Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
E-mentoring is a means of providing a guided mentoring relationship using online software or email. It allows participants to communicate at their own convenience and beyond time zones since it eliminates the need for them to be in the same physical location. [ 1 ]
E-Mentor Corps is a project of the US State Department that will allow entrepreneurs seeking advice to access mentors on-line. [1] The E-Mentor Corps will call on business leaders and proven entrepreneurs in the United States and overseas to serve as E-Mentors to aspiring and emerging entrepreneurs around the world.
According to USA Today, "Prospective mentors and mentees can join for free on StudentMentor’s web site and are matched according to their areas of common interest." [2] Mentorships take place either in-person or virtually (e-mentoring). Mentees go on their way towards achieving their goals while mentors receive personal satisfaction and ...
UStrive’s technology platform matches high school students and mentors. The mentor and student communicate via the platform and work through the mentoring program which is based on a series of sessions outlined in the organization’s curriculum, which focuses on college admission and financial aid.
This is a list of users who have volunteered to be good article mentors. If you wish to choose a specific mentor, you can leave a message on one of their talk pages. Remember that not all of them might be active or be able to help at any given time. If you're an experienced reviewer, you can add your name! You do not need to be on this list to ...
2 Mentor only in areas you are comfortable teaching; ask another mentor for help if needed. 3 Do your best to make yourself available and be responsive to learners. 4 Use your words! Avoid "mentoring" by simply pointing editors to documentation pages. 5 When possible, encourage boldness and editing outside of sandboxes.
This page was last edited on 31 December 2019, at 17:15 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The EMCC was founded in 1992 as the Mentoring Coaching Council, and renamed to its current name around 2001–2002. [1] It was founded by some of the leading exponents and academics in the fields of mentoring and coaching: Eric Parsloe, Sir John Whitmore, David Clutterbuck, David Megginson [5] and Julie Hay.