Julius Caesar once said, For lack of training, they lacked knowledge; for lack of knowledge, they lacked confidence; and for lack of confidence, they lacked victory. This may sum up the motivation of many adult learners. The pace of change in society continues to accelerate. Restructuring, downsizing, right-sizing, corporate mergers, and buyouts are resulting in a job market which is becoming increasingly competitive. New ways of acquiring and processing information are emerging. More and more adults are feeling ill-equipped to face the new challenges they are encountering in such a fluid environment. In a word, they are seeking growth. Growth occurs when we move through progressive transformations as our world grows more complex…Each new horizon demands that we form new, overarching ways to make sense of the diversity and conflict we see with increasing clarity around us. For each, we need to learn to think in whole new ways.
In other words, growth comes from a shift of perspective. As a result, Deloz says, "A good education ought to help people to become both more receptive to and more discriminating about the world." He also says, "Significant learning entails development. Development means successively asking broader and deeper questions of the relationship between oneself and the world." This relational view of the world has implications for educational methods. Education is something we neither 'give' nor 'do' to our students. Rather it is a way we stand in relation to them. The nature of that relationship is best grasped through the metaphor of a journey in which the teacher serves as a guide [emphasis author's].
"If the journey is a good one, they will learn…to see in a new way [emphasis author's]." Adult learners are frequently people whose mental maps are not proving useful for dealing with the actual terrain they are encountering. Their motivation might be described as being a pragmatic concern with application. There is a term which relates to this phenomenon, situated cognition. This simply means that some contexts require learning which occurs within the given situation, or anchored instruction. A good illustration of this theory in application is the traditional practice of apprenticeships for many occupations or residency or internship requirements in many modern professions. This trend of thought is having profound influence upon adult learning approaches. It is out of the resulting ferment that mentorship as an intentional practice is experiencing a tremendous increase in popularity. A corollary to anchored instruction is the premise that "We learn as much or more from the way we are taught as from the content itself." Pursuing this train of thought some educators have identified aspects of mentoring which lead to its success as an instructional method and seek to employ them in other modes of teaching as well. Some of these strengths of mentorship as a tool in adult learning are the availability of time, affirmation, mutual respect, open dialogue, open questions that invite dialogue, engagement in significant work, role clarification, responsibility, and immediate response to questions and issues that are raised.
It is with these methods that "The mentor leads his student to a higher plateau of learning…by instilling within the mentoree a discipline to increase knowledge."
There are a number of definitions of mentoring. According to Cranton, the difference between a teacher who takes the expert role and a mentor is most significantly in the area of relationship with the learner. The effective model or mentor displays a love for the subject area, expresses contagious enthusiasm, is available for personal interaction with learners, is open and authentic, and develops good rapport with learners.
Caffarella, states that "learning via individual modes is a key way through which adults learn," and she then identifies mentoring as one such mode. She defines mentoring as an intense, caring relationship in which someone with experience works with a less experienced person to promote both professional and personal growth. Mentors model expected behavior and values and provide support and a sounding board for the protégé.
Seaman and Fellenz, note that the distinctive nature of such education lies in the fact "that instruction centers on the teacher as a model." They note that learning depends primarily on close observation of the teacher-model, interaction and communication with that model, and opportunities to practice the newly developed skills under the supervision of the model or master.
A common theme in mentoring literature is the proactive role of the learner in a mentoring relationship. Galbraith and Zelenak note that a mentor "shares the dream or vision of the learner and assists in its promotion." A learner must be a risk-taker, one who "seeks independence, desires to see things in new ways, and accepts challenges that will lead to…development and growth." Or as Gibson simply states it: "The mentor assists the learner in change."
The two primary ideas which are common to most definitions, however, are the aspect of relationship and the concept of modeling. Relationships require time. Biehl notes that while teachers cannot establish mentoring relationships with all their students, they can with some. Gibson, also recognizing time limitations, states that the discipline of mentoring is to spend "more time with fewer people to create a lasting impact." As Daloz notes, however, "If learning is about growth and growth requires trust, then teaching is about engendering trust…Teaching is thus preeminently an act of care."
Mentoring relationships cannot be and should not be static, but rather developmental. Mentors' work "is to empower their students by helping to draw out and give form to what their students already know." Thus, mentorship is really a form of assisted self-teaching, at least in its later stages. Seaman and Fellenz emphasize the importance of treating adults as partners rather than observers, thus encouraging them to bring their previous experience and knowledge to the situation and become actively involved in solving problems. Treating interns as partners leads to the formation of independent collaborators; treating them as observers leads to the development of dependent followers who need to keep calling…for guidance.
Formal steps in the mentoring relationship can be quite simplistic: "I do it, you watch; then We do it together; then You do it, I watch; then You do it alone." Steps can also include relational aspects. Candy cites a six stage model for a mentoring relationship. It consists of entry, mutual trust building, risk taking, teaching of skills, professional standards, and dissolution. Whatever model one uses to define the stages of the relationship, "Self-disclosure from the mentor seems to play a crucial part in the full evolution of a mentorship from hierarchy toward symmetry."
Daloz provides a widely cited three-part model of support, challenge, and vision for successful mentoring which he derives largely from the literary Virgil. "Virgil begins by engendering trust, issuing a challenge, providing encouragement, and offering a vision for the journey [emphasis author's]." Daloz notes that "Throughout the journey, he alternately supports and challenges his protégé."
