The Inclusive Research Mentor/People Manager Training (TRAIN-UP) has a new home! Please visit https://career.ucsf.edu/mentor-manage.
To receive announcements about this series, join the OCPD listserv. We will be offering this series virtually via Zoom. To learn more about this course, see the module descriptions, dates, and times below.
Overview
We believe that effective, inclusive supervision is the result of good intentions, support and training. Our goal is to teach UCSF students and postdocs the organizational management and evidence-based pedagogical theory on how to effectively supervise, train and advise researchers from diverse backgrounds, and how to do so inclusively while managing the inevitable role conflict between these three sets of responsibilities and power differentials.
The training provides participants with a new framework to hire, teach, train and supervise other research trainees. This framework integrates education, management and leadership theory and is applied to the research culture. The training includes a combination of lectures and activities, including case studies and assignments to apply the Inclusive Research Mentor framework to one's own situation. For example, participants will practice writing a list of required skills and qualities for a position on their research team, using the concepts learned in lecture around working with diverse team members.
The Inclusive Research Mentor/Manager Training is offered in partnership with City College of San Francisco's Biotechnology Program and is part of the Office of Career and Professional Development's Inclusive Research Mentor/Manager Training Program. This series is open to all UCSF graduate students and postdoctoral scholars for free.
Participants who would like to gain experience applying the skills taught in the Inclusive Research Mentor training will have the opportunity to:
- Practice interviewing skills by helping City College of San Francisco students prepare in mock interviews
- Serve as an informational interviewee for the Biotechnology Program at City College of San Francisco
- Receive coaching as they mentor/supervise a CCSF biotech intern in the UCSF-CCSF Inclusive Mentor Fellows (IMF) Program
To develop additional inclusive teaching skills, check out our Evidence-Based Teaching course (STEP-UP).
Goals & Learning Outcomes
The goal of the Inclusive Research Mentor/Manager training is to provide research trainees with the tools to:
- Effectively hire, train, supervise and mentor team members when building a new research team (including research assistants and associates, graduate students, and postdoctoral scholars).
- Work with diverse team members, where diversity is defined in terms of work styles, learning styles, career goals and educational goals as well as gender, racial, cultural, and socioeconomic diversity.
By the end of this training, research trainees should be able to:
- Effectively communicate their expectations as well as their work style.
- Apply the Inclusive Research Mentor framework to resolve issues related to training, supervising or mentoring new research trainees of different personality types.
- Describe successful practices in hiring a diverse research team (where diversity is defined in broad terms and includes diversity of work styles).
- Describe approaches to effectively mentor trainees while creating a supportive climate in the lab.
Modules and Format
Modules 1-8 are open to all students and postdocs and may be taken independently of each other or together as a series. Participants who attend all workshops and complete all in-workshop activities and out-of-workshop assignments will receive a Letter of Completion issued by the UCSF Office of Career and Professional Development. This Letter of Completion is required if you wish to participate in the Inclusive Mentoring Fellows program.
Module 1. Assess Yourself: How inclusive are you at work/in the lab?
Many scientists with mentoring/managing responsibilities have the best of intentions, but lack clarity about which specific decisions and actions result in their diverse team feeling a sense of belonging and invested in the overall success of the lab. In this session, you will learn a framework to benchmark which decisions, behaviors and actions define what it means to be inclusive as a mentor & manager. Secondly, we will outline the 5 overarching strategies that most inclusive efforts and best practices map to. Finally, you will practice applying these principles to your own work life, by intentionally designing inclusivity into a common work responsibility (a 1:1 or lab meeting).
Module 2. Assess Yourself: How ready are you to manage your mentee/employee’s productivity?
In this workshop, participants identify the skills they have, and those they need to develop, to effectively manage the productivity of their mentee/employee. First, you will self-evaluate your strengths and growth areas in executing the 7 fundamental people management responsibilities: (setting expectations, teaching/training and delegating, the three types of feedback, rewarding achievement, addressing performance issues, managing the inevitable conflict inherent in even the most functional teams, and providing appropriate protection and support.). Second, we’ll dissect the specific strategies individuals with research mentoring and/or managing responsibilities can use to equitably balance decisions in fulfilling their roles as a scientific mentor and/or a manager. Finally, participants consider ways to receive support and further develop their skills and abilities in these areas.
