Faculty Mentoring Programs: Updates from the Field - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 56
About This Presentation
Title:

Faculty Mentoring Programs: Updates from the Field

Description:

Faculty Mentoring Programs: Updates from the Field Jeffrey Morzinski PhD, MSW Dept of Family & Community Medicine – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:172
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 57
Provided by: Jeffo154
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Faculty Mentoring Programs: Updates from the Field


1
Faculty Mentoring Programs Updates from the Field
  • Jeffrey Morzinski PhD, MSW
  • Dept of Family Community Medicine

2
Problems in Academic Health Sciences / Higher
Education
  • Instability
  • Uncertainty
  • Leadership gaps
  • Poor morale
  • Missed opportunities
  • Isolation
  • Unfulfilled careers

3
Mentoring Hope Challenge
  • Optimism / opportunity in mentoring / other forms
    of faculty development
  • Challenges include Cultural fit, program design,
    cost, evaluation
  • Greatness is not where we stand, but in what
    direction we are moving. -- Oliver Wendell Holmes

4
Session Objectives
  1. Describe five stages of mentoring program
    development
  2. List and discuss several lessons from the
    field, based on experiences gained during a
    long-standing mentor program
  3. Appreciate importance of a colleague network
    approach to optimize faculty development
  4. Evaluate an emerging, four level categorization
    for mentoring programs
  5. Discuss any all mentoring program questions

5
Session Activities
  • Introduction
  • Describe five stages of our mentoring program
  • Answer your questions (at three specific
    transitions / others as needed)
  • Report findings of a study on Fac Dev features
    that advance mentoring
  • Review lessons from the field
  • Integrate discuss your plans for mentoring
    practice

6
Speakers Interest and Setting
  • Biology Social Welfare Admin Leader
  • Rural Community Health Faculty Dev Mentoring,
    Evaluation Leadership
  • Medical College of Wisconsin
  • Where we are
  • What we do

7
Mentoring Overview
  • Odysseus from Homers Odyssey
  • Recruited Mentor to guide Telemachus
  • Athene sometimes speaks through Mentor
  • Developmental relationship / transitions
  • A Learning relationship aimed at helping the
    mentee progress toward mutually defined goals
  • Risks
  • Exploitation, careerism, favoritism
  • Benefits
  • Advancement, learning, succession planning,
    vitality, networking

Zachary L Creating a Mentoring Culture
8
Why Structured Mentoring?
  • Do mentors / proteges find each other?
  • Not frequent / not at right time
  • When it do - within social / cultural strata
  • Structured mentoring defined
  • A structure and series of processes designed to
    create effective mentoring relationships, guide
    the desired change of those involved, and
    evaluate the results for the protégé, the mentor
    and the organization. -- Murray Owen

9
Structured / Assigned Mentor Programs
  • Comparable outcomes as with non-assigned
    mentoring
  • Research variables to look for
  • Individual characteristics training
  • Context (e.g., leader support, other Fac Dev)
  • How matching occurs
  • Objectives, monitoring summative eval

Chao, Walz Gardner. Formal and informal
mentorships
10
Published Mentor Program Outcomes (N18)
Morzinski Fisher, Eval Practice
11
Myths of Mentoring
  1. Cant be effective if matched by a 3rd party
  2. Personalities must match
  3. Gender-ethnic-discipline must match
  4. Frequent in-person meetings
  5. Just right timing
  6. De-emphasize other relationships
  7. Protégé will have less work to do

12
Why Mentoring Faculty Development
  • Isolation among junior faculty
  • Senior faculty - search for academic vitality
  • Rapid expansion and change in many fields
    (including my field in academic medicine)
  • Evidence that mentoring works

13
Integrated with Fac Dev MCWs Five-stage
mentoring Program
  1. Organizational readiness
  2. Visibility and recruitment
  3. Matching and orientation
  4. Ongoing seminars, support structure
  5. Evaluation

14
Program Stages
  • 1. Organizational readiness
  • Determine needs and interests
  • Gather input from leaders Chair
  • Secure commitment of resources
  • Publicize goals
  • In our program, trainee / jr faculty goals are
  • Understand values, norms and expectations of
    academic medicine
  • Develop skills to proactively manage career
  • Develop / maintain a productive colleague network

Bland et al, Successful Faculty
15
Program Stages (cont)
  • 2. Visibility and recruitment
  • Mentoring as part of the culture
  • Clarify purpose of two-year program
  • Confirm chair recommendations for mentors
  • Promote a norm of participation
  • Short bridge approach to recruiting

