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New Mentor - Need Advice
Hi FIRST Population,
I'm not sure where to post this but my name is Bryan, and this is my first year as a mentor for FRC and I was wondering if anybody had any tips for mentoring a team. I want to be able to give back to the community and I want to incorporate those great values that makes FIRST what it is today. I'm mentoring a team that's starting their second year and weren't fortunate enough to have a mentor last year, so I wan't to fill up that role so they could accomplish more as a team both, during and after the season. Thank You and Good Luck to all!!! |
Re: New Mentor - Need Advice
I am a new mentor myself so I am still learning, but here are some of the resources I have been studying:
FIRST's Mentor Resource Library The NEMO resource page Team 358's Mentor Handbook Karthik's Running a FRC Team seminar Good luck! |
Re: New Mentor - Need Advice
hi and welcome good to have you. Our teams are trying to do the same last year we adopted a highway to do clean up. but we are also trying to come up with ideas and time to do other community service projects. forum is a great place for ideas and answers
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Re: New Mentor - Need Advice
Welcome sir!
I think that the best advice that I can give you is simple: Keep positive at all times. As a coach/mentor, your team will feed off of how you approach each situation. If you panic, lose your demeanor in tough situations, your students will follow suit. Embrace failure Your team will fail. My team has excelled at failing - heck, I think we do this better than most. However, we try to 'fail safely' by planning ahead and having a back-up plan in all situations. We learned this early and often our rookie season and we have kept up this tradition through the previous season. I honestly believe if your students (AND parents) are presented with this straight-away, they will be better prepared for the inevitable. We have adopted the Universal Systems Model when approaching any new endeavor - or even when we are updating old processes. Here is a simple, yet great model that most 9-12 grade students can understand and adopt: http://www.weston.org/schools/ms/MCA...stemsModel.htm Delegate Responsibilities If you delegate responsibility back to your captains or team they can make unbelievable strides in very short time - but you will still need to manage these projects. Make certain that your leads or captains are backed up with a younger team member on each endeavor - Do not set them adrift or leave them alone - They can become frustrated if they are isolated! Ask Questions You cannot be the expert at everything. If you attempt to be the expert of all, you will let your team down. Seeing as you are already using Chief Delphi, you are on the right track. Good luck sir, This can be one of the most frustrating yet rewarding experiences you have been a part of! |
Re: New Mentor - Need Advice
I think it's very important to find yourself a mentor. Talk with the senior mentor in your area and find veteran to mentor you.
I have been very lucky to be mentored by amazing people here in central Indiana including Chris Fultz and Andy Baker. I would not be the mentor that I am without their influence. |
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As a new mentor as well, I'm still learning to adjust to the role, especially now that I'm not a student on a team where I have to run everything myself. Learning to take a step back and find your place on the team is a difficult transition, but one that I feel has been necessary for improvement (call it growing pains, if you will). It took a whole offseason event and a much needed confrontation from the rest of the mentors on my team for me to see this, and I'm eternally grateful for it. I have been mentored more as a mentor than I have been as a student, and while your results may vary, I find that what I am learning now from more experienced mentors is some of the most invaluable information I have ever learned. |
Thank you all for the advice. I'm still in contact with my old mentor from my competing days so that should make it a little easier. I definitely have a lot of learning to do from other more experienced mentors and also from just taking that role. I appreciate all the advice and I know that I can count on you guys for any other questions.
Bryan Eiroa |
As a student, I would say the two things I value most in a mentor is a cool head, a person who doesn't get angry when we make mistakes, and a mentor who is here when we need them, but not trying to touch the robot too much. Our Coach has outlawed mentors touching the robot at all, delegate to students whenever possible.
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Re: New Mentor - Need Advice
It hasn't been said in almost a full page?! HAVE FUN.
Honestly, if you're having fun with the students (while working on the goals of the team) you are having a profound effect, even if you don't know it. It will encourage them to return, to try new things, and will help open them up to a new world of possibilities. The other advice in this thread is very good. Another thing to keep in mind is that you may not "get it right" this year, but that is ok. Take time to reflect at the end of the season and make improvements for next year. You may also want to try to recruit more mentors to the team. Contact the local paper, PTA, school leaders, the chamber of commerce, anyone. Tell them about FIRST and how they can spread the word to others about mentoring. Mentors are crucial to a successful program. |
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Amen dude. If you aren't having fun doing this you might want to reevaluate whether you should be doing it. I don't mean EVERY minute of every day is fun. But if you can't look back at a season and say, "yeah, that was pretty rad" you're doing mentoring wrong. And, heck, if you aren't learning from the students I'd say your missing on of the most important parts of this program. The mentors don't know the answer, part of what I find most enjoyable is the process of shared discovery with students. Students, for some reason, fear wrong answers, they fear failing at something. Help teach them it's ok to get the wrong answer as long as you learn from it. On the topic of not getting it, it's not that you MAY not get it. You WON'T get it at first. You WILL screw up. Why? Because I'd be willing to bet you every great mentor has moments they feel they've screwed up. Times when they weren't the best they should be or could be. Reflect on it, learn from it. And most importantly, acknowledge it. |
Re: New Mentor - Need Advice
Thank you all for the comments. I definitely have a better understanding of what to expect and I am looking forward to the challenge. Having fun will help make everything easier and it will do a better job of uniting the team. I have a lot to learn not only from the mentors, but from the students themselves. Hopefully everything goes as planned.
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