Location: United States |  Change Location
0
Male flipping through Corwin book

Hands-on, Practical Guidance for Educators

From math, literacy, equity, multilingual learners, and SEL, to assessment, school counseling, and education leadership, our books are research-based and authored by experts on topics most relevant to what educators are facing today.

 

Maximum Mentoring

An Action Guide for Teacher Trainers and Cooperating Teachers
By: Gwen L. Rudney, Andrea M. Guillaume

Foreword by Ellen Moir

New teacher development requires intensive levels of one-to-one training and mentoring. Maximum Mentoring provides mentors with an action guide through the complexities of the school-based mentoring process to ensure maximum success for both mentor and mentee.

This excellent resource features:

  • Step-by-step guidance for one-on-one mentoring and supervision of student teachers and novice teachers, including clear coverage of rules, roles, relationships, responsibilities, and procedures
  • Hands-on essentials, such as reproducible forms, checklists, activities, answers to frequently asked questions, and reflective exercises for mentor and mentee
  • Input on school-university supervisory partnerships
  • Information on observation and feedback, formative assessment, summative evaluation, and professional growth and development
  • Suggestions for working with struggling students and novice teachers

Full description


Product Details
  • Grade Level: PreK-12
  • ISBN: 9780761946366
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2003
  • Page Count: 192
  • Publication date: May 18, 2014

Price: $40.95

Price: $40.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

Review Copies

This book is not available as a review copy.
Description

Description

"To be an effective mentor takes time and training. It requires a whole new set of skills. Maximum Mentoring offers an array of training strategies for mentors, and helps to codify what it means to be an effective mentor."
—From the Foreword by Ellen Moir, Executive Director
The New Teacher Center
University of California, Santa Cruz

What worries and activities did you think about most during your student teaching experience? What were your most consistent concerns? Your own experience as a student teacher is vital in the success of our next generation of teachers.

New teacher development requires intensive levels of one-to-one training and mentoring. Maximum Mentoring provides you, the mentor, with an action guide through the complexities of the school-based mentoring process to ensure maximum success for both mentor and mentee.

This excellent resource features:

  • Step-by-step guidance for one-on-one mentoring and supervision of student teachers and novice teachers, including clear coverage of rules, roles, relationships, responsibilities, and procedures
  • Hands-on essentials, such as reproducible forms, checklists, activities, answers to frequently asked questions, and reflective exercises for mentor and mentee
  • Input on school-university supervisory partnerships
  • Information on observation and feedback, formative assessment, summative evaluation, and professional growth and development
  • Suggestions for working with struggling students and novice teachers

As a mentor, you provide leadership by guiding the classroom-based portion of student teachers' professional education as well as collaborative opportunities for new teachers to explore and reflect on their practice in a safe setting. The purpose of this essential text is to provide support for you as you support future teacher development.


Key features

  • Step-by-step action guide for one-on-one mentoring and supervision of student teachers and novice teachers
  • Checklists, forms, activities, and reflective exercises for mentor and mentee
  • Covers school-university supervisory partnerships
  • Covers observation and feedback, formative assessment, summative evaluation, and professional growth and development
  • Suggestions for working with student teachers who are struggling
  • Foreword by Ellen Moir
Author(s)

Author(s)

Gwen L. Rudney photo

Gwen L. Rudney

Gwen L. Rudney, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Education at the University of Minnesota, Morris. A teacher of language arts and social studies at the middle school level for more than a decade, her teaching and research interests include classroom processes, teacher development, multicultural education, and working with parents. She has worked with student teachers and cooperating teachers in regional, national, and international settings. She is coauthor of Maximum Mentoring: An Action Guide for Teacher Trainers and Cooperating Teachers. She enjoys serving as the chair of the Minnesota Teacher of the Year Program. In 2004, she received the University of Minnesota, Morris, Alumni Teaching Award.
Andrea M. Guillaume photo

Andrea M. Guillaume

Andrea M. Guillaume, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Department of Elementary and Bilingual Education at California State University, Fullerton. Her fields of interest include teacher cognition and devel-opment, and content area instruction. She works with practicing and prospective teachers through Professional Development Schools and through a teacher induction project. She may be reached via e-mail at aguillaume@fullerton.edu.
Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Foreword