16
Program Stages (cont)
  • 3. Matching and orientation
  • Collect distribute faculty biosketches
  • For any reason - is there anyone you could not
    work with?
  • Mentor approves match / gets 30 minute
    orientation
  • Inspirational reception
  • Mentor makes first 3-5 contacts

17
Program Stages (cont)
  • 4. Ongoing seminars, structure support
  • Blend of group / individual activities
  • Recommend a minimum of 2 contacts / month
  • Coordinator reminds and monitors
  • Keep up contactsmeet at naturally-occurring
    events

18
Program Stages (cont)
  • 5. Evaluation Reporting
  • Contact frequency and content
  • Social activities count
  • Public recognition at program end
  • Gather data to improve program and judge impact
  • Report results at appropriate venues

19
Internal Summary 1
  • Reviewed mentor background myths
  • Presented mentorings evolution to structured
    programs
  • Detailed 5 development stages that both guided
    emerged from our program experience

20
Transition / Discussion
  • Mentoring Myths, Program Stages Features
  • Q A
  • Chat Have you been matched in a mentoring
    program? Were you a mentor a protégé?
  • If you have been matched, name one factor that
    either helped the programs effectiveness, or was
    a barrier to its overall effectiveness.

21
Mentoring Faculty Socialization at Other Schools
  • Mentoring, or mentoring plus?
  • Inspired by research in business / management
  • The popular press has done a disservice by
    implying that the key to career success is
    finding a mentor. This is an oversimplification
    of a complex web of work relationships that could
    be made available to individuals in
    organizational settings
  • -- K Kram

22
Colleagues in Academic Careers
  • Why Study / Foster Colleagues?
  • Individual benefits
  • Fac who often utilize Cs in res 4 x pubs
  • Increased creativity, happiness
  • Increased retention
  • Group benefits
  • Recruiting
  • Succession planning
  • If you were allowed only one line of inquiry to
    predict a faculty members future success

Hitchcock et al, Acad Med
Jones et al. J of Dental Ed
23
Colleague Relationships Fac Dev
  • Instructional features of Fac Dev may be
    associated with CR gains
  • Because CRs are valued, we wondered if / how
    professional training helps to develop mentors
    and other CRs?
  • No one had asked learners to describe training
    experiences that influenced CR development
  • No studies of a national sample of Fac Dev

Bland et al, Successful Faculty
24
Study Definitions
  • FDPs 52 Health Professions schools received
    HRSA-BHPr FD grants
  • FD Director Each (52) identified in grant
  • Enrollee Health professions faculty in FDP for
    at least 6 months.
  • Colleague Relationship (CR) career supportive
    relationships (e.g., mentors, peers) initiated
    or strengthened due to FDP participation.

See www.hrsa.gov
25
Study Design Mail Surveys Two Phases (99-00)
  • FD Directors provided program descriptions and
    enrollee rosters
  • Enrollees provided data on
  • CR gains, socialization, products and
    achievements
  • Two key Study Questions
  • How many career supportive colleagues did you
    initiate or develop during your FDP?
  • What FDP features contributed to your developing
    CRs?

Morzinski JA, Fisher. A nation-wide study...
26
Overview of Respondents
  • 37 of 52 (71) FD directors
  • 351 of 543 (65) enrollees
  • male 65 non-white 16
  • Average age at FDP start,
  • male 40 female 37
  • Yrs as faculty at FDP start
  • male 4.5 years female 2.7 years non-white 1.9
    years
  • Distribution from all 10 US regions

27
Descriptions of Colleague Types
  • Mentors
  • Often in advanced career stages
  • Foster academic identity, advancement goals
  • Link to new opportunities, people
  • Peers
  • Often similar career stage
  • Collaborate, informal feedback and friendship
  • Academic Consultants
  • Provide specialized help in activities and
    projects
  • Aid efficiency and quality

28
Findings Study Question 1
  • Enrollees reported 9.1 CRs due to FDP enrollment
  • 2 mentors
  • 3 peers
  • 1 acad consultant
  • 3 perceived CRs
  • CRs were important to enrollees academic
    socialization and careers
  • Six CRs directly assisted with multiple
    career-important products / achievements
  • Three perceived to be in the wings if needed
  • Morzinski JA, Fisher. A nation-wide study on
    the influence of FDPs on colleague relationships.
    Acad Med.

