Notes from:
Linda Edwards
Coaching – the latest buzzword or a truly effective management tool?
Industrial and Commercial Training
Volume 35 · Number 7 · 2003 · pp. 298-300
Good mentors are
- responsive,
- good at listening,
- open and honest,
- non-judgmental
- ethical,
- approachable and available,
- good at observing and problem solving
- patient,
- they set expectations
- have a genuine interest in helping the protégé
Role of the mentors is not to provide
answers but to make suggestions, ask the right questions and point the protégé in
the right direction. They encourage the protégé
to
- think independently,
- use the new knowledge or skills to reach their goals
- not by feeding them information
- making them find the information for themselves
Mentors can also benefit in the
mentoring exercise. They also report
that their protégé often provide them with fresh perspectives on old ideas or
processes, connections to new or different networking opportunities, up-to-date
information on new and innovative technologies, and practices and ideas in
their shared areas of work. Many mentors
report that they improved their teaching and course design skills.
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