Mentoring: Difference between revisions

From OLPC
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(→‎Roles: nonjudgmental feedback and advice concerning the pupil's success to implement the self-imposed limitations)
m (→‎Roles: typo)
Line 20: Line 20:
::* A mentor could be encouraged to fulfill the role of an activity leader as used in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creativity%2C_Action%2C_Service Creativity, Action, Service] component of the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme.
::* A mentor could be encouraged to fulfill the role of an activity leader as used in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creativity%2C_Action%2C_Service Creativity, Action, Service] component of the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme.
::* A mentor could guide his or her protégés to identify, to phrase and to follow [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higher-order_volition higher-order volitions] (e.g. concerning media consumption, game use and educational goals). The mentor could then offer nonjudgmental feedback and advice concerning the pupil's success to implement the self-imposed limitations.
::* A mentor could guide his or her protégés to identify, to phrase and to follow [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higher-order_volition higher-order volitions] (e.g. concerning media consumption, game use and educational goals). The mentor could then offer nonjudgmental feedback and advice concerning the pupil's success to implement the self-imposed limitations.
::* A mentor could be expected to invite his or her protégés to use certain [[activities]], which could be unavailable to a child until activated by a mentor or teacher, and to explain and to guide use of these activities. This would introduce artifical scarcity into the availability of activities with the result that individual activities could become more valuable and the person acting as the moderator could gain some additional respect. (Yes, that is, at least superficially, in contradiction with the idea to allow kids to trade activities freely. The child that is given one well considered program at a time may gain more than the child that gets a whole box of software at once) Teachers could use the number and time of activation of activities to form a first impression about the work of a mentor.
::* A mentor could be expected to invite his or her protégés to use certain [[activities]], which could be unavailable to a child until activated by a mentor or teacher, and to explain and to guide use of these activities. This would introduce artificial scarcity into the availability of activities with the result that individual activities could become more valuable and the person acting as the moderator could gain some additional respect. (Yes, that is, at least superficially, in contradiction with the idea to allow kids to trade activities freely. The child that is given one well considered program at a time may gain more than the child that gets a whole box of software at once) Teachers could use the number and time of activation of activities to form a first impression about the work of a mentor.


:; Teachers : Teachers could receive automatic reports about the use of the mentoring software by individual pupils. Additionally mentors could be asked to write regular reports about their mentoring duties. Teachers could also be able to track tutoring and mentoring assignments, should the school administration choose to make mentoring an explicit part of the curriculum.
:; Teachers : Teachers could receive automatic reports about the use of the mentoring software by individual pupils. Additionally mentors could be asked to write regular reports about their mentoring duties. Teachers could also be able to track tutoring and mentoring assignments, should the school administration choose to make mentoring an explicit part of the curriculum.

Revision as of 17:31, 25 August 2007


This page is not maintained by the OLPC team. (See: About this wiki)



Depending on the school types where laptops were deployed sufficiently adult pupils may be available who could be encouraged to form mentor-protégé relationships with younger pupils.

Software to encourage mentoring

Software could be designed to invite older pupils to take an interest in the education and extracurricular activities of younger pupils voluntarily or as a requirement of the curriculum.

Mentoring and Metacognition

The role of a pedagogue should be beneficial for a mentor to develop an extensive active mental vocabulary for metacognition and adequate social goals towards his or her protégés.

Roles

Tutors
Coaching lessons could be bought from tutors with a currency system like the Saber, but restricted to a single school or school district.
Mentors
Mentors could use a program to monitor the activities used by their protégés. Some activities may also produce records for student performance assessment. Mentors could be allowed to access and evaluate such information like teachers. A goal of a mentor could be to recommend adequate activities to his or her protégés and to watch over their application usage. Duties of a mentor could also include:
  • A mentor could be encouraged to fulfill the role of an activity leader as used in the Creativity, Action, Service component of the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme.
  • A mentor could guide his or her protégés to identify, to phrase and to follow higher-order volitions (e.g. concerning media consumption, game use and educational goals). The mentor could then offer nonjudgmental feedback and advice concerning the pupil's success to implement the self-imposed limitations.
  • A mentor could be expected to invite his or her protégés to use certain activities, which could be unavailable to a child until activated by a mentor or teacher, and to explain and to guide use of these activities. This would introduce artificial scarcity into the availability of activities with the result that individual activities could become more valuable and the person acting as the moderator could gain some additional respect. (Yes, that is, at least superficially, in contradiction with the idea to allow kids to trade activities freely. The child that is given one well considered program at a time may gain more than the child that gets a whole box of software at once) Teachers could use the number and time of activation of activities to form a first impression about the work of a mentor.
Teachers
Teachers could receive automatic reports about the use of the mentoring software by individual pupils. Additionally mentors could be asked to write regular reports about their mentoring duties. Teachers could also be able to track tutoring and mentoring assignments, should the school administration choose to make mentoring an explicit part of the curriculum.

Ideas

Thoughful boy.png
Mentoring examples provided in educational activities
Pupils who can observe examples of mentor-protégé relationships in educational activities could be encouraged to try to follow the examples without further motivation. The "virtual mentors" could be well-known characters with many different SVG animations for typical gestures which could be available to all activities prepared to use this feature. An example for virtual characters as positive role models is Luka und das geheimnisvolle Silberpferd (a free adventure game developed for the crime prevention advisory service of the German police) The same characters could function as tutors for the user in the online help, being able to walk through the desktop and to operate widgets to explain their use. (This could sneakily gain the trust of the naive user) Use of the OLPC laptop itself could already be explained by a group of virtual tutors with virtual OLPC laptops.
Daily episode
A school server could transfer a daily episode to pupils' laptops. A daily episode could vary between interesting questions and references (e.g. to wikipedia articles), mentoring tutorials and seasonal references (e.g. an advent calendar with art/craft projects for children before christmas, which could be written for the point of view of a mentor inviting younger pupils to participate or for protégés, depending on the audience)

See also

External links