Edutopia - August/September 2008 - (Page 14) AskEllen I Want to Hold Your Hand A mentor must offer support for both the head and the heart. Dear Ellen, Ellen Moir is a veteran bilingual teacher who focuses on the challenges new teachers face as well as on the needs of those with long careers in education. She is executive director of the New Teacher Center, at the University of California at Santa Cruz, a resource for educatorinduction research, policy, and practice. I’m struggling with a mentoring issue. I have inconsistent success in addressing instructional practice with the new teachers I mentor because I often find myself addressing their emotional needs, which, of course, is crucial but takes away from instruction. I’m wondering if you’ve encountered this problem, and what you might suggest. Marsha Dear Marsha, Many mentors across the country face your concern. Recently, a team of mentors in Durham, North Carolina, trained in the New Teacher Center mentoring model, looked at this issue in a yearlong inquiry project. Many triggers can affect the need for emotional support. To address this issue, a group of mentors predicted that student diversity, teacher-turnover rate, percentage of students receiving free or reduced lunch, and a school’s Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) status would be major contributors to the need for emotional support. However, the research conducted with mentors and beginning teachers across their district challenged this prediction. The two primary factors that shifted mentor support away from instruction to emotional assistance were the leadership style of the principal and the culture of the school. Results from the Teacher Working Conditions Initiative, a North Carolina statewide survey of K–12 teachers, further validate a strong relationship between positive teacher working conditions and effective school administration, which ultimately leads to improved student achievement. These results led the mentors to realize that effective practice must be more than a one-on-one relationship between mentors and new teachers. Mentoring, at its highest level, must expand the mentors’ role to teacher leaders who support and promote collaborative leadership and effective school cultures, providing a new view of the administrator–teacher dynamic—a view that highlights the impact of administrative leadership on school culture and teacher morale. Teachers have difficulty focusing on the nuances of instructional practice when they are in a state of emotional emergency. Highly effective mentoring relies on a strong relationship between the mentor and his or her administrator. Together, they seek solutions to school problems and promote effective situational leadership to provide more permanent solutions to the emotional triggers negatively affecting new teachers. There is no magic ratio of emotional-mentoring support to instructional-mentoring support for new teachers. However, experience tells us that teachers have dif⇒culty focusing on the nuances of instructional practice when they are in a state of emotional emergency. The challenge for mentors is ⇒nding creative and supportive ways to mitigate emotional problems to free new teachers to focus on improving their pedagogical mastery. As you continue your important work in mentoring, I encourage you to re⇓ect on your relationship with your school leadership as much as you consider your relationships with your new teachers. Look for ways to establish mutual respect for one another. Develop a series of common goals. Create protocols between you and your site administrators. These efforts will encourage conversations about challenges in your school in a safe and nonthreatening manner. Be consistent, frequent, and intentional in your interaction with administration. Use tools like the Teacher Working Conditions Survey to provide the impartial data necessary to initiate critical dialogue. You may ⇒nd that focusing on this often-overlooked area of mentoring will provide your new teachers with real solutions to the emotional triggers in their schools, which in turn opens the door to the instructional mentoring our new teachers so desperately need. Thanks so much for your commitment to supporting new teachers. Warmly, BEWITCHED? BOTHERED? BEWILDERED? Ellen Moir is here to help. Write her at askellen@edutopia.org, and please include your name, affiliation, and contact information. 14 EDUTOPIA AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2008 BART NAGEL
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Edutopia - August/September 2008 Edutopia Contents Up Front Feedback Dispatches Sage Advice Ask Ellen Head of Class Cool Schools Design: Building on Disaster What's Next Full-Service Schools In the Trenches Moral Aptitude Serious Gaming Behaveyourself.com Media Is the Message The Way of the Wiki A Match Made in Cyberspace Hail to the New Chief Rise of the Robots Disrupting Class As Others See Us Heart & Soul Pop Quiz: Moby Edutopia - August/September 2008 Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Edutopia (Page Cover1) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Edutopia (Page Cover2) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 1) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 2) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Up Front (Page 5) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Up Front (Page 6) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Feedback (Page 7) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Feedback (Page 8) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Feedback (Page 9) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Dispatches (Page 10) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Dispatches (Page 11) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Sage Advice (Page 12) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Sage Advice (Page 13) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 14) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 15) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 16) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 17) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 18) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page bindin1) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page bindin2) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 19) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 20) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 21) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 22) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 23) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 24) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 25) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 26) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 27) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 28) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 29) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 30) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 31) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - What's Next (Page 32) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - What's Next (Page 33) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Full-Service Schools (Page 34) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - In the Trenches (Page 35) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Moral Aptitude (Page 36) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Serious Gaming (Page 37) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Behaveyourself.com (Page 38) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Behaveyourself.com (Page 39) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Media Is the Message (Page 40) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Media Is the Message (Page 41) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - The Way of the Wiki (Page 42) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - The Way of the Wiki (Page 43) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - A Match Made in Cyberspace (Page 44) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Hail to the New Chief (Page 45) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Rise of the Robots (Page 46) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Rise of the Robots (Page 47) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 48) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 49) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 50) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 51) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 52) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 53) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 54) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 55) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 56) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 57) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 58) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 59) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Pop Quiz: Moby (Page 60) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Pop Quiz: Moby (Page Cover3) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Pop Quiz: Moby (Page Cover4)
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