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Mentoring is a relationship in which knowledge and skills are shared between members in a way in which everyone benefits. Often a more senior person is mentoring a junior person, but mentorship can happen between any two individuals. Mentoring will help Airmen and Guardians discover their strengths by achieving their full potential through a structured, trusting mentoring relationship.

 

 

GET INVOLVED

Find a mentor and become a mentor!  It’s easy to do both by registering in MyVector.  In 2021, we completely redesigned the Mentoring platform in MyVector based on your feedback. New features include:

  • Ability to self-identify as someone seeking a mentor or someone who wants to be a mentor
  • Track the status of their mentoring requests
  • Updated Resources page
  • Enhanced messaging capability that allows users to send messages to mentors
  • Additional search filters:
  • ethnicity, race, disability, Exceptional Family Members Program (EFMP), MAJCOM, organizations, and ranks
  • Ability for mentees to share documents with mentor
  • Sister Service mentor/mentee enabled capability
  • CFM ability to assign mentors to mentees (Spring 2022)

Log into MyVector, check out the new capabilities, and find your mentor today at https://myvector.us.af.mil!

 

 

Survey of Meteorology Concepts: Validation Strategies
Air University Public Affairs
Video by Mike Tate
Dec. 7, 2023 | 9:58
Daniel O’Keefe, Louis Cascino, Christopher Francis, Wilson Gonzalez-Espada, & Kimberly de La Harpe

Misconceptions are inaccurate conceptual understandings and cognitive structures rooted in students’ thinking but deviate from the conception described by experts in their field, even after traditional instruction. Misconceptions influence how students receive and process new ideas and can interfere with their ability to form a meaningful understanding of complex concepts. Although researchers have explored misconceptions in several meteorology topics, there is a dearth of comprehensive, valid, and reliable questionnaires that can identify persistent misconceptions. Being well-informed, understanding the nature and impact of hazardous natural events, and implementing appropriate responses is essential for national security. The purpose of this study was to develop the Survey of Meteorology Concepts (SMC) as a literature-based, psychometrically valid, and reliable meteorology questionnaire. Although this is still a work-in-progress, the researchers
would like to discuss the validation strategies, which can be implemented in other surveys and classroom-based assessments. These include (a) Item Response Theory, including reliability coefficients, item difficulty, and item discrimination; (b) Differential Item Functioning, a set of methods that can help identify disparities by sex, ethnicity, age, or education among cadets of the same ability; and (c) Distractor Analysis, a deep-analysis of all the alternatives in a multiple-choice question that, in association with a Certainty of Response Index prompt, can identify to what extent distractors are plausible, and which could represent an actual lack of knowledge of a topic, or a misconception.
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INSTALLATION MENTORING CHALLENGE

Airmen handshake

In observance of National Mentoring Month, we have a goal of increasing Airman and Guardian mentoring profiles and pairs by 20%. The winning installation will have the opportunity to participate in a virtual mentoring session.