Being a Better Coach and Mentor: How to help your coachee/mentee gain confidence
In this ¾ hour seminar, we learned key strategies to help your coachee or mentee overcome barriers to confidence. We explored factors that lead to a loss of confidence and discussed techniques for promoting self-compassion and strength-based growth.
Being a Better Coach and Mentor Series: Challenging Imposter Syndrome IS
In this 45-minute seminar, we explored how to address Imposter Syndrome (IS) through coaching and Positive Psychology. Focusing on key concepts like the Dunning-Kruger Effect and the neuroscience behind IS, we discussed how IS manifests through behaviours such as People Pleasing, Perfectionism, Paralysis, and Procrastination (the 4 P’s). Participants also explored how to leverage personal strengths to counteract IS and foster success in coaching and mentoring roles.
By the end of this talk, participants have:
• Gained an understanding of the Dunning-Kruger Effect and its impact on IS.
• Discussed the neuroscience of IS and the influence of the 4 P’s.
• Explored how the 4 P’s of IS affect personal and professional life.
• Discussed role diversity, inclusion, and their effect on success and leadership.
• Developed strategies to apply personal strengths to mitigate feelings of IS.
Being a Better Coach & Mentor Exploring 2nd Wave Positive Pyschology
In this ¾hr seminar, we will revisit the Positive Psychology (PP) movement that was touched on previously with those who participated in the Coaching in Higher Education Foundation Level programme. We will discuss some exciting new ways of bringing PP principles into group settings and the implications for Higher Education Coaching and Mentoring. In this session, the following will be discussed: - Tips to successfully teach PP in group settings - Potential barriers to successfully teaching PP in groups settings - PP in hope therapy - PP Intervention using photographs - Using strengths in different ways - meeting others with similar strengths - Decoding emotions by analysing speech, body, and face - Silent gratitude mapping.
In this ¾hr seminar, we will revisit the Positive Psychology (PP) movement that was touched on previously with those who participated in the Coaching in Higher Education Foundation Level programme.
We will discuss some exciting new ways of bringing PP principles into group settings and the implications for Higher Education Coaching and Mentoring.
In this session, the following will be discussed:
- Tips to successfully teach PP in group settings
- Potential barriers to successfully teaching PP in groups settings
- PP in hope therapy
- PP Intervention using photographs
- Using strengths in different ways - meeting others with similar strengths
- Decoding emotions by analysing speech, body, and face
- Silent gratitude mapping
Re-Connect – Digital Habits, Problematic Internet Use & Habit Redesign
"Students need to use the internet to support their studies and are a group identified with low wellbeing and high loneliness. Re-Connect is a workshop that has been developed in MTU in response to research findings that highlight difficulties caused by problematic internet use for students.
The workshop is being rolled out in MTU and aims to support students in developing awareness of their internet use and its affects. The workshop also enables students with tools which can help to develop healthy internet habits or redesign habits that are causing them problems. The workshop to date has got excellent feedback from staff and student participants and aligns exactly with the government strategy for healthy campuses.
Student problematic internet use can be addressed in a way that few other issues affecting health and wellbeing are. The workshop has been developed to address a student need as evidenced by research, it is a university cross collaboration, developed with student input, honed with professional expertise empowers students to redesign those habits for wellbeing and academic performance.
This workshop is designed for lecturers who might want to deliver the Re-Connect workshop with their students.
This workshop was delivered by Oonagh O’Brien and Catherine Murphy, who gave an overview of the Re-Connect programme, the research that drove its development and they shared resources and facilitation techniques to enable delivery of Re-Connect to student groups. "
"This seminar showcased a range of innovative curricular wellbeing initiatives in UCC and MTU and also provided a forum for discussing such initiatives in line with the National Forum’s USI ""Embedding Wellbeing in the Curriculum"" report.
In addition, Gareth Hughes from the University of Derby who has authored the book “Be well learn well” shared his insights on the topic as keynote speaker.
The seminar was timely given the growing concern for the increased levels of student mental ill health and low wellbeing. As educators, we have the means to ensure that curricula are well designed, and enabled to support the needs of students.
Attendees learned from experienced practitioners who have successfully altered their respective curricula and what effect it has had on students.
The overall goal of this seminar was to ensure that the sharing of resources and information between HEIs will lead to increased knowledge of curricular approaches to student wellbeing and in turn lead to improved mental health promotion and prevention across higher education in Ireland."
" “It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.” (Aristotle)
According to a recent study by the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), funded by the Health and Safety Authority, the instances of work-related stress amongst employees in Ireland has doubled between 2010 and 2015.
Work-Related Stress (WRS) is stress caused or made worse by work. It simply refers to when a person perceives the work environment in such a way that his or her reaction involves feelings of an inability to cope. ‘Stress occurs when an individual perceives an imbalance between the demands placed on them on the one hand, and their ability to cope on the other. It often occurs in situations characterised by low levels of control and support.’ (Professor Tom Cox, I-WHO, University of Nottingham, UK). As we all know, higher education can be a particularly stressful environment for both staff and students due to a variety of competing demands and deadlines at various stages during the academic year, many of which are beyond their control.
Rather than just focusing on students, this workshop was all about staff and helping them survive! It aimed to provide participants with some suggestions to help reduce, or at least manage, some of the causes and effects of stress and hopefully help participants to take control of their workload and stress levels.
Participants who attended this workshop:
Identified strategies that could be utilised to better manage their workload
Became more aware of the signs and symptoms of stress
Identified some useful strategies to help deal with stress
Examined the value of feedback on lectures and the importance of reflecting on one’s teaching for one’s own professional development
Discussed some of the shared challenges faced in higher education today and potential solutions"
"Empowerment is defined as the “the process of gaining freedom and power to do what you want or to control what happens to you”.
Empowerment can help you:
Feel good and laugh more frequently
Recharge your batteries and find a new lease of life
Achieve those goals that you may currently think are way too far out of reach
Overcome challenges and see tasks through to conclusion
For those who want more out of life, to achieve more, do more and be more - this workshop aimed to provide participants with the tools they need to change their mind-set and breakthrough to the next level – tools that, perhaps, could be shared with their students to help them achieve more too!
This workshop provided a brief immersion into the power of the mind, and participants learned that the resources we need to move forward positively in life are already within us. Through fun activity and lots of laughter participants opened the door to transformation, instilling courage to dream and participants left with an incredible experience of their power to accomplish amazing results."
"A common myth is that the way to deal with pressure is to work harder. We like to think that extending work hours and multitasking are ways to be more effective at work. The truth is, this thinking is flawed.
Too much pressure or stress creates narrowed thinking and increases the likelihood of flawed reasoning. It also turns on the stress response in the body, releasing a tsunami of chemicals and hormones.
Being able to increase your resilience is necessary in today’s uncertain and volatile workforce.
This workshop was targeted at all staff, both academic and administrative, and, based on research from the Centre for Creative Leadership, and aimed to introduce participants to a variety of ways to improve resilience, such as:
Reframing how we think about situations or experiences
The importance of sleep and exercises to support a good night’s sleep
Developing strategies to cope when our sleep is compromised
Exploring the power of positivity
The workshop included an introduction to some simple Tai Chi practices and hand mudras that are very effective ways of managing one’s stress and energy.
"
Stephen Brookfield talks about how when teaching something that we love, how difficult it is for us to empathise with students that find the topic boring. The more that we teach the topic, the further removed we become from our first experiences of learning it and the less empathy we are likely to have. Yet empathy and respect strongly correlate with student motivation and motivation is essential to developing understanding. This, final session will explore the importance of empathy and respect.