2018 Teaching and Learning Spring Conference and Student Success Summit Keynote and Panel Discussion
Keynote given by Beronda Montgomery, MSU Foundation Professor, AAN Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activities Node Leader, Academic Advancement Network
Description: Mentoring is often positioned as the transfer of information from an
experienced, senior individual (or mentor) to a junior, inexperienced
individual (or mentee). Implicit in this description are the ideas that
at the core of mentoring is a process of teaching – to guide, instruct
and train – and that mentoring may largely be a one-way flow of
information. Increasingly, however, mentoring is being understood as a
process best facilitated through a bilateral exchange and flow of
knowledge and learning between individuals in a mentoring exchange. In
this evolving conceptualization and practice of mentoring, both mentor
and mentee are positioned as learners and teachers. In this
presentation, I explore effective means of cultivating mentoring as a
place of collaborative learning and reciprocal cultivation that promotes
the growth and success of all involved in the mentoring process.
Panel: What does teaching for student success mean to me?
Moderator: Provost June Youatt
Panelists:
M. Isabel Ayala, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology and Chicano/Latino Studies Program
R. Sekhar Chivukula, Professor of Physics; Associate Provost for Undergraduate Education; Dean of Undergraduate Studies
Teena Gerhardt, Associate Professor, Mathematics Department
Jasmine Lee, Neighborhood Director, Advising Lead, East Neighborhood
Danielle M. Lopez, Assistant Director of Student Success, Biological and Physical Sciences-Interdepartmental Advisor
Randy Rasch, Dean and Professor, College of Nursing
Chezare A. Warren: Assistant Professor, Department of Teacher Education