Faculty Mentoring Undergraduates: The Nature, Development, and Benefits of Mentoring Relationships

Educational research shows that close student-faculty interaction is a key factor in college student learning and success. Most literature on undergraduate mentoring, however, focuses on planned programs of mentoring for targeted groups of students by non-faculty professionals or student peers. Base...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elizabeth McKinsey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Calgary 2016-03-01
Series:Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tlijournal.com/tli/index.php/TLI/article/view/125
Description
Summary:Educational research shows that close student-faculty interaction is a key factor in college student learning and success. Most literature on undergraduate mentoring, however, focuses on planned programs of mentoring for targeted groups of students by non-faculty professionals or student peers. Based on the research literature and student and faculty testimony from a residential liberal arts college, this article shows that unplanned “natural” mentoring can be crucial to student learning and development and illustrates some best practices. It advances understanding of faculty mentoring by differentiating it from teaching, characterizing several functional types of mentoring, and identifying the phases through which a mentoring relationship develops. Arguing that benefits to students, faculty, and institutions outweigh the risks and costs of mentoring, it is written for faculty who want to be better mentors and provides evidence that administrators should value and reward mentoring.
ISSN:2167-4779
2167-4787