Aboriginal Mentor Support
Overview
- Aboriginal Cultural Understandings
- History
- Impacts of the Residential School Era
- Family Status
- Family Tree
- Traditional Values and Teachings
- Teachings of the Medicine Wheel
- Aboriginal Ceremonies
- History
- Communication Skills
- Listening
- Speaking
- Assertiveness
- Principles of Helping
- Understanding Self and Others as Holistic Beings
- Values, needs, roles, and personal style
- Individual differences
- Roles, Responsibilities and Relationships
- Roles and Relationships of peer tutors and helpers
- Creating productive helping and tutoring relationships
- Characteristics of the Successful Learner
- Knowledge
- Skills
- Attitudes
- Principles of Tutoring
- Structure of a Tutoring Session
- Tutoring Techniques
- Ethical Issues in Peer Helping
Classes will be experiential in nature using a combination of short lectures, demonstrations, structured activities, and group discussions. Students will participate in role plays and other exercises designed to focus on developing specific aspects of helping skills. Video and audio equipment may be used in practice and for evaluation purposes.
Selection of evaluation and assessment tools for this course will be based on:
- Adherence to college policy regarding number and weighting of evaluations.
- A combination of evaluation instruments that includes opportunities for students to demonstrate different ways of knowing i.e. individual, group, oral, written, descriptive, reflective, practice.
- A developmental approach to evaluation that is sequenced and progressive.
- Evaluation being used as a teaching and learning tool for both students and instructors.
- Commitment to student participation in evaluation through such processes as self and peer evaluation, participation in instrument design and course/instructor evaluation.
At the end of the course, the successful student should be able to:
- Communicate effectively in a helping role.
- Recognize and respect individual differences that affect learning and life choices.
- Promote personal and academic skill development of self and others.
- Help other students access information and resources.
- Help others in an ethical manner.
- Develop an increased understanding of his/her aboriginal culture.
Textbooks and Materials to be Purchased by Students:
Students may be required to purchase a textbook.
Requisites
Prerequisites
Instructor permission
Corequisites
No corequisite courses.
Equivalencies
No equivalent courses.
Course Guidelines
Course Guidelines for previous years are viewable by selecting the version desired. If you took this course and do not see a listing for the starting semester / year of the course, consider the previous version as the applicable version.
Course Transfers
These are for current course guidelines only. For a full list of archived courses please see https://www.bctransferguide.ca
Institution | Transfer details for FINA 1100 | |
---|---|---|
There are no applicable transfer credits for this course. |