Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Skills and Qualities Necessary Required to Establish and Maintain a
The Skills and Qualities Necessary Required to Establish and Maintain an Effective Working Relationship                                                                                              In this essay I have chosen to explore the skills and qualities     required to establish and maintain an effective working relationship     with my mentor in practice in the role of supervisee. I will discuss     communication skills, willingness to learn, self-awareness,     assertiveness, open-mindedness, reflective skills as criteria of     mentee to establish working relationship with mentor.       The term mentor originates from Greek mythology, was first introduce     in academic and business world of north America (Laurent 1998) used in     United Kingdom with the implementation of project 2000 in the national     health service (Bracken 1989) to help smooth transition from student     to professional. (Philips et al 1996, Grey M and Smith1999). The     dictionary defines a mentor as a trusted counselor or guide. A mentor     is generally an influential, experienced individual with whom mentee     establish a personal relationship and who actively helps mentee reach     their goals. The terms mentorship are designated to staff nurses who     engage in a multitude of roles supporting student nurses in the     clinical setting. (Quinn2000). And reducing the theory practice gap     (Earnsaw 1995). Mentorship is a mechanism that promotes safe and     effective practice, maintains standards and accountability, and     develops nurse practitioners autonomy.       Proctor (1998) has grouped supervisees' skills under three functions:     formative, supportive and normative. Supervisee should be keen,     capable, trustworthy, attentive, ...              ...ellor:Acyclical Model.     2nd Edition. London. Roultedge.       Power S (1999) Nursing Supervision. A guide for clinical practice.     London: Sage.       Proctor (1988) supervision: a working alliance. London: Alexia,       Scanlon C, Weir W S (197) learning from practice? Mental health     nurses' perceptions and experiences of clinical supervision. Journal     of advanced nursing 26,295-303.       Watson N. A., 1999. Mentoring today-the students' views. An     investigative case study of pre-registration nursing students'     experiences and perceptions of mentoring in one theory/practice module     of the Common Foundation Programme on a Project 2000 course. Journal     of Advanced Nursing 29, pp. 254-262.       Wong S (1979) Nurse teacher behaviour in clinical field:Apparent     effects on nursing students' learning. Journal of advance learning, 3     ,369-378                      The Skills and Qualities Necessary Required to Establish and Maintain a  The Skills and Qualities Necessary Required to Establish and Maintain an Effective Working Relationship                                                                                              In this essay I have chosen to explore the skills and qualities     required to establish and maintain an effective working relationship     with my mentor in practice in the role of supervisee. I will discuss     communication skills, willingness to learn, self-awareness,     assertiveness, open-mindedness, reflective skills as criteria of     mentee to establish working relationship with mentor.       The term mentor originates from Greek mythology, was first introduce     in academic and business world of north America (Laurent 1998) used in     United Kingdom with the implementation of project 2000 in the national     health service (Bracken 1989) to help smooth transition from student     to professional. (Philips et al 1996, Grey M and Smith1999). The     dictionary defines a mentor as a trusted counselor or guide. A mentor     is generally an influential, experienced individual with whom mentee     establish a personal relationship and who actively helps mentee reach     their goals. The terms mentorship are designated to staff nurses who     engage in a multitude of roles supporting student nurses in the     clinical setting. (Quinn2000). And reducing the theory practice gap     (Earnsaw 1995). Mentorship is a mechanism that promotes safe and     effective practice, maintains standards and accountability, and     develops nurse practitioners autonomy.       Proctor (1998) has grouped supervisees' skills under three functions:     formative, supportive and normative. Supervisee should be keen,     capable, trustworthy, attentive, ...              ...ellor:Acyclical Model.     2nd Edition. London. Roultedge.       Power S (1999) Nursing Supervision. A guide for clinical practice.     London: Sage.       Proctor (1988) supervision: a working alliance. London: Alexia,       Scanlon C, Weir W S (197) learning from practice? Mental health     nurses' perceptions and experiences of clinical supervision. Journal     of advanced nursing 26,295-303.       Watson N. A., 1999. Mentoring today-the students' views. An     investigative case study of pre-registration nursing students'     experiences and perceptions of mentoring in one theory/practice module     of the Common Foundation Programme on a Project 2000 course. Journal     of Advanced Nursing 29, pp. 254-262.       Wong S (1979) Nurse teacher behaviour in clinical field:Apparent     effects on nursing students' learning. Journal of advance learning, 3     ,369-378                        
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