Front cover image for The good teacher mentor : setting the standard for support and success

The good teacher mentor : setting the standard for support and success

"As districts across the country struggle to find and retain qualified teachers, more and more schools are turning to mentoring as a solution. Data suggest that mentors not only guide and orient new teachers, but also help to keep them in the profession. But what makes mentoring successful? This book is a rare, behind-the-scenes view of mentoring that lays bare the actions of both partners and shows how mentoring actually works in an urban public middle school. Follow the experience of Trubowitz (an education professor emeritus) and Robins (a first-year teacher) as they tackle everything from classroom management to the politics of paperwork. Their story, told in two voices, describes the day-to-day flow of events in such a way that readers feel the satisfactions, the frustrations, and the sense of fulfillment that are all part of becoming a teacher. Beyond supporting new teachers, mentor programs also give veteran teachers a chance to pass on their valuable experience and to reflect on their own practice. This volume also includes checklists for good mentoring and suggestions for improvement and future learning." -- Publisher
Print Book, English, ©2003
Teachers College Press, New York, ©2003
x, 133 pages ; 23 cm
9780807743881, 9780807743874, 0807743887, 0807743879
52271428
1. Starting the mentorship
2. First sessions, first reactions
3. In the classroom: trying methods from a book
4. The lesson that fails
5. Integrating the academic with the personal
6. Other teachers, administrators, and the school's social system
7. Job pressures
8. Relating to parents
9. The standardized test
10. The end of the year
11. What we've learned