POUNTNEY, Richard (2019). Seeing and framing mentoring through the lens of knowledge practices. Working Paper. Leeds Beckett University. [Monograph]
Documents
24532:529667
PDF
(Pountney, 2019) Seeing and framing teacher mentoring through the lens of knowledge practices.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License All rights reserved.
(Pountney, 2019) Seeing and framing teacher mentoring through the lens of knowledge practices.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License All rights reserved.
Download (221kB) | Preview
Abstract
In this paper I draw on empirical work I have
been involved in since 2016, involving over
1200 teacher mentors, to discuss a key issue
that has arisen – the professional knowledge
required to mentor effectively. This work
includes the development of a curriculum for
training school-based mentors of trainee and
newly qualified teachers, Enhance your
Mentoring Skills, delivered regionally across
South Yorkshire (Pountney and Grasmeder,
2018), as well as nationally for mentors of
mid-career teachers on the Chartered Teacher
programme of the Chartered College of
Teaching. I begin by discussing briefly what is
known about teachers’ mentoring practices,
and understandings of what constitutes
professional knowledge. Next, I discuss the
nature of mentor teachers’ learning for
practice, and the difficulties inherent in
articulating this to themselves, and to others.
I illustrate this with examples, to show how
the problem can be differentiated in two
dimensions of meaning: the first is closeness
to context (semantic gravity) and the second
is the degree of conceptual complexity
(semantic density). Finally, I discuss the need
for a specialised language for mentoring and
how this can promote the professional status
of mentors, as well as building knowledge
about, and for, effective mentoring practice.
More Information
Statistics
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year
Share
Actions (login required)
View Item |