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Teacher to Teacher: A Guidebook for Effective Mentoring
 
 

Teacher to Teacher: A Guidebook for Effective Mentoring [Paperback]

Jane Fraser
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

Grades K - 5

 

This is a book about the growth and change that can be achieved by teachers, new and experienced, when they work together. Adults learn best when they are interested. They need opportunities to practice and time to integrate and modify new ideas to fit their belief system. Most of all, they need input from a sympathetic peer–a mentor who is there to help a protégé through the rough spots. This is the kind of guidance Teacher to Teacher provides.

Teacher to Teacher is a complete course in effective mentoring, with broad and practical suggestions on:

  • establishing and nurturing a positive mentoring relationship
  • helping protégés with classroom management
  • what protégés need to know about learning in order to help students
  • the role of reflection in teaching
  • working with parents
  • the importance of reading aloud
  • peer coaching.
Fraser describes the principles that have guided her own work mentoring new and experienced teachers, including the need for mentoring to be responsive and tailored to fit the needs of individual learners; grounded in sensitive, skilled observation; and the importance of establishing a close and honest relationship. Although her book is directed to teachers who work as mentors to other teachers, classroom teachers looking for new insight into their teaching practice will find its practical suggestions just as useful.

About the Author

Jane Fraser taught elementary school for twenty-five years and worked as a staff developer with the Teachers College Reading and Writing Project, Columbia University. She is a mentor to beginning teachers in the Westport Public Schools in Westport, Connecticut and presents workshops throughout the Northeast and at national professional conferences. Fraser coauthored, with Donna Skolnick, On Their Way: Celebrating Second Graders as They Read and Write (Heinemann, 1994).

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Because this has been a cold, wet spring, I didn't plant my peas at the usual time. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Mentor as nurturing "gardener", Jan 22 2000
This review is from: Teacher to Teacher: A Guidebook for Effective Mentoring (Paperback)
This book was an easy read and insightful in many ways. Jane Fraser is a former elementary teacher with many years experience and an honest desire to share her wisdom and help guide new teachers (or proteges, as she refers to them)in successful classroom practices. While the theme of the book is about developing a successful mentoring relationship the book is filled with advise about such things as classroom environment, parent conferences, record keeping, and classroom discipline. The author's area of expertise is in language arts and there are many excellent practices that are detailed in the book. Jane Fraser's use of gardening metaphors to describe a mentor relationship were very effective in relaying her beliefs about successful mentoring. Phrases such as; "planting the seeds...", "...time for roots to grow, deepen, and become strong", "...staking the plants", convey her sense of nurturing and committment to the mentor-protege relationship. The book is filled with thoughts from her journal that detail the ups and downs of creating mentoring relationships with various teachers. She is honest, sincere and straightforward in her words. The key components for developing a successful mentoring relationship focus on the needs of the individual not necessarily a particular set of skills. The author feels that a close, honest relationship and the goal of lifelong learning are essential for a successful relationship. Other important components that she provides and encourages are: trust and confidentiality, feedback, quality time, skilled observation, availability, flexibility, reflection, and mentor as model. This is a wonderful book for either the mentor or protege/new teacher to read. Even an experienced teacher can gain insights and be reminded of the true focus of educating people; to nurture, inspire, collaborate and learn from one another.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Teachers as Mentors, Jan 22 2000
By 
This review is from: Teacher to Teacher: A Guidebook for Effective Mentoring (Paperback)
The author Jane Fraser, takes the reader through the process of beginning and maintaining a mentor relationship with another teacher who may be new to the field or in need of some guidance. Jane stresses that the key to a successful mentor/protégé relationship is dependent on how it is begun. Much how a garden's success is determined by its soil, seeds planted, cultivation and care, a mentoring relationship needs the same attention. When getting things started the mentor often begins by intently listening to the needs of the protégé, and then providing professional development materials to assist in meeting the needs of the protégé.