Module 3. Effectively supervising people who aren’t you: Managing different workstyles
In this module, participants consider how individual differences in values, approaches and relationship to work can impact productivity, morale and retention of team members. We also discuss tangible steps that managers can take to intentionally cultivate inclusive environments. We consider several factors that may make up our individual ‘operating systems’ when we engage in work, including how we prefer to communicate, make decisions, feel organized, and manage change/conflict. Participants will also have the opportunity to assess some facets of their own work style preferences, as well as develop the vocabulary to discuss others’ preferences without pathologizing their approach to work. Finally, we discuss and brainstorm tactics that team leaders can use to inclusively manage multiple work style differences and reap the benefits of working in diverse teams.
Module 4. How to transparently set (performance and conduct) expectations
Gallup’s national State of the American Worker poll notes that half of all workers do not know what is expected of them. We discuss the challenges – the impossibility, actually – of setting all performance and behavioral expectations at the beginning of someone’s tenure, and the strategies that successful research mentors/managers use to set and manage those expectations over time. Participants will 1) identify which key expectations need to be set immediately to preserve their own productivity, 2) define and articulate expectations to team members, 3) overcome common challenges in setting expectations, including when mentoring/supervising individuals who are more experienced than themselves or have a strongly held ‘operating system’/way of doing things, and 4) consider criteria to determine if they’ve set an expectation effectively.
Module 5. Teach/train and delegate: Using best practices to train your diverse team
Using effective training practices is important in any organization, but it is particularly important in research organizations. In biotechnology companies, the constant evolution of knowledge requires a solid training process to stay up to speed on innovative technology and knowledge. In this module, we discuss common training issues that can result in loss of productivity for individuals and their teams, and can put team members from some underrepresented groups at a disadvantage. We propose evidence-based approaches to avoid, detect and correct these training issues.
Module 6. Communicating inclusively: Developing your own feedback strategy and style
Do you feel most comfortable offering positive (or kudos) feedback? Do you tend to avoid or sugarcoat corrective feedback? Not sure what ‘evaluative’ feedback is? Then this is the session for you. In this module, we begin by dissecting the three types of feedback that everyone (including you) needs to be productive: kudos, corrective and evaluative feedback. Participants will practice giving feedback using a protocol that works for both kudos and corrective feedback Next, participants will modify the protocol as they consider their style (including their personal values, approach and language). We’ll discuss strategies to both gain buy-in/determine how the recipient can best hear and act on that feedback, and how to engage when the recipient has a strong reaction to feedback.
Module 7. When someone isn’t meeting your expectations: Strategies and resources to manage performance equitably
When someone repeatedly fails to meet performance or conduct expectations, many research mentors/managers frequently under- or over-correct and mistakenly attempt to handle the situation alone (rather than reaching out for support). In this session, participants will learn tactics to determine how their particular organization expects them to manage performance or conduct issues, how to access organizational resources to help them navigate the situation (including HR, Learning and Development, etc.), and common mistakes and approaches (including building a circle of support/self care) to manage one of the most challenging responsibilities for any mentor/manager.
Module 8. How to inclusively hire: Which strategies will you use?
In this workshop, participants will learn evidence-based strategies to assess and select candidates using tactics from four inclusive strategy clusters: 1) adding intentional respect, 2) adding diverse voices, 3) adding accountability) and 4) leveling the playing field. Participants will learn how to transparently structure the overall hiring process, begin to develop their own questions/rubrics to assess for their priority qualifications, consider steps to prepare and manage a hiring committee, and discover tactics to mitigate others - and their own - unconscious biases.
Facilitators:
- Naledi Saul - Director, UCSF Office of Career and Professional Development and Interim Chief of Staff, SAA/Graduate Division
- Karen Leung - Biotechnology Faculty, City College of San Francisco
- James Lewis - Project Director Bridge to Biosciences, City College of San Francisco
What participants said about the course:
- "I wish this course was offered before I had an intern! Very useful tools and I look forward to putting them to use in the near future."
- "I have a much better idea of how to write a job description and conduct an interview in a way that will help communicate my expectations to my potential trainees."
- "I plan to rely on the framework and strategies that were taught and practiced during the TRAIN-UP course. The seven steps of an effective mentor were excellent for me to refer back to and have as core concepts that I can remind myself of regularly."