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To Access your Personal File Storage
The Personal File Storage document on the previous page tells you how to retrieve your file so that you can read your Mentor'sfeedback. (Usually it will take a few days to receive feedback on submitted assignments.) What follows on the next few pages is a description of how yourMentor will offer feedback. These pages are excerpts from our "Mentor Guidebook" that describe to Mentors how to offer feedback to you (theLearner) when they receive your completed assignments.
We are providing this information to you now for the following two reasons:
Here begins the several-page excerpt from our Mentor Guidebook:
Our Role as Mentors
As Mentors, we have a choice about how to offer feedback to our Learners. We can take the route of "the doubting game" the predominantwestern model that includes "argument, debate, criticism, and extrication of the self" as a way of knowing, or we can take the route of the"believing game," which challenges us "to listen, affirm, enter in, try to put ourselves into the skin of people with other perceptions and asks us toshare our experience with others." In Writing Without Teachers Peter Elbow discusses these two games - the need for both, and the realms in which each game worksbest.
Most likely you will need to utilize a bit of both "games " in your role as Mentor. For giving feedback on assignments, however, weemphasize the "believing game."
We ask our Mentors to develop and use their "believing muscle" - that is "to understand ideas from the inside." As Peter Elbowwrites, "The believing game is constant practice in getting the mind to see or think what is new, different...[the believing game]emphasizes a model of knowing as an act of constructing, an act of investment, an act ofinvolvement..." (p. 173, )
What does it mean to "listen, affirm, enter in" when we speak of giving feedback to Learners?
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