Abstract

.Although mentoring is not a common practice in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), there is a strong need for it. Conceptual frameworks provide the structure to design, study, and problem-solve complex phenomena. Following four workshops in South America, Asia, and Africa, and borrowing on theoretical models from higher education, this article proposes two conceptual frameworks of mentoring in LMICs. In the first model, we propose to focus the mentor–mentee relationship and interactions, and in the second, we look at mentoring activities from a mentees’ perspective. Our models emphasize the importance of an ongoing dynamic between the mentor and mentee that is mutually beneficial. It also emphasizes the need for institutions to create enabling environments that encourage mentorship. We expect that these frameworks will help LMIC institutions to design new mentoring programs, clarify expectations, and analyze problems with existing mentoring programs. Our models, while being framed in the context of global health, have the potential for wider application geographically and across disciplines.

Highlights

  • Various adult learning theories have been proposed to understand the complex processes of higher education.[1]

  • Mentoring occurs in informal ways without conceptual models in various settings, including in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), we propose these conceptual models as a framework to let groups of mentors organize their work, generate new ideas, and develop programs within their institutions

  • To address criticisms of the lack of mentee-centered approaches, go beyond the developed country framework, and capture the complexity of working in LMICs as mentioned in the prior section, we propose two conceptual models for mentoring

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Summary

Global Health

Shailendra Prasad,1* Elizabeth Sopdie,[2] David Meya,[3] Anna Kalbarczyk,[4] and Patricia J. Development, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota; 3Infectious Disease Institute, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda; 4Center for Global Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland; 5School of Public Health and Administration, Cayetano Heredia University, Lima, Peru

INTRODUCTION
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR MENTORING
CONCLUSION
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