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The Effects of Developmental Mentoring and High School Mentors' Attendance on Their Younger Mentees' Self-Esteem, Social Skills, and Connectedness

NCJ Number
253676
Journal
Psychology in the Schools Volume: 42 Issue: 1 Dated: 2005 Pages: 65-77
Author(s)
Michael J. Karcher
Date Published
2005
Length
13 pages
Annotation
Since far more has been written about the possible outcomes of cross-age mentoring than about actual outcomes and the processes that lead to change, the current study examined the effect of mentors' attendance on their mentees' outcomes after 6 months of developmental mentoring.
Abstract
Developmental mentoring is a structured, cross-age peer mentoring program designed to promote children's development by facilitating connectedness. In this randomized study of 73 Caucasian, rural youth, multiple analyses of covariance revealed that connectedness to school and parents at posttest were significantly greater for mentees than for the comparison group. Regression analyses revealed that changes in self-esteem, social skills, and behavioral competence were highly related to mentors' attendance, suggesting relational processes accounted for more change than did exposure to program curricula; however, the relationship between mentors' inconsistent attendance and mentees' decline in self-esteem and behavioral competence suggests that absent mentors may do more harm than good. 4 tables (publisher abstract modified)