Education is more than the virtual passage of education. It is the
learning and grasp over the complex principles of a subject that
needs to be embedded into a student’s mind. It is the creation of
a healthy and balanced environment between educators, mentors,
students, and parents.
Education is more than just the exchange of information and
transference of facts from the teaching facility to the students.
It is about maintaining and establishing trust and communication
between a teacher and a student. A student needs to have a mentor
and a guide to navigate through the problems of life.
I cannot begin to emphasize the role of a mentor in my student
life. Not only has having a mentor helped me choose better career
options, but it has also helped me deal with the numerous
challenges that my life has thrown at me.
A mentor can be a guide and a friend which a student needs in
their life. Mentors understand students in ways that educational
institutions, professors, and parents do not. Students experience
emotional, physical, academic, and mental stress during their
school-university years.
This strain can sometimes stifle a student’s overall growth and
development. This can lead to a drop in grades and extracurricular
activities, which can emotionally and mentally break a student.
The presence of a guide or mentor, who can provide adequate one on
one mentorship and a career guidance counselor, can significantly
help students in crafting effective answers to these problems.
This can lead to improved student outcomes, when conducting
assessment of learning, while also ensuring their happiness and
satisfaction.
Having a mentor can have a life-changing impact on the lives of
our students. Students these days have abundant stress in their
lives. It can be intimidating for them to tackle all these issues
on their own, including the stress and pressure of excelling in
academics and performing beautifully in extracurricular
activities. This is where the role of a mentor comes into the
picture where they can guide students with the essentially
required one on one mentorship.
Not only can a mentor guide the students but also help them manage
through the challenges of life that are thrown at them. A mentor
understands students’ personalities and helps them assess their
short-term and long-term goals and thus prove to be an excellent
career guidance counselor.
For instance, let us consider the following example.
Arjun is very academically driven and focused. Mentors can push
Arjun to achieve his goals, short-term and long-term. This type of
mentorship can prove very valuable to him. Students will have
someone to guide them through any obstacles, while they craft
their ways out of these problems on their own.
Now, Sukriti is not that academically motivated. So the mentor
must lay the groundwork, starting with motivating that student
from level 0. The mentor must understand all the issues that she
may have (emotionally, physically, or mentally) to divulge into
the working of this child’s brain to comprehend what she faces
while studying or performing any form of career-defining
activity.
Thus, from the above example, it becomes exceedingly evident that
the role of a mentor becomes very versatile and even more
challenging as the needs and wants of every other student are
exceedingly different. Mentors challenge students to push their
limits emotionally, physically, and mentally whilst maintaining a
balance with health.
What are the roles and responsibilities of a mentor?
1) Understanding the psychology of students, and communicating
with parents and students to bridge the gap between them to
understand where the students’ life is heading.
2) Agent: The student knows the mentor will go to bat for him or
her. The mentor removes obstacles, but only after the student has
made a convincing attempt. And the mentor is careful to avoid
spoon-feeding, which stunts the development of independence.
3) A good coach motivates the players to win. Knowing when to
offer encouragement. When to push. And when to pause and take a
break. A mentor must push for action while tolerating inaction — a
cause of considerable tension in the mentor. Likewise, a mentor
recognizes that it is far easier to give a lecture than to guide a
student in how to do it.
4) Handling Failure with grace and talking and helping students
through bad times.
5) Developing confidence and making the students independent.
6) Advisor and counselor: The students need a sounding board and
reality check to help refine ideas and gain clarity of thought.
Being older, the mentor provides the missing experience — been
there, done that. The student does not need someone to pave the
road but needs help in becoming a better navigator. The mentor
will not try to personally solve the student’s problems but helps
the student craft his or her own solution — to become
self-reliant.
7) The mentor teaches the students the technical skills unique to
their field of research. The mentor guides the students in how to
read and understand efficiently and how to reason from first
principles.
In the modern era, we need to take the role of a mentor and
develop a long-term relationship with all our students. The
quality of content available online for free, and platforms like
YouTube with so many talented content creators, have
revolutionized the whole idea of learning.
For example, as a mathematics instructor, I can teach my students
in the best possible way I know of. But there can be so many
educators who are much better at creating and delivering the same
content. As educators, we need to help students benefit from the
unprecedented learning revolution that has happened in the last
decade.
We need to understand that learning is more about what happens
inside their minds and less about what happens outside. So rather
than just focusing on creating content with amazing animations,
narration, etc., we must also focus on supporting the students to
figure out the learning methodology that suits them the best.
We must encourage them in their failures, keep them grounded in
their success so that they can achieve their dreams, conduct a
frequent and thorough assessment of learning, and become
confident, empathetic, social, financially independent, and
happy.
The simple fact is if the students are motivated and know how to
approach things in the right way, they have more than enough
resources available for free that can help them in achieving their
short-term and long-term goals.
We need to participate in different aspects of students’ lives, be
it music, movies, sports, culture, environment, social media, and
personal issues that they are facing. Once we start understanding
students from different perspectives, only then will we be able to
motivate them and help them realize their full potential.