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Alabama Teacher Mentoring

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Title: Alabama Teacher Mentoring


1
Alabama Teacher Mentoring
  • Building Bridgesto Best Practice The
    Principals Role

2
Mentoring Matters. . .
  • Often, the only person who knows a beginning
    teacher is falling through the cracks is the
    teacher him/herself.David Pearson, Michigan
    State University

3
Mentoring Matters in Alabama!
  • Beginning in the 2007-08 school year, every new
    teacher will be assigned a mentor teacher.
  • Systems and schools that have established
    mentoring programs will proceed as planned.
  • Systems that have not previously had resources
    for mentoring will select mentors by the end of
    August.

4
Background and Guidelines for the Alabama
Teacher Mentoring (ATM)
  • Statewide program recommended by the Governors
    Commission on Quality Teaching (GCQT)
  • Mentor stipends (1,000 per new teacher) funded
    by Alabama Legislature for the 2007-08 school
    year
  • Guidelines created by the ALSDE
  • Training and support from the ALSDE and Regional
    Inservice Centers (RICs)

5
Purpose of Alabama Teacher Mentoring
  • Provide every beginning teacher in Alabama with a
    well-trained, effective mentor who will
  • Provide beginning-of-year induction into the
    school and systems culture
  • Deliver ongoing coaching and support
  • classroom coaching and assistance to maximize
    the learning and achievement of all students
  • personal support to the new teacher during their
    transition into the profession

6
Expected Benefits
  • Improved learning of all students
  • Increased retention of effective new teachers
  • Reduced replacement costs
  • Leadership and professional growth opportunity
    for mentors
  • Enhanced school culture

7
Mentor Compensation
  • Mentors will receive a stipend of 1,000 per year
    for each new teacher mentored.
  • The Education Budget calls for mentors to be paid
    in up to two payments however, the SDE hopes to
    pay all mentors in one payment.

8
Mentoring Matters
  • New teacher mentoring is NOT a new idea,
  • BUT weve learned a lot about best practices in
    mentoring in recent years
  • AND there are new tools and strategies to assist
    mentors.

9
You, the Principal, are Vital to the Success of
ATM
  • As principal, you set expectations for mentors
    and beginning teachers and their interactions.
  • New teachers perceive building principals to be
    the vital link in their success. Danin Bacon

10
Principals Leadership RoleSetting the Stage
for Effective Mentoring
  • Communicate the purposes of Alabama Teacher
    Mentoring to all.
  • Ensure fairness and quality in mentor selection
  • Arrange good matches between beginning teachers
    and mentors.
  • Support mentor training

11
Communicate ATMs Purposes to All
  • Use the PowerPoint presentation and related
    materials to present to your faculty
  • Talk with parents and the community about
    potential benefits

12
Ensure Quality and Fairness in Mentor Selection
  • If you have not already selected mentors, use the
    tools developed by the GCQT Mentoring Committee
    to guide the process
  • Job Description for Mentor Teachers
  • Rubric for Mentor Selection

Care in selection of mentors is key to the
success of a mentoring program.
13
Attributes of Effective Mentors
  • Possess knowledge, skills, and dispositions
    needed to support new teachers effectiveness
    with all learners
  • Have a strong commitment to the mentoring process

14
Recommended MentorQualifications
  • Knowledge, Skills, and Disposition
  • Professional collaborative working relationships
    with colleagues
  • Personal strong communication and
    relationship-building skills
  • Instructional success in differentiating
    instruction to reach all students
  • Commitment to Mentoring
  • Enthusiasm for the process
  • Willingness to dedicate time and effort

15
Arrange good matches between beginning teachers
and mentors.
  • Professional considerations
  • Same school, when possible
  • Similar teaching assignment, i.e., same grade
    level or subject area
  • Common planning period
  • Personal
  • Consider personalities, e.g. introvert/extrovert,
    learning style
  • Sensitivity to age differential (e.g., you may
    not want to match a young mentor with a
    mid-career beginning teacher)

16
Research reports that . . .
  • A mentorship agreement is based on how well the
    mentor and the mentee match in such factors as
    commitment, accessibility, and teaching
    assignment.Danin and Bacon. p. 207.