The brief chapters contain information about parental involvement, the importance of reading aloud to students and how teachers are encouraged to reflect on their interactions with students. She provides crucial information about structuring the time spent between mentor/protégé, by encouraging that the mentor provides not only one on one support but also real time classroom support through modeling teaching strategies and student/teacher interactions. Due to Jane's extensive work with writing and reading in the classroom a majority of the mentoring examples that are used reflect her expertise in guiding the protégé to the use of unique classroom management techniques, workshop teaching and the importance of record keeping as it pertains to student progress.

The examples used in this book would be most helpful for a teacher in the K-8 grade level, but the basic principals about beginning a trusting mentor relationship, and it's maintenance provide the reader with enough inspiration to seek out a new teacher. I also found this book to contain a lot of helpful hints as a practitioner that I would like to try in the classroom. This book is littered with examples that allow the reader to see the importance of careful cultivation, seed planting and tending to the new blooming teacher and the easy to read format of concise information, truly makes it a Guidebook for Effective Mentoring.

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Mentor as nurturing "gardener", Jan 22 2000
By Julie Beckman - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Teacher to Teacher: A Guidebook for Effective Mentoring (Paperback)
This book was an easy read and insightful in many ways. Jane Fraser is a former elementary teacher with many years experience and an honest desire to share her wisdom and help guide new teachers (or proteges, as she refers to them)in successful classroom practices. While the theme of the book is about developing a successful mentoring relationship the book is filled with advise about such things as classroom environment, parent conferences, record keeping, and classroom discipline. The author's area of expertise is in language arts and there are many excellent practices that are detailed in the book. Jane Fraser's use of gardening metaphors to describe a mentor relationship were very effective in relaying her beliefs about successful mentoring. Phrases such as; "planting the seeds...", "...time for roots to grow, deepen, and become strong", "...staking the plants", convey her sense of nurturing and committment to the mentor-protege relationship. The book is filled with thoughts from her journal that detail the ups and downs of creating mentoring relationships with various teachers. She is honest, sincere and straightforward in her words. The key components for developing a successful mentoring relationship focus on the needs of the individual not necessarily a particular set of skills. The author feels that a close, honest relationship and the goal of lifelong learning are essential for a successful relationship. Other important components that she provides and encourages are: trust and confidentiality, feedback, quality time, skilled observation, availability, flexibility, reflection, and mentor as model. This is a wonderful book for either the mentor or protege/new teacher to read. Even an experienced teacher can gain insights and be reminded of the true focus of educating people; to nurture, inspire, collaborate and learn from one another.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Teachers as Mentors, Jan 22 2000
By J. Brunner - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Teacher to Teacher: A Guidebook for Effective Mentoring (Paperback)
The author Jane Fraser, takes the reader through the process of beginning and maintaining a mentor relationship with another teacher who may be new to the field or in need of some guidance. Jane stresses that the key to a successful mentor/protégé relationship is dependent on how it is begun. Much how a garden's success is determined by its soil, seeds planted, cultivation and care, a mentoring relationship needs the same attention. When getting things started the mentor often begins by intently listening to the needs of the protégé, and then providing professional development materials to assist in meeting the needs of the protégé.

The brief chapters contain information about parental involvement, the importance of reading aloud to students and how teachers are encouraged to reflect on their interactions with students. She provides crucial information about structuring the time spent between mentor/protégé, by encouraging that the mentor provides not only one on one support but also real time classroom support through modeling teaching strategies and student/teacher interactions. Due to Jane's extensive work with writing and reading in the classroom a majority of the mentoring examples that are used reflect her expertise in guiding the protégé to the use of unique classroom management techniques, workshop teaching and the importance of record keeping as it pertains to student progress.

The examples used in this book would be most helpful for a teacher in the K-8 grade level, but the basic principals about beginning a trusting mentor relationship, and it's maintenance provide the reader with enough inspiration to seek out a new teacher. I also found this book to contain a lot of helpful hints as a practitioner that I would like to try in the classroom. This book is littered with examples that allow the reader to see the importance of careful cultivation, seed planting and tending to the new blooming teacher and the easy to read format of concise information, truly makes it a Guidebook for Effective Mentoring.

 Go to Amazon.com to see both reviews  5.0 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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