Undergraduate Curricular Peer Mentoring Programs Perspectives on Innovation by Faculty, Staff, and Students
, by Barry, Andrew; Bolton, Tamsin; Epstein, Marcia Jenneth; Goel, Sanjay; Singleton-Jackson, Jill; Johnson, Ralph H.; Mogyorody, Veronika; Nelson, Robert; Pollock, Carol; Pugliese, Tina; Smith, Jennifer L.; Smith, Tania S.; Zier-Vogel, Kate; Young, Bryanne; S- ISBN: 9780739179321 | 0739179322
- Cover: Hardcover
- Copyright: 12/14/2012
Curricular peer mentoring is a programmatic approach to enrich student learning and engagement in postsecondary courses in which instructors welcome a more experienced undergraduate student into a credit course they are teaching. The student then serves as peer mentor to the students enrolled. Peer mentors can provide a variety of peer-appropriate, course-specific mentoring, tutoring, facilitation and leadership roles and activities that complement the roles of the course's instructor and teaching assistants both in classroom settings and beyond. A program provides training and ongoing support for a larger number of peer mentors and instructional teams and manages recruitment and program research and quality. This volume provides research findings, definitions, theories, and practical program descriptions as a foundation for program development and research of undergraduate curricular peer mentoring programs in higher education. This work builds on a long history of higher education program development and collects a significant amount of literature that has previously been scattered.