
Inspire, Empower, Connect: Reaching across Cultural Differences to Make a Real Difference
Author(s): Anne Chan (Author)
- Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Education
- Publication Date: 16 Jan. 2010
- Language: English
- Print length: 174 pages
- ISBN-10: 160709603X
- ISBN-13: 9781607096030
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
Chan has provided a practical and insightful guide to mentoring that explains all the things mentors can do to connect effectively with ethnic minorities and people from diverse backgrounds. Most importantly, Chan demonstrates how race and culture can enrich a mentoring relationship and how mentors can work successfully through cultural differences. Not only does Chan demystify the process of mentoring, she lays it out step-by-step, providing helpful tips for how to connect with people of all ages from all walks of life. Chan also explains how institutions can provide support for mentoring to improve recruitment and retention rates of ethnic minorities. Whether you’re an administrator, teacher, employer, advisor, or supervisor―this is a must-read guide to making a real difference in people’s lives and in the quality of the work or school environment and increase diversity in the process.” — Horace Mitchell, president, California State University, Bakersfield
Anne Chan urges mentors and mentees to address the elephant in the room. Talking with one another about their different racial/ethnic backgrounds and how these have shaped their experiences, outlooks, and ambitions―such conversations do indeed matter. Chan provides not only pointers for initiating these essential conversations but also dozens of helpful suggestions to increase mentors’ competency and confidence. — JoAnn Moody, national specialist in faculty development (www.diversityoncampus.com)
Anne Chan’s book reinforces the importance of our roles as mentors and provides guideline for how to deal with cultural differences, how to implement specific techniques when dealing with age differences, and how to model and encourage the setting of positive goals. AAUW Fremont Branch enthusiastically endorses this book as a resource for its own high school girls’ mentorship program, because it serves as an extension of AAUW’s mission to provide equity for women and girls through advocacy, education, philanthropy, and research. — Board of Directors, American Association of University Women, Fremont Branch (http://www.aauwfremontbranch.org/)
This book is a practical and evidence-based manual on how to be a good mentor and a good protégé. It is based on systematic interviews with both mentors and protégés and observations of their interactions with each other. The findings are distilled into valuable tips about finding and enjoying a significant professional relationship. — John Krumboltz, professor of education and psychology, Stanford University
Anne Chan’s book talks about the essentials of mentoring. Throughout the entire book, she gives case examples of specific mentoring practices, an explanation of why the practice matters as well as a section of practical strategies for implementing the practice with students of protégés. Advisors will find the practical strategies at the end of each chapter to be specifically applicable to their work with students…. This well-written book is easy to read with practical strategies that advisors can implement in their own advising work with their students. ―
NACADA Journal
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