Tuesday October 30, 2007
Katy Dickinson
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Big Quake Just Now - No Caboose Movement!
The USGS "Map for San Francisco" says the earthquake we felt just now was at least 5.6 magnitude. It seems to be centered within a few miles of where I sit. Of course, WP668 our backyard caboose, did not move at all. We lost some glassware and our pets are upset but we are fine. Waiting for aftershocks...
Posted at 08:45PM Oct 30, 2007 by katysblog in Caboose Project and Other Trains |
Mentoring Program Models
I haven't been writing much about mentoring in my blog because we are in the process of designing a new pilot mentoring program and are still in discussions. However, today I made a presentation about SEED (Sun's world-wide Engineering mentoring program) to another company. As often happens, in answering questions in a different context, I understood what I was explaining in a new way. This is to try to explain SEED's model in the new way again so I don't forget what I said...
One of the problems of the SEED program is that is does not scale. SEED relies on hand-matching of each pair rather than on an automated system. This means that SEED can handle only 200 to 250 participants (or mentees or proteges) in about six terms a year. There are two reasons why SEED has chosen hand-matching:
- About 3/4 of SEED's mentors are senior executives (Directors, Distinguished Engineers, Fellows, Vice Presidents) who are likely to have remarkable accomplishments and better-than-average communication skills but also require individualized support to be able to participate. The program is run to ensure ease of participation and convenience of Mentors. Mentors who are happy with their experience recommend SEED to others. Also, SEED has found that the source of the request for an executive to become a mentor matters. A trusted source seems to return a higher number of acceptances to mentor match requests.
- Participants are asked to add names to their SEED Mentor Wish List primarily
because of the
potential mentors' accomplishments, experience, personality, capabilities, or skills.
In creating their Mentor Wish List, each SEED participant needs to make two hard
decisions:
- What they want to learn
- Who has already accomplished the kind of things they want to do (that is, who is already down the path that they see themselves walking)
Other mentoring programs do use self-identified lists of capabilities. Such lists allow automated mentor-mentee matching on a large scale. One popular program creates an average of 2,000 mentoring relationships a year. However, not everyone is good at knowing what they are good at. For more, read: Justin Kruger and David Dunning (Cornell University), "Unskilled and Unaware of It: How Difficulties in Recognizing One's Own Incompetence Lead to Inflated Self-Assessments" Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (from the APA - American Psychological Association): December 1999, Vol. 77, No.6, 1121-1134.
By preferring executive mentors who have remarkable accomplishments and then asking mentees to request mentors based what they have already demonstrated, SEED seeks to avoid the problems of mistaken self-identified competencies. However, this also means that the SEED program does not scale.
More information on SEED is available at http://research.sun.com/SEED/
Posted at 04:29PM Oct 30, 2007 by katysblog in Mentoring & Other Business |