29
CR Totals and Types
Peers
Mentors
Junior Faculty
Academic Consult.
Perceived CRs
30
Details FD Colleagues Most Influential
  • 74 were well or very well connected to a
    regional/national scholar network
  • 43 had primary affiliation external to subjects
    home institution
  • 41 had original meeting during training
    activities
  • 60 exchanged support challenge
  • Stimulate avg of 2-3 products/achievements
  • Hands-on support most associated with products /
    achievements

31
Study Question 2 FDP Features
  • What faculty development program features
    contributed to your developing Colleague
    Relationships?
  • 269 of 351 enrollees (66) made 624 usable text
    responses
  • Template approach resulted in 16 sub-categories
    in 4 main categories
  • Inter-rater agreement 88 Cohens Kappa 83
  • Crabtree Miller Constas.

32
Sub-Analysis (continued)
  • We examined open-ended responses from FD
    enrollees with
  • Moderate to high CR gains
  • CRs important or very important
  • Final count of 335 text responses by 141
    enrollees

33
Results 335 Entries in Four Main Categories
  • Concrete interaction (n127 38)
  • Presented our teaching to one another for
    feedback
  • Learned by group participation
  • Learning context (n105 31)
  • A safe group mutual respect
  • Meeting away from home and pagers

Also see Morzinski, Influence of Academic
Projects Family Medicine
34
(No Transcript)
35
Results on FDP Features (cont)
  • Instructional Experiences (n46 14)
  • Frequently used participants programs to
    illustrate teaching points
  • Active instruction on learning styles
  • Learners and Leaders (n57 17)
  • Being together with my peers at all the classes
  • Faculty were well-connected with national
    organizations

36
(No Transcript)
37
Internal Summary 2
  • Mentoring is a Faculty Development method
  • From a national sample of FDP enrollees and
    programs, we learned
  • Positive career-impact of three types of CRs
  • Power of instructional activities that include
    hands-on help, concrete interaction a
    respectful learning context

38
Transition Discussion
  • What about the study and its results?
  • Q A Colleague Relationships as extension of
    mentoring
  • Chat If someone has a strong network of peers
    and acad consultants, do they still need one or
    more mentors? Why / why not?

39
Lessons from the Field For Organizations
  • Mentoring programs need objectives
  • Mentoring cant be window dressing need
    appropriate learning context
  • Promote Small m mentoring
  • Establish a code of institutional expectations
    and support for mentoring

Zachary L. Creating a Mentoring Culture
40
Lessons from the Field For Mentors
  • Ok to start before youre certain you are ready
  • Balance challenge with support
  • Plan to be more directive / active early
  • Provide hands-on support

Bower, Diehr, Morzinski Simpson.
41
Lessons from the Field For Proteges
  • Proteges need objectives
  • Be ready emotionally suspend judgment
  • Avoid mentor envy
  • Seek diversity up to six to eight active,
    career-support members

42
Role of ColleaguesSupport and Challenge (Daloz)
High
Challenge
Low
High
Support
Adopted from Daloz LA, Effective teaching and
mentoring.
43
Support/Challenge
High
RETREAT
GROWTH
Challenge
STASIS
CONFIRMATION
Low
High
Support
44
Support Types
  • Information. Aids decision-making clarifies
    uncertainty increases awareness of opportunities
  • Feedback. Fosters quality and confidence by
    offering comparisons or standards for judging the
    quality of projects, behaviors, performance.

45
Support Types (cont)
  • Emotional support. Builds trust, friendship.
    Could reduce beliefs of personal competence
  • Hands-on support. Direct work, often tangible
    and/or visible, that moves a project toward
    completion. Strongest association with junior
    faculty products achievements

46
Examples of Challenge
  • Heat up dichotomies
  • Offer new language
  • Silence / give time
  • Dialogue on aims / purposes
  • Questions Lets assume.. / What if
  • Set challenging tasks
  • Set and maintain high performance standards
  • Keep an eye on the clock / calendar

47
Tool for Reviewing CR Networks
  • List your active, career-supportive CRs
  • Mentors ___________, ___________.
  • Peers __________, ___________, __________.
  • Academic consultants __________, _________.
  • Plan for adding diversity/filling gaps______
  • ____________________________________
  • Reflect on exchanges with existing CRs
  • Support / challenge balance?
  • How to improve balance___________________

