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What is Peer Mentoring

Encyclopedia of Human Resources Information Systems: Challenges in e-HRM
Form of mentoring that takes place in learning environments such schools, usually between an older more experienced student and a new student(s).
Published in Chapter:
Concepts, Technology, and Applications in E-Mentoring
Ricardo Colomo-Palacios (Universidad de Carlos III, Madrid, Spain), Juan Miguel Gómez-Berbís (Universidad de Carlos III, Madrid, Spain), Angel Garcia-Crespo (Universidad de Carlos III, Madrid, Spain), and Cristina Casado-Lumbreras (Universidad Complutense, Madrid, Spain)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-883-3.ch025
Abstract
The so-called “Internet revolution” has dramatically changed the way people communicate and work nowadays. Attending to The Word Factbook developed by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), there are 1,018,057,389 Internet users in the world by 2005 (CIA, 2006). Fostering of the Internet revolution from a business perspective is out of question and the evergrowing number of Web functionalities has implied a significant and dramatic change in all business management areas. Within these areas, this revolution has not gone unnoticed, particularly for human resources management. Mentoring, which has been used as a tool for human capital development leverage in organizations has also been deeply impacted by the emergence and generalized use of Internet technologies giving birth to the so-called “e-mentoring.” The origins of the term must be looked for in Ancient Greece. In the Homer masterwork “Odyssey,” Ulysses, king of Ithaca, recommends mentor Alcímida his house, properties, and his son, Telemachus, education on leaving for the Troy War (traditionally dated from 1193 BC-1183 BC). Apart from the word ethimology, several modern disciplines literature (such as management, social psychology, sociology, or knowledge management) have provided with mentoring studies from the late seventies of the XX century, particularly, from the mid-nineties. As a consequence of the growing interest of the topic and its broad application in business ecosystems, thousands of definitions have popped up, trying to cover the semantics of the concept. Due to the aforementioned popularity of the concept, Friday and Green (2004) accomplish a re-conceptualization of the term stemming from a deep and detailed study about existing literature definitions. Subsequently, a definition for the mentoring concept is provided, aiming at being universal, following the authors goal: Mentoring is a guidance process that takes place between a mentor and a protégé (also known as mentee). Authors define similarly the mentor term as “wise and trusted counselor or teacher.”
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More Results
Supporting Sustained Faculty Engagement in Blended Learning
Faculty mentoring can be done as part of a formal program or informally by a senior faculty member or members. The goal is to help (junior) faculty reach their potential as teachers, researchers, and administrators.
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Faculty Socialization and Gaining Tenure: Ethical Concerns and Considerations
A form of informal mentoring, these mentoring relationships may be comprised of colleagues who have comparable interests and roles within higher education institutions. Peer mentors or co-mentors assist each other through sharing information, resources and feedback, exchanging roles as mentors and proteges while aiding others in the peer or co-mentoring relationship in developing knowledge and skills ( Hansman, 2012 , 2014 , 2016 ).
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Mentoring Doctoral Students in a Distance Learning Environment
A form of graduate-student mentorship that pairs a more senior doctoral student with a junior student for support related to work-academic life balance and degree completion.
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Turning Managers into Leaders: The Art of Mentoring
“Involves two or more personal of equal status and can range from a small gr4oup to a large network. Peer mentoring often combines both informal and forma characteristics as programs may be officially offered within institutions, yet their content is determined by participants” – Nicole Thomas, Jill Bystydzienski and Anand Desai.
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Integrating Student Peer Mentoring Online
Peer mentoring is defined as students sharing the responsibility for facilitating the online interactions by generating and posting questions, responding to others, asking further questions to clarify understanding, guide, support, and provide summary comments to facilitate building the collective knowledge base.
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