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[ecrea] CFP: Communication and Critical/Cultural Mentoring: Experiences from Higher Education
Wed Feb 07 16:30:12 GMT 2018
CFP: Communication and Critical/Cultural Mentoring: Experiences from
Higher Education
Edited by Ahmet Atay (College of Wooster) and Diana Trebing (Saginaw
Valley State University)
Mentoring occupies a major role in higher education. We mentor students
and fellow faculty members, many of whom come from diverse backgrounds,
such as first-generation, LGBTQ, and other countries among others.
Perhaps as scholars and educators we do not spend or have enough time
thinking about mentoring. It might also not be something that we
formally discussed in graduate school. As we find ourselves mentoring
various groups of people in higher education, we try to model our own
mentors who helped us as students or faculty. Due to lack of formal
training, perhaps we might use a trial-error approach or simply find
spontaneous ways to mentor. Additionally, we might also spend hours
trying to solve a problem or deal with issues regarding students or new
faculty colleagues. We mentor these people, despite the fact that we
might not be trained, knowledgeable or prepared for specific mentoring
situations. Similar to undergraduate and graduate students, junior
faculty also need guidance in their teaching and research. However, in
some instances, mentoring becomes a secondary issue when, as scholars,
we are too busy working with students, teaching our classes, and
conducting our research. Thus, we might neglect our responsibilities to
mentor students outside the classroom or new faculty who might be
struggling with different issues, such as maintaining a research agenda,
becoming a good educator, or balancing their work and personal lives.
Therefore, mentoring is one of the most crucial aspects of our academic
lives.
This book will tackle two interrelated issues: The role and importance
of mentoring in our discipline as well as critical/cultural studies and
the ways in which we mentor students and junior faculty with diverse
backgrounds. We invite authors who will present a position or an issue
in regards to mentoring students and faculty or the lack of it in higher
education, especially in mentoring new faculty and minority students.
Our goal is to generate a scholarly discussion by utilizing different
theoretical models, highlight some of the important issues in mentoring
as a form of critical and intercultural communication pedagogy, and
finally to present guidelines and examples to mentor more effectively.
In this project, we see mentoring as a form of critical communication
pedagogy, outlined by Fassett and Warren (2007), and intercultural
communication pedagogy, outlined by Atay and Trebing (2017) and Toyosaki
and Atay (2018). Hence, borrowing from communication pedagogy and
critical cultural scholars, Calafell (2007), Calafell and
Gutierrez-Perez (2017) and Chrifi and Calafell (2016), in this book we
argue that mentoring as a commitment and practice builds on the ideas of
critical dialogue, embodies critical love and intercultural and
transnational sense-making, and promotes a web of community that
cultivates care and commitment.
Topics may include but are not limited to:
1-Theorizing mentoring
2-Critical/Cultural mentoring
3-Queer mentoring
4-Feminist mentoring
5-Mentoring vs. advising
6-Mentoring international students and faculty
7-Mentoring special populations
8-Mentoring junior faculty
9-Mentoring in the digital age
10-Mentoring as dialogue
11-Mentoring as critical love
12-Mentoring in times of crisis
13-Mentoring as a community act
14-New ways of mentoring
15-The good, the bad, and the ugly sides of mentoring
16-The role of mentoring in tenure and promotion
Abstracts are due by Thursday, March 15, 2018, with a word length of no
more than 500 words, along with pertinent references, contact
information, and a short biographic blurb of no more 300 words.
Full-length manuscripts are due on October 1, 2018, with a word length
of no more than 5,000-7,000 words and in APA style, including
references, endnotes, and so forth. Please email your abstracts as Word
documents to both Ahmet Atay ((aatay /at/ wooster.edu)) and Diana Trebing
(dtrebing@svsu) for an initial review.
Ahmet Atay, Ph.D
Associate Professor
Department of Communication
Chair of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
College of Wooster
+
Visiting Scholar, CEMP
Bournemouth University
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