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The perceived influence of past mentoring experiences on the mentoring practices of selected female school executives

Although research on mentoring dates back to the early 1980’s, there is little
research available which examines the influence of past mentoring experiences on
relationships in which female school executives, in turn, serve as the mentors. This
interpretive qualitative case study, based on data collected from conversational
interviews with three selected female school executives, was designed to explore and
investigate the past and present mentoring relationships of these female school
executives to understand more clearly the influence of their past mentoring experiences.
Four distinct strands of mentoring interactions emerged from the key findings of
this study. The four strands include: Strand I: Career Development and Psychosocial
Functions, Strand II: Attributes of Successful Mentoring Relationships, Strand III:
Values of Successful Mentoring Relationships, and Strand IV: Mutual Attraction,
Reciprocity, and Interpersonal Comfort. After studying the various data that were
collected, it became evident that the degree of influence of past mentoring experiences is
interdependent and mutually connected to the mentoring interactions of Strand IV:
Mutual Attraction, Reciprocity, and Interpersonal Comfort. In these specified relationships, there appeared to be a greater degree of emotional connectivity and
intimacy which served as an avenue to support the influence of past mentoring
experiences in relationships where these females, in turn, mentored others.
Studies, such as this, add to the literature base regarding the importance of
mentoring for females and thus affect mentoring practices, policies, and guidelines and
serve to address the gap which sometimes exits between theory and practice. Since
research has shown females remain historically underrepresented in educational
leadership positions and mentoring is critical to the success of females who do occupy
these positions, it is females who should gain the most benefit from studies of this
nature.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1091
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsAshley, Betty Diane
ContributorsCollier, Virginia, Foster, Elizabeth
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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