Growth necessitates movement. Support provides safety for movement. Challenge provides motivation for movement. Vision provides guidance for movement. Seen another way, the growth dialectic is enabled by this triad. Support helps confirm, identify, and establish the thesis. Challenge helps identify and propose the antithesis. Vision enables synthesis.
Supporting comes largely through listening, providing structure (which decreases over time), and giving a safe and open environment with positive expectations. It also includes advocating and explaining for the learner. A feeling of continuity can also encourage a learner to take risks. "By their mere existence as experienced travelers, mentors provide continuity. Beyond that, by offering a map…a teacher can oftentimes make that sense of continuity still more concrete for her student."
"The first business of a guide is to listen to the dreams of the pilgrim." Listening is also perhaps the best way to provide support as well as the most important tool in building the relationship. An awareness of where the learner is and where he or she wants to go are essential both for the mentor and for the learner.
Challenging occurs through setting tasks, questioning assumptions or approaches, setting standards, encouraging hypothetical thinking, providing feedback, and constructing hypotheses. When a mentor challenges then it creates cognitive dissonance which the student has a desire to eliminate. This is intended to lead to growth.
Vision is essentially the ability to see the world in new ways. "It is the purpose of a mentoring relationship to unveil new perspectives and new ways of thinking and acting. Mentoring should assist learners in becoming critical thinkers."
Vision is provided firstly through modeling. Vision also increases through the provision of cognitive maps with which the learners can understand their journey, through suggesting new language or metaphors, and through reflecting back their own position from different vantage points.
Mentors need to develop a comprehensive approach to topics which includes a broad overview, the context and relationships to other topics, assumptions and their alternatives, history, experts, cultural variances, and other points of view. They should present controversial positions and perspectives, encourage discussion and debate, and apply the topic to the tasks facing the learner. Analysis and reflection should be encouraged. In this process the learner will often move from either/or choice patterns to dealing with polarities.
"Vision…is the field on which the dialectical game between the old self and the new can be played; it is the context that hosts both support and challenge in the service of transformation" Vision allows this dialectical approach which always seeks synthesis. Synthesis is not compromise, but rather a way of thinking in which "the only route out is through an understanding of the opposing position."
A good illustration of the power of relationship in mentoring as an educational approach can be seen in William Tennent's Log College. William Tennent was a patent failure as a pastor, a preacher, and in terms of economic prosperity, yet he left a major imprint on the nation through the twenty men he mentored in his Log College, who in turn founded sixty-three institutions of higher education, including Princeton. Tennent's aim of developing well-rounded pastors was complemented by his live-in mentoring approach. His students essentially became part of the Tennent family. This enabled him to have a comprehensive influence on their ways of thinking and approaches to life.
Such mentoring relationships are not restricted to educational settings. Management can provide an ideal setting for such an approach.
Mentoring will take on new meaning… As the manager makes himself available to the Xer and promotes the freedom to ask questions and to learn, the Xer will continue to develop a stronger sense of identity and confidence.
Interestingly similar advice is given in regard to dealing with Baby Boomers and Generation Xers in terms of management. In regard to Boomers Elder advises, Lead by example, inspiring and equipping. It is WHO you are that wins and influences this generation, not your titles, achievements, or position. Develop leaders who can work as facilitators and coaches, rather than as order givers. Motivate by keeping a sense of involvement and sense of partnership high.
Similarly, Bantz says that when dealing with Generation Xers in a ministry setting, the goals should be to equip them with the tools they need for ministry; to enable them to make decisions and implement ideas; and to empower them with the authority to accomplish those responsibilities. Here we find a key aspect of mentoring. It would be beneficial for managers to view young workers as being in an apprentice role-helping them to develop as future leaders.
SUMMARY
Mentoring is an effective tool for adult learning. One reason is that it is evident to the learner that what is being studied is practical because mentoring often takes place in a context which poses a challenge or opportunity for the learner. This motivates the learner.
Mentoring can also help the learner become a self teacher by providing new patterns of thinking which lead to a paradigm of continuous learning and development. This enables constant growth on the part of the learner, even after the mentorship is completed.
Mentoring is essentially a relational instructional method which relies heavily on modeling. The mentor seeks to provide a safe and supportive environment which will free the learner to take risks. Challenges are then chosen with the intention of providing appropriate risks for the learner to take. Finally, vision, in terms of patterns of thinking, are modeled by the mentor in order to guide the learner into appropriate problem-solving and relational paradigms.
Mentoring is a flexible approach in that it can be carried out in a wide range of contexts, but it is time intensive and so has severe limits in terms of the number of people which can be assisted by a given mentor. The effects are potentially powerful and long-lasting, however. Thus, mentoring holds particular promise for leadership development.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bantz, Jeffrey R. Generation X: Implications for Mission Organizations of the Sociological Distinctives of Christians Born Between 1961 and 1975. Miami: Latin America Mission, 1995.
Biehl, Bobb. Mentoring: Confidence in Finding a Mentor and Becoming One. Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1996.
Caffarella, Rosemary S. Planning Programs for Adult Learners: A Practical Guide for Educators, Trainers, and Staff Developers. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1994.
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Elder, Annette. "Boomers, Busters, and the Challenge of the Unreached Peoples." International Journal of Frontier Missions 8 (April 1991): 51-55.
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Schnittjer, Gary E. "The Ingredients of Effective Mentoring: The Log College as a Model for Mentorship." Christian Education Journal 15 (Fall 1994): 86-100.
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