• Consultation Services

Consultation Services

The Office of Faculty Development offers consultative services to individual faculty, small groups, and departments. We further provide faculty support, guidance, and resources to empower and achieve your professional goals.


Assessment

Myers-Briggs

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)

  • Indivdual and Team use
  • Looks at personality preference 
  • Builds an understanding of strengths & blind spots
  • Self - awareness tool
  • Helps you understand how you may differ form others
  • Used for: communicaiton, handling conflict, managing change, making deicisons, bring a leader or changing careers
     
Prism

PRISM

  • Brain-based coaching tool
  • Explores link between neuroscience and coaching
  • Self awareness tool 
  • Identifies  behavioral  preferences 
  • Measures intensity of a perosn's expressed prefrences for a range of behaviors & the activites related to those behaviors
  • Individual and team 
  • Used for: leadership, coaching, team devleopment, career exploraiton, recruitment, performance managmenet and 360 feedback  
     
HOGAN

HOGAN ASSESSMENT

  • Measures everyday strengths, potential  shortcomings, and values and motivators 
  • Utilizes five personality assessments with seven primary scales 
  • Individual 
  • Discover motivating factors and vlaues
  • Professional development 
  • Enhance team effectivenss 
     

Peer Teaching Evaluation 

Our team knows the value of low-stakes, objective feedback from informed colleagues. Therefore, we are gauging the interest and need of this service to better serve our students by utilizing each other's strengths.

Please contact us with your comments and suggestions.

Coach Program

The Office of Faculty Development offers coaching to interested faculty, of all HR classifications.

Coaching is a collaborative partnership between the coach and the client, also known as the coachee, which aims to enhance the client's personal and professional development. The coach utilizes various techniques, tools, and frameworks to help clients clarify their goals, identify obstacles, and develop action plans to achieve desired outcomes. Coaches use a range of communication skills (such as targeted restatements, listening, questioning, clarifying, etc.) to help clients shift their perspectives and thereby discover different approaches to achieve their goals. Coaching is unlocking a person’s potential to maximize their own performance. It is helping them to learn rather than teaching them.

Consultation

Mentor Program

The Office of Faculty Development has designed a mentorship program to connect faculty who wish to have a mentor. This is a voluntary program designed to provide support and resources to our faculty.

Mentoring allows people to learn from one another, providing a path to knowledge transfer. In the professional environment, for instance, someone established in their career can share knowledge and insights, as well as offer guidance, to someone with less experience. Mentoring at its core is the opportunity for people to learn from one another. It enables knowledge transfer between two or more people for the benefit of all.

Benefits of being a Mentor

Mentor
  • Develop and refine skills
  • Give back to profession
  • See what's next in your field

 

Benefits of being a Mentee

Mentee
  • Gain support and knowledge
  • Become more productive
  • Enhance a skill set and knowledge base
Three Types of Mentoring

Employee Career Mentoring

Employee Career Mentoring

This traditional one-to-one mentoring relationship can last nine to 12 months. Employees get the opportunity to learn and build skills, which can help grow their careers, keeping them from feeling stagnant in their roles.

Reverse Mentoring

Reverse Mentoring

This format pairs a more senior employee with a more junior employee. Companies can implement reverse mentoring in a one-to-one or group setting. The younger employee serves as the mentor, providing senior members of the organization with up-to-date information on the latest frontline experiences, technical skills, and workplace culture.

Mentoring Circles

Mentoring Circles

A mentoring circle is a peer-to-peer format that enables employees to find peers who share common interests or learning objectives, and develop together as a group. People from across departments and generations can learn from one another, expanding institutional knowledge. Employees can also build cross-functional relationships with people of similar or diverse backgrounds.

Contact Us to Learn More

Dr. Bill Boyer
Associate Dean – Faculty Development

Dr. Shenifa Taite
Assistant Dean – Faculty Development