Mentor & Mentee Support Resources

Mentorship Tools & Toolkits

Mentorship Agreement Library

The CIMER Library of Mentorship Agreements and Compacts is a useful resource for setting and aligning expectations between mentor and mentee. This library compiles a list of examples and worksheets for a variety of career stages and disciplines.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1eBq02ibBu2h50jI38f6STt9TSfkzoJOts0OWaYDdXYc/edit?gid=117517556#gid=117517556 external link

Enhancing Your Mentorship Practice Infographic

This infographic was produced by CIMER as a part of its work with the NSF-supported Inclusive Graduate Education Network (IGEN) to assist those in taking first steps into building sustainable cultures of mentorship at their institutions. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LPRIcNT5xR4uI4sAkehKJi5AbdsNBKci/view external link

NASEM Online Toolkit and Consensus Report

The Science of Effective Mentorship in STEMM is a consensus report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine which studies mentoring programs and practices at the undergraduate and graduate levels. It also includes an Online Toolkit.

Equity-Minded Mentoring Toolkit (Posselt Team)

The Equity-Minded Mentoring, developed by the Equity in Graduate Education Resource Center, was designed to engage mentors in deeper thinking about how mentoring relationships in graduate education can embody equity-mindedness. The exercises in the Equity-Minded Mentoring Toolkit are designed to help establish shared understandings of mentoring expectations and facilitate conversations about equity in mentoring relationships. https://equitygraded.org/rsrc/4399047/ external link

Culturally Aware Mentoring

The NRNM Culturally Aware Mentoring (CAM) initiative aims to enhance mentors’ and trainees’ ability to effectively address cultural diversity matters in their research mentoring relationships. Here you can find more information about CAM, the CAM study, and gain access to additional resources for self-reflection and education. https://cimerproject.org/culturally-aware-mentoring-resources-2

Resources Across Four Stages Of Mentorship Relationships

Coming soon!

Resources by Mentoring Competency

Coming soon!

Mentorship Skill Development

Synchronous Training Curricula

UCSF Mentor Training Program Archive

The University of California-San Francisco offers an evidence-based synchronous online mentor training program. Materials from this program’s archive are available for broader use.
https://accelerate.ucsf.edu/training/mtp external link

I-TECH (Clinical Mentoring)

The International Training and Education Center on HIV (I-TECH) has an extensive clinical mentoring curriculum. The three-day generic curriculum on basic mentoring skills includes sessions on interpersonal communication skills, clinical teaching skills and program orientation. Many of the materials, particularly those on communication, building relationships, and theories of learning, may easily be adapted for use with research mentors.
https://www.go2itech.org/HTML/CM08/toolkit/training/index.htm lexternal link

Asynchronous & Hybrid Training Options

In the domain of mentor and mentee training, CIMER’s expertise is in the delivery of synchronous in-person and synchronous online workshops. Other colleagues across the country have developed wonderful asynchronous mentor and mentee training tools and have made them publicly accessible, through their own websites and through the course catalog of the National Research Mentoring Network (https://nrmnet.net/nrmn-courses/ external link).

We encourage you to consider using some of these tools with your colleagues. These approaches have been evaluated and in most cases are more effective when paired with synchronous discussion groups.

Mentoring Graduate Students, Post Docs & Early Career Faculty

Optimizing the Practice of Mentoring (OPM):

The University of Minnesota’s Optimizing the Practice of Mentoring offers asynchronous online self-paced research mentor training for mentors of graduate students, fellows and early-career faculty. Content is organized into five modules that cover mentoring models, mentor roles and responsibilities, structure and dynamics of the mentoring relationship, and strategies for facilitating, and addressing challenges to, the mentoring process.
https://ctsi.umn.edu/training/mentors/mentor-training external link

NRMN

This self-directed course is designed to help faculty members (or other experienced researchers) optimize their mentoring relationships with graduate students, post-doctoral fellows, and early-career faculty. The course predominantly addresses research mentoring that occurs within biomedical, behavioral, and social science fields. However, many of the principles and approaches covered in this course are applicable to other disciplines and other types of mentoring relationships.
https://courses.nrmnet.net/course/c/mentoring-grad external link

Mentoring Undergraduate Students

Optimizing the Practice of Mentoring (OPM):

The University of Minnesota’s Optimizing the Practice of Mentoring offers asynchronous online self-paced research mentor training for mentors of undergraduate researchers. Content is organized into five modules that cover mentoring models, mentor roles and responsibilities, structure and dynamics of the mentoring relationship, and strategies for facilitating, and addressing challenges to, the mentoring process. https://ctsi.umn.edu/training/mentors/mentor-training external link

Mentoring Undergraduate Students:

This self-directed course offered by NRMN is based upon OPM. It  is designed to help faculty members, postdoctoral fellows, or graduate students optimize their mentoring relationships with undergraduate mentees. The course predominantly addresses research mentoring that occurs within biomedical, behavioral, and social science fields. However, many of the principles and approaches covered in this course are applicable to other disciplines and other types of mentoring relationships. https://courses.nrmnet.net/course/c/mentoring-undergrads external link

Advancing Inclusive Mentoring (AIM)

The AIM program is a mentor training program developed at California State University Long Beach (CSULB) as part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Building Infrastructure Leading to Diversity (BUILD) Initiative. The overarching goals of AIM are to provide a variety of engaging faculty training resources to promote student success through positive and inclusive mentoring, particularly for mentors of undergraduate research students. https://courses.nrmnet.net/course/c/AIM external link

Fair Play

Fair Play is an interactive, experiential, case-based computer game that teaches players to recognize and self-correct implicit stereotype-based biases. Fair Play’s gameplay and mechanics are inspired by point-and-click adventure games in which players explore the setting and embark on quests to advance the story. Players take on the perspective of Jamal Davis, a young African American student who has recently been accepted into graduate school and has plans to build a successful academic STEMM career for himself. Over the course of the game’s five chapters, Jamal meets peers and mentors who can propel him to (or hinder him from) achieving his ultimate goals. https://fairplaygame.org/ external link

iBiology “Building Your Research Community Course”

Build Your Research Community from the Science Communication Lab (formerly iBiology) is a free, five module online course that guides science trainees through the crucial steps of identifying mentors and building and maintaining strong mentoring relationships. https://courses.ibiology.org/catalog/BYRC/SP/ external link

Dismantling Ableism in Mentorship

Working Together: Deaf & Hearing People The Working Together: Deaf & Hearing People from the National Technical Institute for the Deaf is an approximately two-hour course designed to help employers develop the sensitivity and skills to communicate effectively with deaf and hard-of-hearing employees, enable deaf and hearing colleagues to work together more productively, and assist in fostering a workplace culture of diversity and inclusion. The five self-paced modules in the course cover topics on Myths and Definitions, Hearing Loss, Deaf Culture, Communication, and Accommodation and Inclusion in the Workplace.  This group is also developing mentor training modules external link.
http://workingtogether.deaftec.org/ external link

National Disability Mentoring Coalition – Disability Mentoring Certification

The NSMC Disability Mentoring Certification is a four-month program for individuals seeking to develop competence in running mentoring programs that are inclusive for individuals with disabilities. Participants will attend several webinars, take a curriculum at their own place, and develop an inclusive mentoring action plan. https://pyd.org/ndmc/certification/ external link