Acknowledgments


About the Authors


1. Introduction: First Things First

Roles for Those Who Mentor

Cooperating Teacher

Support Provider

Peer Coach or Mentor

Your Rights and Responsibilities as a Mentor

What This Book Does

Exercises

1.1 Recording Your Roles and Responsibilities

1.2 Setting a Purpose to Read

1.3 Let's Go Surfing Now

2. Teacher Development

The Concerns and Reflections of Student Teachers

Novice Teachers and How They Differ From You

The Tasks Novice Teachers Accomplish

Knowledge of Pupils

Image of Self as Teacher

Integrated Procedural Routines

Categories of Concern and Changes That Occur

Thinking About Your New Teacher Partner's Thinking

Exercises

2.1 Self-Study

2.2 Making Connections

2.3 Study in Pictures

3. Building a Base for the Partnership

Building Relationships Through Trust and Understanding

Getting to Know Each Other as People

Getting to Know Each Other as Professionals

Building Effective Communication Strategies

Setting and Sharing Expectations

Active Listening

Ongoing Communication

Exercises

3.1 Uncommon Commonalities

3.2 Predictions

3.3 Discussion Starters

3.4 I Need/I Like Statements

3.5 Metaphors for Teaching

3.6 Knowledge Chart: Setting Goals for the Term

4. University Supervision: The Triad

"Who Is That Person and Why Is She Here?"

Understanding the Essentials of the Supervision Triad

Sharing Goals and Appreciating Perspectives

Sharing Space and Power

Sharing Time and Effort

Context for Communication and Collaboration

Exercises

4.1 Understanding Expectations

4.2 Preparing for a Supervision Conference

4.3 Rating the University Supervisor, Part 1

4.4 Rating the University Supervisor, Part 2

4.5 Rating Yourself

5. Off and Running: The First Week

Using the First Week to Build Your Relationship

Building Trust With the Student Teacher

Building Trust With the New Teacher Partner

Building Communication Structures

Clear Expectations

Feedback Mechanisms

Planning the Student Teaching Experience

Becoming Familiar With the Students, Classroom, School, and Local Context

Getting to Know the Students

Getting to Know the Classroom

Getting to Know the School and District

Getting to Know the Neighborhood

Parting Words

Exercises

5.1 First Week: The Off-and-Running Report Card

5.2 Assumption of Responsibility Plan

5.3 Getting to Know Our Classroom

6. Helping Novices Learn the Roles of Teaching

The Complexity of Teaching

Complex Conditions

Teachers' Many Roles

Teachers' Visions of Their Work

Tensions in Teaching

The Moral Dimension of Teaching

The Layeredness of the Experience Teacher Partner's Role

Supporting Competence in a Multifaceted Profession

Start With a Vision

Perceive and Address Classroom Complexity

Work Across the Range of Teacher Roles

Honor the Tensions of Teaching

Attend to the Moral Dimension of Teaching

Exercises

6.1 Articulating a Vision of Education

6.2 Looking for Classroom Complexity

6.3 A Few of the Many Roles of Teaching

6.4 Responding to a Case With Moral Implications

7. Observation and Feedback

The Power of Feedback

Before They Teach

While They Learn

After the Lesson

Formal Observation

Scientific Approach

Artistic Supervision

Clinical Supervision

Looking Ahead

Exercises

7.1 Joe's First Lesson Observation

7.2 Practicing the Scientific Aproach

7.3 Practicing the Artistic Approach

7.4 Practicing the Clinical Approach

8. Summative Evaluation

The Logic of Evaluation

What Will Be Judged?

Setting Standards of Performance

Data and Documentation

Making Data-Based Final Judgments

How the Process Can Work for You

Preparing the Summative Evaluation

Communicating Results

Exercises

8.1 The Top Five Skills for Beginning Teachers

8.2 Summative Evaluation: Questions to Ask and Answer

8.3 Measuring Up to the Role of Evaluator

8.4 Evaluating Evaluation

9. Working With a Student Teacher in Trouble

What Would You Do?

Framing the Struggle

Lack of Probable Potential or Presence of Developmental Delay?

Lack of Ability or Lack of Teachability?

Marginal or Failing Performance?

Now What?

Helping Your Mentee Understand the Problem

Awareness Phase

Assistance Phase

Making Final Decisions

Successful Resolution

Exercises

9.1 Framing the Struggle

9.2 Communication of Concern

9.3 Early Interventions

9.4 Preparing for a Difficult Conference

9.5 Conference Format

10. Growing as a Professional

Defining Action Research

Action Research

Conducting Action Research

Getting Going in Action Research: A Few Tips

Collaboration

Peer Collaborations

Professional Community Collaborations: Teacher Education Accreditation

Advanced Certification and Degrees

Certification

Graduate Degrees

Parting Words

Exercises

10.1 Personal Professional Inquiries

10.2 Inquiring Into Action Research

10.3 Investigating National Board Certification

10.4 Building and Sharing Professional Portfolios

10.5 Revising the Book

References


Index


Reviews

Reviews

Price: $40.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

Review Copies

This book is not available as a review copy.