skills/mentorship-teaching/mentorship-onboarding

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Version Compatibility

Reference frameworks and tools cited: CIMER Entering Mentoring (2024 revision), AAAS MyIDP, NSF PAPPG 24-1.

The frameworks referenced here are stable. If implementing within a specific institution, adapt communication templates to local norms and compliance requirements. Mentors in NIH-funded labs should reference specific broadening requirements applicable to their award type.

Mentorship Onboarding

Effective mentorship does not happen by accident—it requires structured onboarding that establishes expectations, communication norms, and mutual goals from the outset. This skill provides a step-by-step onboarding process based on the Entering Mentoring curriculum developed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Center for the Improvement of Mentored Relationships in Research and Teaching (CIMER).

For goal-setting after onboarding, see mentorship-teaching/ors-mentorship-goal-setting. For designing formal research training courses, see mentorship-teaching/ors-teaching-course-design.

When to Use This Skill

ScenarioWhy this skill is needed
New mentor-mentee relationshipEstablishes framework before expectations diverge
First-time mentorProvides evidence-based structure, reduces anxiety
Transitioning to new mentorRe-sets expectations, avoids carryover assumptions
Lab rotation completionFormalizes lessons learned, prepares for next phase
Multi-mentor arrangementAligns expectations across mentors

The CIMER Onboarding Framework

The Entering Mentoring curriculum identifies five key areas that must be addressed in the first meetings:

  1. Establishing expectations — What does each party expect from the relationship?
  2. Assessing current skills and knowledge — Where is the mentee starting?
  3. Defining communication norms — How, when, and how often will you communicate?
  4. Creating a development plan — What specific goals will guide the mentorship period?
  5. Establishing feedback norms — How will you give and receive feedback?

Expectation Alignment Template

The most common source of mentorship breakdown is misaligned expectations. Address these dimensions explicitly:

DimensionMentor ExpectationMentee Expectation
Meeting frequencyWeekly / biweekly / monthlySame
Meeting formatIn-person / Zoom / hybridSame
Email/chat response timeWithin 24-48 hoursSame
Feedback deliveryImmediate / scheduledSame
Project ownershipMentor leads / mentee leadsSame
Authorship expectations% contribution to justify co-authorshipSame
Working hoursCore hours / flexible / as neededSame
Time-off policyRequest advance / informSame
"
Activity: In the first meeting, each party independently填写上面的表格,然后对比讨论。这避免了"以为对方知道"的假设。

Initial Skills Assessment

Use a structured self-assessment to identify mentee's starting point:

Research Skills Inventory:

  • Literature search and synthesis
  • Experimental design
  • Technical lab skills
  • Data analysis (statistics, coding)
  • Scientific writing
  • Grant writing (for advanced mentees)
  • Lab management and mentorship (for senior mentees)

Example conversation starter: "Before we set goals, I'd like to understand where you are in each of these areas. On a scale of 1-5 for each: Where would you rate yourself, and what's one area where you'd most like to grow?"

Communication Norms Agreement

Explicitly define communication norms in writing:

MENTORSHIP COMMUNICATION AGREEMENT

Meeting Schedule: [Day] [time] every [week/biweek/month]
Format: [in-person / Zoom / hybrid]
Pre-meeting: Mentee sends agenda by [day/time]
Post-meeting: Mentor returns written feedback by [day/time]

Email/Chat:
- Urgent (实验安全): [response time]
- General questions: [response time]
- Scheduling: [response time]

Feedback:
- Positive feedback: [immediate / weekly]
- Constructive feedback: [in meetings / scheduled 1:1]
- Written annual review: [yes/no]

Documentation:
- Meeting notes: [who maintains]
- IDP updates: [frequency]

Onboarding Meeting Sequence

Meeting 1: Introduction and Expectation Alignment (60-90 minutes)

Before meeting:

  • Mentee completes self-assessment
  • Both parties review AAAS MyIDP initial assessment

Agenda:

  1. Personal introductions (background, research interests)
  2. Mentor research program overview
  3. Mentee goals and motivations
  4. Expectations discussion using template above
  5. Communication norms agreement
  6. Schedule next meeting

Deliverable: Signed communication agreement

Meeting 2: Skills Assessment and Initial Planning (45-60 minutes)

Agenda:

  1. Review self-assessment results
  2. Identify priority growth areas
  3. Discuss lab norms and culture
  4. Assign initial project or reading
  5. Set first IDP draft goals

Deliverable: Initial IDP draft with 3-month milestones

Meeting 3: Plan Finalization and Launch (30-45 minutes)

Agenda:

  1. Review and finalize IDP
  2. Establish feedback schedule
  3. Introduce key lab members
  4. Resource allocation确认

Deliverable: Finalized 6-month IDP, feedback schedule

Common Onboarding Pitfalls

PitfallWhy it mattersPrevention
No written agreementVerbal understandings are forgottenSign communication agreement
Assuming mentee knows lab cultureCultural norms vary; explicitness prevents conflictProvide written lab manual
Inconsistent meeting scheduleRelationship stalls without accountabilityCalendar recurring meetings
Only discussing实验Broader development neglectedInclude career and skill goals in IDP
Mentor not providing feedback structureMentee unsure how to improveUse CIMER feedback framework
No documentationInstitutional knowledge lostMaintain meeting notes

Feedback Framework: The CIMER Model

Effective feedback is specific, timely, and balanced. Use this structure:

Behavior: "When you [specific action]..." Impact: "It [positive/neutral/negative effect]..." Suggestion: "In the future, consider [alternative]..."

Example: "当你在实验前检查protocols时,你的实验成功率和可重复性显著提高。建议继续保持这个习惯,也尝试在开始前向团队成员简要解释你的实验设计。"

References

Related Skills

  • mentorship-teaching/ors-mentorship-goal-setting - Setting research and career goals using IDP framework
  • mentorship-teaching/ors-teaching-course-design - Designing formal research training curriculum
  • mentorship-teaching/ors-teaching-syllabus - Creating course syllabi with learning outcomes
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