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  2. Teacher leadership - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teacher_leadership

    Teacher leadership is a term used in K-12 schools for classroom educators who simultaneously take on administrative roles outside of their classrooms to assist in functions of the larger school system. Teacher leadership tasks may include but are not limited to: managing teaching, learning, and resource allocation.

  3. Workplace mentoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workplace_mentoring

    Eg: coaches, advisors, and teachers. [12] Reverse Mentoring: This type of mentoring takes place when a younger member of a company is the mentor to an older member of a company to foster a better pipeline of leadership in a company. [13] The mentor has less overall experience in comparison to the mentee due to age.

  4. Mentorship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mentorship

    These mentoring relationships promote career growth and benefit both the mentor and the learner: for example, the mentor can show leadership by teaching; the organization receives an employee that is shaped by the organization's culture and operation because they have been under the mentorship of an experienced member; and the learner can ...

  5. Peer mentoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_mentoring

    Peer mentoring in education was promoted during the 1960s by educator and theorist Paulo Freire: "The fundamental task of the mentor is a liberatory task. It is not to encourage the mentor's goals and aspirations and dreams to be reproduced in the mentees, the students, but to give rise to the possibility that the students become the owners of their own history.

  6. Academic tenure in North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_tenure_in_North...

    Two major examples of invisible labor are student mentoring and university diversity/inclusionary work. [44] [45] Though student mentoring and inclusion are important aspects to student success, these tasks are often undervalued in faculty evaluations when compared to other academic work, such as publishing research and attaining grant money.

  7. Instructional scaffolding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instructional_scaffolding

    Instructional scaffolding is the support given to a student by an instructor throughout the learning process. This support is specifically tailored to each student; this instructional approach allows students to experience student-centered learning, which tends to facilitate more efficient learning than teacher-centered learning.

  8. Collaborative learning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative_learning

    Collaborative learning is a situation in which two or more people learn or attempt to learn something together. [1] Unlike individual learning, people engaged in collaborative learning capitalize on one another's resources and skills (asking one another for information, evaluating one another's ideas, monitoring one another's work, etc.).

  9. Youth mentoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youth_mentoring

    Youth mentoring is the process of matching mentors with young people who need or want a caring, responsible adult in their lives. Adult mentors are usually unrelated to the child or teen and work as volunteers through a community-, school-, or church-based social service program.