48
Emerging Program Lesson Levels of Formality
  • How Formal Should Y/our Program Be?

49
Tuxedos to Blue Jeans Four Mentoring Levels
  • Formal mentoring includes matching / monitoring
  • Facilitated mentoring the dept still arranges
    meetings and monitors (does not match)
  • Intentional mentoring, where chairs or directors
    recommend individual action, with no / limited
    follow-up
  • Coincidental mentoring relies on luck
  • At MCW all levels represented

Morzinski JA. STFM Messenger.
50
Internal Summary 3
  • Lessons from the field
  • Mentors, protégé and organization
  • Support and challenge
  • Lesson for programs mentoring level (formal,
    facilitated, intentional, coincidental) to fit
    different situations

51
(No Transcript)
52
Discussion on Lessons
  • Q A
  • Questions from your experiences / final comments?

53
Next Steps at MCW
  • Institutional Awards for mentoring (not
    restricted to mentors)
  • Through faculty council, networking lunch drop
    in sessions on CVs/portfolios, co-sponsored by
    Rank and Tenure Committee
  • Maintain written an on-line resources for mentors
  • Grad level course (elective) on mentoring

54
Overall Conclusions
  • Start modest and build
  • Match mentoring level with level of commitment
    you can sustain
  • Get periodic mentoring about your mentoring
    program
  • Consider evidence, lessons, and then

55
Conclusion (cont)
  • Grey-eyed Athene spoke likening herself to
    Mentor in voice and appearance, Telemachus,
    already your companions are sitting at the oars,
    and waiting for you to set forth. So let us go,
    and not delay our voyaging longer. -
    The Odyssey of Homer
  • Thank you!

You can reach me at jmorzins_at_mcw.edu
56
References
  1. Achinstein B, Athanases S. (Eds). Mentors in the
    Making Developing New Leaders for New Teachers.
    New York Teachers College Press. 2006.
  2. Bland C, Schmitz C, Stritter F, Henry R, Aluise
    J. Successful Faculty in Academic Medicine. New
    York Springer-Verlag. 1990.
  3. Chao G, Walz P, Gardner P (1992). Formal and
    informal mentorships A comparison on mentoring
    functions and contast with non-mentored
    counterparts. Personnel Psychology, 45, 619-36.
  4. Daloz L. Mentor. San Francisco Jossey-Bass.
    1997.
  5. Hill SK., Bahniuk MH, Dobos J, Rouner, D. (1989).
    Mentoring and other communication support in the
    academic setting. Group and Organizational
    Studies. 1989 14(3) 355-368.
  6. Hitchcock MA, Bland CJ, Hekelman FP, Blumenthal
    M. Professional networks The influence of
    colleagues on the academic success of faculty.
    Academic Medicine. 1995 70(12) 108-1116.
  7. Jones JE, Preusz GC, Finkelstein SN. Factors
    associated with clinical dental faculty research
    productivity. Journal of Dental Education.
    198943(11)638-45.
  8. Kram KE. Mentoring at Work Developmental
    Relationships in Organizational Life. Glenview,
    IL Scott Foresman, 1985.
  9. Morzinski JA. The influence of academic projects
    on the professional socialization of family
    medicine faculty. Family Medicine,
    200537(5)348-53.
  10. Morzinski JA. Mentors in tuxedos or blue jeans.
    STFM Messenger, an international newsletter. Jan
    2007.
  11. Morzinski JA, Simpson DE, Bower DJ, Diehr S.
    Faculty development through formal mentoring.
    Acad Medicine. 199469(4) 267-69.
  12. Morzinski J, Fisher J. An evaluation of mentoring
    studies and a model for their improvement.
    Evaluation Practice, 17, 37-50. 1996.
  13. Morzinski JA, Fisher JC. A nation-wide study on
    the influence of faculty development programs on
    colleague relationships. Acad Med, 77(5)
    402-406. 2002.
  14. Morzinski JA. Mentors, Colleagues and Successful
    Health Science Faculty Lessons from the Field.
    Journal of Veterinary Medical Education. 2005
    32(1), 5-12.
  15. New Teacher Center _at_ USC. www.newteachercenter.org
  16. Murray M, Owen M (1991). Beyond the myths and
    magic of mentoring. San Francisco Jossey Bass.
  17. Ragins BR, Kram KE. The Handbook of Mentoring at
    Work. Sage2007.
  18. Zachary LJ. Creating a Mentoring Culture.
    Jossey-Bass. 2005.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com