Coaching and Mentoring First Year and Student Teachers

Coaching and Mentoring First Year and Student Teachers
Author: Vicki Denmark,India J. Podsen
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2013-09-27
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781317923305

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Features over 60 step-by-step procedures, checklists, and planning guides for supervisors, mentors, and all those engaged in in-service teacher training. NEW to this edition - updated coverage of standards - assessment - analyzing student work - cognitive coaching - and more...

Mentoring Beginning Teachers

Mentoring Beginning Teachers
Author: Jean Boreen
Publsiher: Stenhouse Publishers
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2009
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781571107428

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The first edition of Mentoring Beginning Teachers was named an Outstanding Academic Title by the American Library Association's Choice magazine in 2000. The expanded second edition -- packed with insights, anecdotes, and updated research -- provides mentors with a road map for helping new teachers become confident, reflective educators. The collaborative model outlined in the book is enlightening and rewarding for the mentor and the novice alike. The authors have incorporated the latest findings on all aspects of mentoring --from preparing to be a mentoring guide or coach to school culture and parent outreach. Teachers will find five new chapters on working with ELL students, working with parents, curriculum mapping, school culture, and the role of administrators within an effective mentoring system. Organized around a series of questions, the book allows mentors to quickly locate practical advice to match any mentoring situation. The range of resources includes: recommendations for pairing mentors and teachers, questions to jump-start conversations, ideas for teacher reflection, and answers to the most commonly asked mentor questions. Mentoring Beginning Teachers, Second Edition provides a comprehensive and tested plan for helping mentors guide new teachers in moving beyond the basics of plan/teach/evaluate to a higher level of joint assessment and inquiry.

The First Year Matters

The First Year Matters
Author: Carol Pelletier Radford
Publsiher: Prentice Hall
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2009
Genre: First year teachers
ISBN: 0205585558

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This book is designed for new teachers to serve as a documentation and reflection of their first year of teaching. The idea for the book came from teacher mentors using the author's book Mentoring in Action. The First Year Matters: Being Mentored...In Action provides new teachers with a practical guide to use throughout their mentoring experience as well as for self-reflection. Many new teachers become overwhelmed in their first year of teaching and leave the profession. Many are so busy trying to meet all of the criteria of the assessments-based curriculum that often the most obvious skills are overlooked for discussion with their mentor. Often the mentor and the teacher spend their meetings discussing one student or situation. This book outlines the school year month-by-month so curriculum-based topics can be discussed in a more systematic way. The author encourages the new teacher to become a listener and filter all of the information coming at them as a new teacher. They can't do everything! This book will help them use the mentoring process as a way to get the most out of their first year of teaching without getting discouraged. The book can be used: with small groups of new teachers as well as individually. with a teacher mentor, but can also serve as a guide to enrich the quality of their reflections as a tool to document the school year for licensing purposes as well as serve as a ready reference for the second year of teaching.

A Better Beginning

A Better Beginning
Author: Marge Scherer
Publsiher: ASCD
Total Pages: 258
Release: 1999
Genre: Electronic books
ISBN: 9780871203557

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Here's help for any school or district that wants struggling first-year and beginning teachers to survive and thrive. Written by seasoned administrators and teacher leaders who know the ropes, this guide covers every aspect of the topic, including: Best ways to support new teachers; Stages they go through in their first year; Effective induction programs that last five days, all summer, or an entire year; Mentoring programs that benefit all teachers involved; Strategies for improving new teachers' teaching skills without damaging their morale; and Systemwide solutions that combine induction and mentoring programs with ongoing assessment and professional development. Case studies of successful programs and insights from veteran and novice teachers give you plenty of fresh insights on how to maintain new teachers' confidence and encourage them to innovate and grow.

Mentoring New Teachers Through Collaborative Coaching

Mentoring New Teachers Through Collaborative Coaching
Author: Kathy Dunne,Susan Villani
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2007
Genre: First year teachers
ISBN: 0914409301

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What are the best approaches for developing effective teacher mentors? In their work across the country, Kathy Dunne and Susan Villani have combined the nonjudgmental approach of collaborative coaching with a focus on student learning to heighten teacher effectiveness. The result is a stunningly effective model that benefits mentors and teachers alike — all in the service of students. For education leaders who oversee mentor programs and those who provide professional development for mentors, this book looks at mentoring from the context of the research on effective mentoring and provides extensive guidance on how mentors can understand the needs of new teachers, build strong relationships with them, and coach them through an ongoing process of improving their teaching practice. Step-by-step professional development activities spell out the details in the companion facilitation and training guide.

Working One to One with Students

Working One to One with Students
Author: Gina Wisker,Kate Exley,Maria Antoniou,Pauline Ridley
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2013-04-11
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781134216208

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Working One-to-One with Students is written for Higher Education academics, adjuncts, teaching assistants and research students who are looking for guidance inside and outside the classroom. This book is a jargon-free, practical guide to improving one-to-one teaching, covering a wide range of teaching contexts, including mentoring students and staff, supervising dissertations and how to approach informal meetings outside of lectures. Written in an engaging, accessible style and grounded in experience, this book offers a combination of practical advice backed by relevant learning theory. Featuring a wealth of case studies and useful resources, the book covers areas including: Supporting students; Encouraging independent learning; Mentoring coaching and personal tutoring; Developing peer groups and buddying programs; Dealing with diversity, difficult students and ethical dilemmas; supervising the undergraduate dissertation. Supervising postgraduates in the arts, social sciences and sciences. This book is a short, snappy, practical guide that covers this key element of a lecturer's work. In the spirit of the series (KEY GUIDES FOR EFFECTIVE TEACHING in HIGHER EDUCATION) this book covers relevant theory that effectively informs practice.

A Practical Guide to Mentoring Coaching and Peer networking

A Practical Guide to Mentoring  Coaching and Peer networking
Author: Christopher Rhodes,Geoff Hampton,Michael Stokes
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 152
Release: 2004-07-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781134369577

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This book will help you and your staff to develop a framework for continuing professional development within your school or college.

Mentoring Teachers

Mentoring Teachers
Author: Ann Lieberman,Susan Hanson,Janet Gless
Publsiher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 113
Release: 2011-11-03
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781118138953

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A useful guide for teacher mentors as they face new and difficult challenges in their work New teachers often struggle to apply their knowledge in real-world settings, and the idea of mentoring these teachers during their first years in the classroom has captured the imagination of schools all over the world. Drawn from the experiences over the last twenty years of the New Teacher Center, the book illuminates the subtleties and struggles of becoming an excellent, effective mentor. The book discusses the five big tensions of mentoring: developing a new identity, developing trusting relationships, accelerating teacher growth, mentoring in challenging contexts, and learning leadership skills. Describes in-depth the most common challenges of the mentor role A wonderful guide for both new and veteran mentors Includes engaging firsthand narratives written by mentors working in a variety of settings This book is from the New Teacher Center, an organization whose highly respected mentor training model has served over 50,000 teachers nationwide. The New Teacher Center is dedicated to improving student learning by accelerating the effectiveness of teachers and school leaders through comprehensive mentoring and professional development programs.