when it doesn’t, it can be
disastrous especially for the trainee!
Became very interested in mentoring as a process and ways to
help it work better for all involved, but…
Almost never taught as a skill to develop – mentoirng seen as
informal process that somehow people figure out how to do
Getting Started
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What are the elements of a good mentored student research
project or project in general? When you sit down to define a
project for a student, what are you thinking about?
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Take 3-5 minutes to think about and jot down your answers to
these questions.
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In groups of 3 or 4, take 1-2 minutes to each first just read what
you put down without discussing so you have a sense of the
range of answers – THEN take 10 minutes to discuss
especially your reasoning behind what you put down.
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What did you discover? What were some of the key points you
came away with?
Role Reversal
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Now think of yourselves as students! From a student’s
perspective, what constitutes a good mentored research
project?
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Take 3 minutes to think about and jot down your answers.
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What are some of the biggest similarities and differences in
looking at it through your eyes and theirs?
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Was this hard or easy to do?
In groups of 3 or 4, take 1-2 minutes to read what you put down
without discussing so you have a sense of the range of
answers – THEN take 10 minutes to discuss especially the
DIFFERENCES from when you did it from your perspective.
Have you ever thought before about these questions and how
faculty and students might differ?
“Entering Mentoring”
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MUCH written about mentoring – from opinions to
philosophy to guide books
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Most well known: “ADVISER, TEACHER, ROLE
MODEL, FRIEND: ON BEING A MENTOR TO
STUDENTS IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING” by
National Academy of Science
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Most seem logical and laudable but seldom approach
mentoring as sophisticated skill to teach and learn
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In 2005, 4 U of Wisconsin faculty created “Entering
Mentoring”, one of first and most enduring tools for
teaching core skills needed for good mentoring
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Focus on faculty/postdocs/grad students mentoring
summer undergraduates – 8 X 1-hr workshops
Topics in “Entering Mentoring”
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Getting Started
Learning to Communicate
Goals and Expectations
Identifying Challenges & Issues
Resolving Challenges & Issues
Evaluating Our Progress as Mentors
The Elements of Good Mentoring
Developing a Mentoring Philosophy
What do you notice?
Second Generation “Entering Mentoring”
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Maintaining Effective Communication
Aligning Expectations
Assessing Understanding
Addressing Diversity
Fostering Independence
Promoting Professional Development
Articulating Your Mentoring Philosophy and Plan
Broad skills not narrow ones
More focus on skills, less on tactics
Goals of Entering Mentoring
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Entering Mentoring p. 9 – Goals
P. 10-11 – What to review with mentees – molecular
biology lab
Take 5 minutes to jot notes on pp. 10-11:
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If you are in the sciences, how does this fit with what
you might focus on for a new student?
If you are in another discipline, what might a similar
list look like for you?
Take 10 minutes to compare notes with colleagues
What did you learn?
How would it feel to have such a list to go through
with a potential mentee at the start?
Session 2 – Learning to Communicate
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Go to p. 22 of Entering Mentoring and read the Case
Don’t worry about it being a laboratory case - you can
substitute in any type of student project in your field
Break up into groups of 4 and discuss the case - 10-15 minutes
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What are the key issues in the case?
Which of them are related to communication?
What might have been done differently at the start?
What would you do now?
What came out of your discussions of the case?
What kinds of communications challenges have you run into
while mentoring? What strategies do you have to foster
communication with mentees?
Look at p. 24 – establishing and sustaining mentoring
relationships – something we usually leave to the unspoken
More on Communication
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Take 3 minutes to jot down the most common or frustrating
mis-communications you faces during mentoring
Break up into groups of 2-4 and discuss focusing on:
 What are the key communication issues?
 How well have you and the student established explicit,
mutually agreed upon expectations?
 What might you do differently in the future?
Read through p. 24-26 on the handout
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Do any of you have anything like this for new students
starting to work with you?
Do you think it could be valuable?
Session 3 – Goals and Expectations
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Remember the first 3 sessions in the new “Entering Mentoring”
 Maintaining Effective Communication
 Aligning Expectations
 Assessing Understanding
Most common problem is failing to have clear, explicit, aligned
expectations
Requires genuine, active role of mentor to bring out in the open
 give students permission to think about and tell their
expectations
 be flexible to adapt to students goals if possible or make
clear if you can’t
Take a few minutes to jot down how you currently identify and
establish expectations when you start a relationship with a new
mentee
Critical Elements of Mentoring Relationships
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Mutual understanding of goals and expectations
Trust
Responsibility - and ability to redefine responsibilities over time
Situation – You have a student who agreed to work on a
project with you and initially seemed VERY excited and eager.
You think it is a great project and one you find very interesting
and important. As the semester has gone on, however, the
student seems to have lost interest in the project and is not
getting things done in the time you had agreed to. You have
had pep talks with her and she seems to be re-energized
afterwards but soon it dissipates.
Take 10-15 minutes in groups of 4 to discuss:
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What do you think is going on?
What should you do?
How do you motivate her to dedicate time to the project?
Going from implicit and oral to explicit and
written…
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The vast majority of mentoring relationships are guided by oral
communication – often spontaneous and usually unplanned
Important and effective for maximizing individualization and
flexibility
Effective over short periods of time
INEFFECTIVE over longer times and more complex issues
How many of you have ever used some form of written
documentation or agreement?
Critical in some situations – e.g. co-mentoring
A walk through an example of moving from oral to written and
establishing expectations…
Guiding conversations to establish a
mentoring relationship…
 “Tell me a little bit about yourself. What are your goals
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or plans after you finish (college, program, etc.)?”
“What got you interested in working on this project with
me?”
“What are you hoping I can provide to you?”
“When you say you are looking for a mentor, what
does that mean to you? It means different things to
different people so I want to make sure we are on the
same page.”
“When I have mentored other students in the past, I
have been able to provide….”
The next level of conversation
 “I view mentoring as a kind of teaching and learning.
To learn actually requires as much or more effort on
the part of the student as the teacher or mentor. What
type of effort and time do you anticipate you will be
able to put in to get the most out of us working
together?”
A later conversation…
 “I think it is going to work out for us to work together. It
would be very helpful for me, and I think you also, if
we could get in writing what you hope to learn or how
you hope to grow by working with me. Having it in
writing will make it easier for us to keep track of where
we have been and the progress we are making.”
 “Why don’t you start by taking some time to write down
a short list of your goals you hope to achieve in the
next 2-4 years (or whatever time frame). Once you
have those then think about and right down a list of
skills or knowledge you already have that are needed
to reach these goals. Then make a list of things you
need to learn or get better at to reach your goals.”
The next conversation…
 “Let’s look at your lists so we can figure out how I can help
you get better at the things you feel you need to achieve to
reach your goals. I might also have some other
suggestions of things to consider.”
 “Now that we have the list of what you need to go from A
(today) to B (the future) we can figure out how I can help
you, what you are going to need to work on yourself, and
possibly some things that other mentors might help you
with better than I can.”
 At the PhD and postdoctoral fellow stage this process is
becoming increasingly popular – often called the creation of
an Individual Development Plan – IDP
 Totally adaptable to any field and stage of development
What else would you like to talk about
when it comes to mentoring?
 Going through Entering Mentoring on your own or in groups
can be very valuable
 Second generation guides now available from U of
Wisconsin group
 http://www.researchmentortraining.org/
My contact information
Rick McGee, PhD
Northwestern University Feinberg School of
Medicine
312-503-1737
[email protected]