2. The Mentoring Partnership uses a simple,
but powerful idea:
To help job-ready skilled immigrants build their
professional networks in Canada and better leverage
their experience and skills in the local labour market.
3. Program milestones
8,700 + mentoring matches to date over 1,200 / year
5,850 + mentors and over 750 /year
4.
5. TMP Mentor Professional
Development (PD) series
Launched 2012 / Includes:
• Workshops
• Networking Events
• Webinars
500 mentors participated since 2012
350 mentors participated in 2013
Mentoring hours and PD sessions recognized as
PD credit by HRPA and CGA
6. Online learning modules
Launched :
For coaches for individual orientation:
• Introduction to The Mentoring Partnership
• Develop a Strong Mentoring Relationship
For mentors:
• Motivating Your Mentee in the Job Search
Coming soon:
• Enriching your Mentee's Networking Skills
• Producing Standout Resumes and Cover Letters
• Helping your Mentee Master the Job Interview
Available on www.trieccampus.ca
7. Employer Partner Framework
…Launched in November 2013
Objectives of this framework to:
•
•
•
•
Provide a planning document for successful
implementation
Clarify responsibilities of TMP and the
employer partner implementing the mentoring
cycle
Ensure program delivery and quality
assurance guidelines
Outline our shared commitment
‘Mentoring Plus’ in 2013
8. New Classification System
• New Occupational and Industry Classification System
• Consulted with Employer and Service Delivery
Partners to revise classification to better reflect mentor
and mentee pool
• 2014 TMP will redevelop the classification and
matching function in the IT system
9. Impact of mentoring: mentees
Outcome*
Employed in field or related field
6 months
12 months
70%
81%
Behind the numbers:
• 1,090 mentees reported to have obtained employment
• 116 were hired by an employer partner
*Reports April 1, 2012 – March 31, 2013
10. Survey results: mentees
High Rate of Mentee Satisfaction*
• 93%
• 91%
of mentees were satisfied with their mentoring experience
• 89%
• 88%
are better prepared for employment in profession
feel their resume better reflects skills and qualifications in a way that is
meaningful for Canadian employers
can talk better about their skills and qualifications with confidence
*Surveys of Mentees who complete
partnerships in 2012-2013
11. ALLIES National Survey
Findings*
• Unemployment decreased
• The percentage of those working in their field increased
• Average full-time earnings increased
• Successful mentees find employment faster than the average
newcomer. Most mentees find work in their field.
• Starting salaries (and future salary trajectory) are likely higher than
those working outside their field of expertise and experience.
• Most mentees find permanent work. They likely receive employee
benefits, increasing their effective earnings.
*The results are in: Mentoring improves employment outcomes for
skilled immigrants
12. Survey results: mentors
High Rate of Mentor Satisfaction*
• 97% of mentors were satisfied with their mentoring experience
• 94% understanding the challenges and barriers that skilled immigrants face in
the labour market, and that they better able to appreciate the talent and
experience that skilled immigrants bring to the workplace
• 93% better able to motivate, coach and develop people
• 88% can better assist immigrant professionals in adapting to the workplace
and are now more likely to interview and/or hire IEPs
•
88% more likely to interview and/or hire IEPs
*Surveys of Mentors who complete
partnerships in 2012-13
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Special Recognitions
15. Mentees who have become mentors
Agustin Pinto
Neil Fernando
Ana Trinidad
Neil Fernandopulle
Anya Faingersh
Olsen Briceno
Basab Goswami
Salma Wahwah
Basdeo Upadhyaya
Suresh Ramabadran
Daniel Morodvanschi
Tao Liu
Indra Maharjan
Tasneem Shaikh
Joaquin Milo
Xiaomeng Tang
Manoj Kumar
Yan Reznikov
16. I’m grateful to all my mentors. And the only way I can pay
forward is to keep mentoring myself. You might have all the
skills and qualifications, and you know you can do the work.
It’s like you have a plane and you know how to fly, but you
also need to know how to land and where. I called all mentors
“traffic controllers” who direct mentees where to land and what
to do to land successfully.
17. Mentors who have mentored 10
or more skilled immigrants
Abdulhamid Hathiyani
Angela Loconte
Bill Simpson
Debra Bloomfield
Donna Messer
Mike Velshi
Ranil Mendis
18. You may have done it once, twice, three times, but as
someone who has done it for ten years, the more the merrier!
The more mentees you meet, the more you learn, so keep
coming back to the program every year. You will be rewarded
for that.
27. Coaches
Adolfo Castellanos
Amy Zhang
Beena De-Souza
Brian Thomson
Claudia Valenzuela-Parra
Colleen Kelly
Collette Smith
Dana Savescu
Devlin Balfour
Eva Wilkinson-Knight
Ewa Balinska
Harpreet Shah
Helena Guan
Janet Gaffney
Jenya Zukershtein
Jingling Wang
Jinmiao Xu
Joanna Hong
Juliet Allen
Karl Lewis
Kavitha Jeyaratnam
Kristle Villanueva
Liliana Lewandowski
Lucy (Dexian) Sun
Luisa Robinson
Macarena Lopez
Mahrukh Rostami
Marcela Marin
Marcello Scarsella
Marisa De Luca
Michelle Yu
Myra Cosentino
Natalia Schiopu
Patricia Houghton
Peter Pipiska
Quoc Phan
Raymond Yip
Rebecca Rodrigue
Rosa Cortez
Rosaline Graham
Said Omar
Sandra Ornelas
Silvia Lubecki
Slava Gutkowska
Suhad Yousif Andraws
Taha Syed
Tami Cooper
Tom Ng
Tracy Liu
Valerie Gow
Vijy Varghese
Ying Que
28. Mentoring Coordinators
Agatha Doerffer
Ann Gordon
Baskaran Rajmani
Beverly Khan
Brian Lee
Bryce Phillips
Carla Boose
Cheryl Ogle
Gene Jamieson
Heather Meadus
Jennifer Lu
Jill Smith
Jumi Gervacio
Karen Tuschak
Karin Larkin
Lucy Walker
Lysiane Hoffschmidt
Mara Furlan
Maria Freschi-Acosta
Mark Williams
Mary Da-Costa Lauzon
Mugda Joshi
Nabila Kanji
Nicole Brocklebank
Nicole Jacksic
Nishant Pune
Odilia Stapleton
Pamela Preston
Saba Zia
Salim Nensi
Sarah Masih
Shehryar Hussain
Shemina Khimji
Sujay Vardhmane
Sunita Guyadeen