Return to search

The lived experience of women student mentors

This is a phenomenological research study of the lived experience of
women student mentors at one community college located in an urban setting on
the West Coast. The study participants were women students who served as
mentors to other women at the community college who are participants in a
returning women's program. The researcher interacted with the study participants
over a nine-month time period. Interviews were held with the six mentor
participants prior to their mentoring experience, during the time of the mentoring
experience, and at the end of the mentoring experience. The data for this study
consist of interviews, observation, and field notes. The mentoring program
coordinator was also interviewed to provide for triangulation of data.
Six themes emerged from the interviews with the participants and
subsequent analysis of the data: Reflecting on past experience, wanting to help, setting and maintaining boundaries, experiencing strong emotions, relational support from other women, and mentoring as a reciprocal relationship.
The resulting implication for practice recommendations from this study for
community college administrators and student service professionals designing or
implementing mentoring programs are: provide training for mentors, provide ongoing support for mentors, offer an orientation for the mentees on responsibilities and
expectations, design the mentoring program to provide a full academic year for
the mentor-mentee pair to meet, provide benefit and rewards for serving as a mentor, and ensure adequate staffing of the program.
Recommendations for further research on student mentoring are provided.
They include additional research in the areas of women as student mentors, men as
student mentors, comparison of the experiences of male and female mentors,
retention studies on students who serve as mentors, college credit and training for
mentors, mentoring programs across individual college campuses, and a statewide
view of mentoring programs on college campuses. / Graduation date: 2006

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ORGSU/oai:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:1957/28750
Date15 September 2005
CreatorsRennick, Vikki
ContributorsShintaku, Rich
Source SetsOregon State University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

Page generated in 0.0025 seconds