Natural Mentors, Social Class, and College Success

Natural mentors provide advice, moral support, and assistance to adolescents who aspire to obtain a postsecondary degree, but past studies of the benefits of having an informal adult mentor have yet to resolve several issues. Our analyses of a national sample of high school graduates test three hypo...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of community psychology 2018-03, Vol.61 (1-2), p.179-190
Hauptverfasser: Reynolds, John R., Parrish, Michael
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Natural mentors provide advice, moral support, and assistance to adolescents who aspire to obtain a postsecondary degree, but past studies of the benefits of having an informal adult mentor have yet to resolve several issues. Our analyses of a national sample of high school graduates test three hypotheses: (H1) natural mentoring increases the odds of college attendance and completion, (H2) guidance and career advice are more important for college success than encouragement or role modeling, and (H3) students from poor and working‐class families benefit more from mentoring than students from middle‐ and upper‐class families. Hypotheses 1 and 3 are clearly supported when examining the odds of attending college, while Hypothesis 2 was not supported—encouragement and role modeling boost attendance, not advice or practical help. None of the hypotheses is supported when predicting degree completion among those who matriculated. As natural mentors do not appreciably increase the odds of completing college, we conclude past studies have overstated the postsecondary educational benefits of natural mentors. Highlights College benefits of natural mentors limited to attendance and do not extend to degree completion. Mentor encouragement, role modeling boost the odds of attendance more than guidance, tangible help. We need more investment in university programs that help under‐represented students finish college.
ISSN:0091-0562
1573-2770
DOI:10.1002/ajcp.12209