Janine Brooks

Practical Applications of Coaching and Mentoring in Dentistry


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      It is also important to recognise the joy and pleasure of being a mentor or coach, and watching people develop. Personally, that is one of the main reasons I worked for my qualification. I have been rewarded time and time again for the work required to achieve it, by seeing how you can support those who wish to engage.

      Our careers can often take unexpected twists and turns, due to so many different factors, mine certainly has. Yet if you have someone to turn to who will mentor or coach you, depending on your need at the time, you find opportunities in the directions you can take and skills you may not have even known you had.

      Enjoy this book and what it teaches you, and remember it is just the start of a bigger, and hugely rewarding journey.

      Dr. Catherine Rutland

      MA, BChD, IRMCert, CMI, BDS, PGCert Leadership Coaching and Mentoring

      August 2020

      Acknowledgements

      We would like to acknowledge the kind participation and contributions of colleagues who generously shared the projects they have developed. Their projects have been included to help the profession to benefit from their experiences of introducing and using mentoring within dentistry.

      Thank you to all our Case Study contributors: Dr. Barkat Ahmed, Dr. Jane Davies‐Slowik MBE, Dr. Stephen Denny, Dr. Frederick Fernando, Dr. Keith George, Dr. Sarah Jackson, Dr. Sumair Khan, Dr. Claudia Peace, Dr. Ewa Rozwadowska, Dr. Catherine Rutland, Dr. Ahmad El‐Toudmeri, Dr. Jin Vaghela, Dr. Shilpa Chitnis.

      We would also like to thank our husbands, John Brooks and Bob Hughes for their unfailing support and encouragement, not to mention proof reading expertise.

      This book principally concerns itself with practical applications of mentoring within the profession of dentistry in the United Kingdom (UK). Whilst the book is written to showcase case studies within dentistry in the UK it is important to acknowledge that the skills of both dental professionals and mentors are not dissimilar throughout the world. If you are working outside the UK whether in dentistry or different field you will find much that you can take away from the book and the case studies. It is also important to acknowledge that whilst the case studies relate to dentists, their application is equally valid for all dental professionals.

      The inspiration for the book came from students who have completed our post graduate certificate and award qualifications in mentoring and coaching. They are hard‐working dental professionals with a passion for both dentistry and mentoring and we are indebted to their contributions. Future students will be directed to this publication as a course book, however it is not limited to being a course text.

      We provide a number of case studies for projects which showcase how mentoring is being utilised in positive ways to enhance individuals and the services those individuals provide. The aim is to demonstrate how mentoring programmes can be implemented and the benefits they can bring. We invite you to submit your own case study examples to our website at www.dentalcoachingacademy.co.uk.

      Whilst mentoring is a practical intervention it is underpinned by sound theory and the acquisition of mentoring skills. We have included chapters that describe mentoring and coaching as the two interventions share a number of skill areas, yet are quite different in purpose and application. We have also included a chapter on mentoring and coaching tools and models with particular attention to a model that we have successfully used in our training programmes. The discussion chapter will review topics that the case studies have introduced and other aspects that we hope will provoke further thought.

      Mentoring is increasingly being seen by organisations generally, and the dental profession in particular, as a way of helping and supporting the development of people (employees, staff, contractors, patients) to achieve their goals. The word mentor has come to mean trusted adviser, friend, teacher, and wise person. The term ‘coach’ has been more commonly associated with someone supporting personal and professional performance, goal achievement, and drive. We aim to broaden both these terms to encompass enhanced self‐awareness, development, personalised learning, and excellence in practise.

      In dentistry we are still at the beginning of appreciating the potential and benefits of mentoring. In our experience more and more dental professionals are undertaking training to become mentors, such that these skills are applied more intentionally and more professionally. As will become evident as you read through the book, great mentors combine skill, expertise, and experience with the skills of mentoring in the service of another individual, the mentee. The practical skills, expertise, and experience that others wish to learn and emulate will not be covered by the book, they are taken as present. What the book does cover are the skills of translating that expertise and experience into a worthwhile, productive conversation, and relationship that promotes growth and development of another individual, the mentee.

      Mentoring has slowly been gaining a position within dentistry since the Millennium with more and more dental professionals becoming familiar with the term and the concept of mentoring. It is also good to see this recognition from the statutory regulator for dental professionals.

      Activities such as coaching and mentoring, where individuals are supported by other members of the dental profession, also have an important role to play here, and are valuable ways of enhancing the skills and approach of all involved.

      Shifting the Balance: a better, fairer system of dental regulation

      (GDC 2017).

      Vernon Holt did much to champion mentoring within the dental profession and his series of articles written between 2008 and 2010 are referenced frequently through the literature. Holt produced his thesis in 2013 and it contains a rich mine for those wishing to know more about mentoring in dentistry.

      (Holt 2013, p. 24).

      It is from the 1980s that we start to see the emergence of a body of literature about mentoring in American business management (Colley 2002). Influential articles, particularly Roche's report, Much Ado about Mentoring (1979), claimed to have discovered mentoring as an informal but important part of a businessman's career. Mentoring in Britain then began to be seen as an American import, which had to be adapted to British culture. Clutterbuck was instrumental in the 1980s in bringing the idea of mentoring to Britain from the United States. He is regarded as the ‘grandfather’