Abstract

Youth mentoring is primarily understood as a relationship between mentor and mentee, yet mentors often enter into home, school, and other community settings associated with youth they serve, and interact regularly with other people in mentees' lives. Understanding how and why mentors negotiate their role as they do remains underexplored, especially in relation to these environmental elements. This qualitative study drew on structured interviews conducted with professional mentors (N=9) serving youth at risk for adjustment problems to examine how mentors' perceptions of their mentees and mentee environments informed their sense of how they fulfilled the mentoring role. Mentors commonly characterized problems youth displayed as byproducts of adverse environments, and individual-level strengths as existing “in spite of” environmental inputs. Perceptions of mentees and their environments informed mentors' role conceptualizations, with some mentors seeing themselves as antidotes to environmental adversity. Mentors described putting significant time and effort into working closely with other key individuals as well as one-on-one with mentees because they identified considerable environmental need; however, extra-dyadic facets of their roles were far less clearly defined or supported. They described challenges associated with role overload and opaque role boundaries, feeling unsupported by other adults in mentees' lives, and frustrated by the prevalence of risks. Community-based mentoring represents a unique opportunity to connect with families, but mentors must be supported around the elements of their roles that extend beyond mentor–mentee relationships in order to capitalize more fully on the promise of the intervention.

Highlights

  • Youth mentoring is broadly defined as an individualized, supportive relationship between a young person and a non-parental adult that promotes positive development (DuBois & Karcher, 2005; Keller & Pryce, 2010), but mentors are members of mentees’ social networks, and many interact with other members of these networks (Keller & Blakeslee, 2013)

  • The current study builds on a prior study (Lakind, Eddy, & Zell, 2014) examining the conceptualizations of “professional” youth mentors who worked with rosters of youth perceived to be at heightened risk for adjustment problems and negative life outcomes

  • The findings presented are limited to a particular form of youth mentoring as practiced and experienced by professional mentors firmly committed to their roles at one particular agency site

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Summary

Introduction

Youth mentoring is broadly defined as an individualized, supportive relationship between a young person and a non-parental adult that promotes positive development (DuBois & Karcher, 2005; Keller & Pryce, 2010), but mentors are members of mentees’ social networks, and many interact with other members of these networks (Keller & Blakeslee, 2013). Great within-program variability in mentoring practices and intervention effectiveness (Deutsch & Spencer, 2009; DuBois, Holloway, Valentine, & Cooper, 2002; DuBois, Portillo, Rhodes, Silverthorn, & Valentine, 2011) may be fueled in part by the high level of discretion and latitude allowed mentors in order to insure that mentoring is responsive to each childs needs, strengths, and interests. This means that mentors’ perceptions of the youth they serve can dramatically inform the shape their mentoring takes. The current study used the same set of interview transcripts to examine mentors’ perceptions of their mentees and mentee environments, and their descriptions of the mentoring role in light of these youth and environment-related conceptualizations

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