Not only has Gloor benefited from the program in his pursuit of tenure, his pairing with Rorrer has also impacted his teaching abilities. “There are so many basic questions that someone being a first time professor would want to ask. I can’t tell you how many ideas and improvements I have made to my teaching students as a result of my talking with my mentor or the other mentees,” Gloor says.
In their time in the program, Rorrer and Gloor have developed a friendship as well. Gloor, who moved here from Texas, has found it helpful to have someone he can talk to about life in general, as well as the pressures of academia.
In some cases, they are able to lend a helping hand. Gloor recalls, “I ride my bike to work each day and I had a flat tire so I needed a ride home. It was Friday at 5 o’clock. So lo and behold, I call the Bat Phone and the mentor is there and all of the sudden I have a ride home.” Both quip that a real mentor would have shown him how to fix his flat tire.
Gloor has been pleasantly surprised at how much he has gotten out of the program. Being a new professor, the program gives him valuable skills he can bring to the classroom and prepare him for his attempt at tenure. As he puts it, “I don’t understand how someone starting here would not be in it.”