Abstract

This article offers a theoretical and critical analysis of race-dysconscious mentorship involving students of color and white faculty. Inspired by ecological systems theory, critical race theory, and the NIH-funded program, Building Infrastructure Leading to Diversity: Promoting Opportunities for Diversity in Education and Research, our analysis considers the ecosystems that promote student pushout and hinder diversification of the scientific workforce, which call for “critical” alternatives to traditional research mentorship. We first examine the historical, social–political, institutional, interpersonal, and intrapsychic ecosystems of traditional mentor–protégé relationships. Two areas are reviewed: (a) “diversity” as it operates in universities and research laboratories and (b) the discursive properties of a dysconscious dialog that rationalizes modern racism. Next, we connect the five ecosystems of mentorship by integrating literature on critical history, white consciousness, the interpersonal context of mentoring, and mentor–protégé phenomenology. Our analysis demonstrates how the racialized lives of members involved in a mentoring relationship are situated within racist macro-level ecological systems wherein intrapsychic and interpersonal actions and discourses unfold. The development of race-consciousness and anti-racist faculty mentor training programs is also discussed.

Highlights

  • This article offers a theoretical and critical analysis of race-dysconscious mentorship involving students of color and white faculty

  • This offers a special canvas on which to draw contrasts of its critical approach to mentorship training against standard training practices. Both parts of this article begin with a macro-level account that transitions into a micro-level analysis, all the while drawing upon connections to critical race theory (CRT) and BUILD PODER

  • As the USA moves toward greater diversity, a need will grow to institutionalize critical mentorship approaches—akin to the BUILD PODER program—that properly serve students of color, who are the future of science and who are best equipped to operationalize and solve the needs of their valued communities

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Summary

Sample Source

Dismantlement: Experiential Knowledge: Interdisciplinary Work: Race/Racism Centrality: Social Justice: Deconstructing the diversity promise. Traditional mentorship Aversive racism Benevolent prejudice (white paternalism) Student of color phenomenology white phenomenology (race-dysconsciousness and white fragility). Cultural social psychology (vertical individualism) Discursive social psychology (discourses of denial) Education research History (whiteness as property) Traditional social psychology (attitude function theory and system-justification theory) Multiculturalism (colorblindness) Pushout problem and racism Structural racism and white hegemony/supremacy Anti-racist science communities Concientización (social-political consciousness) Reframing traditional mentorship (anti-racist mentors) Societal transformation via science (“Science New Deal”)

Institutional Systems
Sample Dialogue
Justification of exclusion and marginalization
Discussion
Findings
Recommendations and future directions
Conclusion
Full Text
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