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On Mentorship
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The specific principles which I see as applicable to mentorship are as follows:
[N.B. The following segment refers to the following joke/story, recounted in Reader's Digest:
A professor believed that his students were mindlessly copying too much of his lectures instead of thinking and then writing down key points. One day in class, he interrupted his lecture and said, "Stop. I want you to put down your pens and pencils and listen to me. You are not here to transcribe my lectures. You are here to think first and foremost, and only then to write down the essence of what I am saying. You don't have to write down every word I say verbatim. Now, any questions?"
One student raised her hand. "Yes?" "How do you spell 'verbatim'?"]
I will also mention several books which provide a backdrop to my comments, three that I would strongly reccommend and four that I would suggest:
Strongly Reccommended:
The Bible. That has provided the theological and philosophical grounding to my thought as a whole; it gives the structure/meta-structure which I fit the other points into. (This is the most important, but it is not necessary to read cover to cover before beginning anything. Fifteen or thirty minutes a day will add up to a lot if continued for a couple years.) Particularly relevant passages that come to mind are Matthew 5-7 (the Sermon on the Mount), I Cor. 13 (the hymn to love), much of the Johannine writings (esp. John 13-17), and certain areas of Proverbs.
Suggested:
Jonathan's Corner
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On Mentorship
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