Through one-to-one confidential conversations, a mentee is encouraged and challenged to achieve their career potential and aspirations. It can be useful at all stages of a career.
Mentoring has proved to have a beneficial impact on effectiveness, confidence and career advancement. It has advantages both for the mentor and mentee. For the mentor it can help with developing leadership skills and for the mentee they can access a colleague’s experience, gaining advice and guidance.
Mentors encourage, nurture and provide support to a mentee, usually through a 12-month period. They draw on their own experience and knowledge base within a specific area. Mentoring involves the use of the same models and skills of questioning, listening, clarifying and reframing associated with coaching. However, it is important to note that the timescales for mentoring are usually longer, and a mentor will offer their own experiences and expertise to support the mentee. By contrast, a coach will focus on helping their coachee identify their own options and actions.
Queen Mary does not run a central mentoring scheme to partner mentors with mentees. Instead, we strongly encourage you to use your own networks to find a mentor. Here are some tips:
If you're interested in mentoring someone else, make sure that people in your network are aware of it! They can let their own colleagues and friends know that you want to become a mentor.
Introduction to Mentoring for Mentors and Mentees [PDF 439KB]
We have also put together some guidelines for those seeking academic career progression. Mentoring can support academic colleagues to progress their careers, by asking a more senior colleague to provide advice and act as a sounding board and role model. This guide, available below, provides some tips for mentees and mentors to get the most out of this relationship.
Mentoring for academic career progression [PDF 716KB]
All apprentices require a workplace mentor. Usually, the mentor is someone other than the apprentice's line manager who has experience and knowledge in the area that the apprentice is training in. The mentor should be able to provide advice and support in relation to learning and evidencing the Knowledge, Skill and Behavioural requirements of the apprenticeship, details of which will be shared by a training provider.
The mentor can help a new starter (who was recruited as an apprentice) settle into their role, or support an upskilling apprentice (who has started their apprenticeship while already in post) to develop in their career.
As with all mentoring at Queen Mary, it is not necessary to have formal training to be an apprenticeship mentor. However, if you are a mentor to an apprentice, you may be interested in gaining a qualification in mentoring via the Learning and Skills Mentor apprenticeship.
If you would like to find out more about qualifications deliver through apprenticeships, please see the Qualification programme webpages for more information.
If you have been a mentor to a staff apprentice and would like to share your experience with others, please complete the Staff Apprenticeship Case Study form and your profile will be added to the Staff Apprenticeships webpage.
Some of our past and present mentors have kindly agreed to be profiled for this page - find out more about their roles, their career journeys, and what advice they have to share. If you are, or would like to become, a mentor for Queen Mary colleagues you can also share your own profile!
If you are currently mentoring a colleague at Queen Mary or another institution, or aspire to do so in the future, the Staff Mentor Network on Teams is available for you to join. Resources are available to help you develop your practice, and members are encouraged to start open discussions about the practice of mentoring.
'Introduction to Mentoring' is a short workshop run approximately once per semester, according to demand. You can find it on CPD Training here.