HomeVideos Mapping Mentoring Share: See our full episode notes at https://www.centerforengagedlearning.org/mentoring-constellations-research-teaching-with-a-twist-visual-mapping/ In this episode, host Matt Wittstein joins fellow researchers Jenn Aumiller (University of Maryland School of Medicine), Sarah Burns Gilchrist (American University), and Alexis Hart (Allegheny College) to discuss their collaborative research on mentorship as a constellation of relationships rather than a single dyad. Sparked by shared questions about student support, belonging, and engagement, the team explores how students understand and navigate networks of meaningful, supportive, and mentoring relationships across academic and personal contexts. Drawing on survey data, interviews, and an interactive constellation mapping process, the conversation highlights how visualizing mentorship networks can prompt reflection, surface gaps, and challenge assumptions about who “counts” as a mentor. The group reflects on key findings, including students’ realization that they themselves act as mentors, the importance of relationships beyond formal academic roles, and how mentoring needs shift over time. The episode closes with discussion of how constellation mapping might be adapted for professional development, faculty mentoring, and other non-student settings. This episode was hosted and edited by Matt Wittstein, and produced by Matt Wittstein in collaboration with Elon University’s Center for Engaged Learning (https://www.centerforengagedlearning.org/) . Themes and music composed and produced by Kai Mitchell, Elon University Music Production and Recording Arts class of 2024. Kai produces music and releases it across streaming platforms with the producer’s name KVI. You can follow Kai on Instagram @theofficial_kvi. Show art was created by Jennie Goforth and Matt Wittstein. ChatGPT 5.1 was used to generate the background image, with an initial prompt of “I’d like to create episode artwork for an episode titled Mapping Mentorship. I’m thinking something like an old style constellation chart.” Prompts for revision included, “Let’s try a concept that shows someone trying to chart the stars,” and finally, “Take the people out of it, and let’s just see a cartographic map of the stars and constellations.” The Center for Engaged Learning uses Rev to create transcripts for each episode. 2 months ago• 14views Center for Engaged Learning Research Seminars,Limed: Teaching with a Twist,Mentoring,Podcasts You may also like 00:05:40 Empowering Students’ Future Planning for Success 2 weeks ago 60-Second SoTL,Podcasts 00:09:40 Mentoring as a Meta High-Impact Practice 2 weeks ago Conference Keynotes,High Impact Educational Practices,Mentoring 00:41:47 Mentoring Moves 3 weeks ago Center for Engaged Learning Research Seminars,Limed: Teaching with a Twist,Mentoring,Podcasts 00:05:46 Exploring GenAI’s Potential as a SoTL Partner 3 weeks ago 60-Second SoTL,GenAI,Podcasts,Scholarship of Teaching and Learning,Studying Engaged Learning 00:38:24 Multi-Semester Capstone Undergraduate Research Experiences 1 month ago 60-Second SoTL,Capstone Experiences,Podcasts,Undergraduate Research 00:05:08 Ungrading in an Online Asynchronous Course 1 month ago 60-Second SoTL,Assessment and Feedback,Podcasts