Best Practices for Mentoring in Online Programs: Supporting Faculty and Students in Higher Education

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Best Practices for Mentoring in Online Programs is a straightforward guide to creating meaningful, lasting mentoring programs for faculty or students enrolled in fully or predominantly online programs. Faculty and student mentoring programs are proliferating in higher education, including peer mentoring, group/network mentoring, and career mentoring, making it all the more important that administrators and instructors incorporate research-based best practices for effective and successful implementation. Divided into two sections – the first on mentoring programs for faculty, the second on programs for students – this volume engages a broad variety of mentoring models and contexts across disciplines, paying special attention to the effective strategies and common problems associated with online mentoring. The book addresses the practical aspects of setting up, running, structuring, and evaluating online mentoring programs, along with the recruitment, selection, compensation, and recognition of mentors. Case studies and interviews bring to life the challenges and opportunities of mentorship, including how to resolve discussions pertaining to difficult or controversial issues, while a wealth of resources, templates, and checklists will help administrators and faculty take concrete steps towards implementing or developing programs tailored to their needs and institutional contexts.

Author(s): Susan Ko, Olena Zhadko
Series: Best Practices in Online Teaching and Learning
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 162
City: New York

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART I: Faculty Mentoring Models
1 Faculty Group and Networking Mentoring
2 Faculty Peer Mentoring
3 Campus Cultures, Compensation and Incentives, and Related Issues
4 Training, Evaluation, Plus Resources, Checklists, and Templates for Setting Up Your Program
PART II: Student Mentoring Models
5 Student Peer Mentoring
6 Peer Tutoring as Mentoring
7 Career-Oriented Mentoring by Non-faculty and Faculty Mentors
8 Special Issues: Modality, Recruitment, Workload, Compensation, and More
9 Setting Up a Student Mentoring Program: Training, Evaluating, and Resources
Index