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Coaching & Mentoring at Work: Developing Effective Practice Mary Connor & Julia Pokora. Open University Press. 2007. £17.99(pb). 224pp. ISBN 9780335221769

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Alan Swann*
Affiliation:
Newcastle General Hospital, Westgate Road, Newcastle upon Tyne NE4 6BE, UK. Email: alan.swann@nmht.nhs.uk
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2008 

In the introduction Connor and Pokora outline their reasons for writing this book. Both have extensive experience in delivering mentoring skills training and they hope to encapsulate their learning from these programmes. They wanted a book that would be easily accessible for busy people and one that would be of use to both experienced and novice coaches and mentors, and also to their potential clients. They acknowledge the ongoing debate about coaching v. mentoring which, in their experience, they have found to have much in common: ‘… this book seeks to identify the common ground, as well as to acknowledge the differences, and to explain the key principles that underpin both effective coaching and effective mentoring’.

So how well do they achieve these aims? First, each of the ensuing chapters begins with a helpful outline and ends with a brief summary of key learning points.

The book is good on definitions in this difficult area. The authors articulate nine key principles that underpin their concept of effective mentoring and coaching, and these are referred to throughout the text. The focus is clearly on the individual at work and they go to great pains to differentiate coaching and mentoring from patronage and other forms of psychological therapies and counselling.

They emphasise the importance of having a conceptual framework to your coaching or mentoring practice and a chapter is devoted to a detailed look at Egan's ‘skilled helper’ framework. This is illustrated with two good worked examples for both a coaching client and a mentee. Regarding the latter, the example is a hypothetical Paul who is a medical director and the reader is taken through two mentoring sessions helping him deal with a difficult senior clinical colleague and a demanding director of finance. The worked examples are explicitly underpinned with the nine key principles and the reader is encouraged to reflect on how they would act in their role as mentor at key stages during the two sessions. In both worked examples there is a further interactive reflective section where the reader is encouraged to consider their own development and need for support or supervision.

There is a chapter, including helpful references, on useful tools and techniques which are clearly explained along with suggestions on when they should be used and what skills the coach or mentor will need. There are excellent chapters on how to train and develop coaching and mentoring skills and on practical ethics.

Finally, the authors look at how a mentoring and coaching culture can be developed within an organisation, drawing on the experiences of four people involved in such initiatives within their own organisations. The four examples cover both public- and private-sector organisations: ‘… we hear from the possibilities and problems; the costs and benefits; the highs and lows; the resistances and the rewards’. This approach works very well.

The appendix contains useful contacts and websites and there is a comprehensive bibliography.

This is a superb book and an excellent resource for existing mentors and coaches. It will also be a valuable introduction for potential clients – and is likely to encourage them to become coaches and mentors in their own right.

I am doing an intensive coaching skills course next month – this book will be kept close at hand and referred to extensively throughout the course.

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