17
Support quality trainingfor all mentors.
  • Work with central office and designated mentor
    liaison in scheduling of training.
  • The SDE and RIC will provide train-the- trainer
    experience to your central office liaison who
    will arrange training for all mentors in your
    system

18
Mentor Training
  • Begins in August and occurs throughout the school
    year
  • Is job-embedded and designed to be in sync with
    the rhythm of the school year
  • Is aligned with the new Alabama Quality Teaching
    Standards (adopted by ALSBE in 3/07)

19
Mentor Training
  • School systems that have comprehensive mentor
    training programs in place may continue to
    deliver these.
  • School systems that do not have comprehensive
    mentor training programs should plan to
    participate in the state-sponsored
    train-the-trainer program.
  • All mentors participate in comprehensive
    training.

20
Mentor Training
  • Train-the-trainer modules provided by the ALSDE
  • Regional Inservice Centers deliver
    training-for-trainers to school systems mentor
    liaison (appointed by local superintendent to
    coordinate ATM within the system)
  • Mentor liaison responsible for training all
    mentors

21
Principals Leadership RoleSupporting the Cast
  • Develop a supportive relationship with mentors
    and new teachers
  • Assign beginning teachers a doable work load
  • Schedule time for mentor and beginning teacher to
    meet weekly
  • Respect the confidentiality of the mentor-mentee
    relationship

22
Develop Supportive Relationships
Beginning Teacher/Mentee
Principal
Mentor
23
Assign beginning teachers a doable workload.
  • One of the conundrums of our profession is that
    we often assign new teachers the most challenging
    situations a high percentage of students with
    diverse learning and emotional needs the least
    desirable schedules inadequate classrooms and
    materials and the largest number of class
    preparations. Administrators must be vigilant
    about safeguarding new teachers from these
    especially difficult assignments during the first
    three years. Villani, p. 22.

24
Schedule time for mentors and mentees to meet
weekly.
  • School principals should help create time for
    mentors and mentees to work at least once a week.
  • Researchers recommend a minimum average of 2.5
    contact hours per week between the mentor and
    mentee. The time may vary from week to week, but
    weekly contact is critical.

25
Respect the confidentiality of the
mentor-beginning teacher relationship.
  • Talk to mentor and beginning teacher together
    about the need for this confidentiality
  • Do not ask mentor for evaluative information
  • Model trust, respect, and confidentiality

26
Principals Role Contributing
to Encore Performances
  • Create a school culture that supports the
    mentoring process
  • Help mentors and beginning teachers understand
    the role of formative feedback in the mentoring
    process
  • Ensure that all parties complete the program
    assessments requested by the ALSDE

27
Create a school culture that supports the
mentoring process
  • Focus on students and their learning
  • Encourage collaboration
  • Model learning yourself, and support learning for
    all students
  • Develop a sense of collective responsibility for
    the learning of all studentsand for the success
    of all beginning teachers

28
Help mentors and beginning teachers understand
the role of formative feedback in the mentoring
process
  • Mentor teachers provide beginning teachers with
    ongoing, formative feedback.
  • The Continuum for Learning and Performance, a
    tool to help teachers understand the Alabama
    Quality Teaching Standards, will provide
    framework for the feedback.
  • Mentors should not be involved in formal
    evaluation of new teachers.
  • Confidentiality between mentor liaison, mentor,
    and mentee is essential.

29
Ensure that all parties complete the program
assessments requested by the ALSDE
  • LEAs will be asked to provide baseline data.
  • Throughout the year, the SDE will ask
    participants to assess services for purposes of
    continuous improvement.
  • The anonymity of all participants in the program
    assessment will be ensured.
  • Evaluation of the ATM will enable improvement
    and, is essential for continued funding.

30
What if your school already has a successful
mentoring program?
  • Move on with your program!
  • Use training and follow-up support from the ALSDE
    to enhance your local program, as appropriate.
  • Build on your successes!

31
What if your school does not have a mentoring
program in place?
  • Use materials and training provided by the ALSDE
    and RICs.
  • Mentors should be matched with beginning teachers
    no later than the end of August, 2007.

32
Together we can . . .
  • Create an effective network of services and
    support for Alabamas beginning teachers
  • Enhance beginning teachers effectiveness with
    all of their students
  • Make a difference in the lives of students of
    beginning teachers
  • Contribute to the future of our profession

Alabama Teacher Mentoring
33
Alabama Teacher Mentoring
  • Building Bridges to Best Practice
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