What to expect from
mentoring?
The mentor is customarily an active, engaged person, who
voluntarily offers their time in favour of the mentee. Try to stick to the
following steps to ensure that your relationship is effective and
professional.
- The mentee is the one who leads the process. It is your
responsibility to contact the mentor, make sure you agree on a time and a place
for meetings in a way that will be acceptable for both of you.
- Be open
and honest during the meetings and regularly document your goals and
successes.
- Provide the mentor with feedback.
- Provide the mentor
with a new perspective on their work with a fresh pair
of eyes.
What can the mentor do for you?
- Support you, so
you can learn to react to impulses from your environment to achieve
your goals.
- Offer support, but also let you take responsibility for
your own actions.
- Support you in seeking different points of view and
solutions to a problem.
- Act as your confidant during the duration of the
mentorship.
What can you offer to the mentor?
- A new
perspective on their work through the eyes of an unbiased observer.
- The
opportunity to become a role model and inspiration for the mentee.
- The
opportunity for personal development.
- The opportunity to experience the
role of a trainer and a guide.
- The opportunity to “raise” a prospective colleague, who has real interest in the work.
What does
the student gain?
- Mentoring provides the student with the opportunity
to work on their career advancement early.
- Close work with the
mentor
- An insight into the real work environment.
- Expand their
knowledge with experience from a successful person with praxis in the field
which is interesting for them.
- Try out activities applicable in the
real work environment and develop their experience and skills
this way.
- Gain immediate feedback and useful contacts.