Publication | Closed Access
The ABC of peer mentoring – what secondary students have to say about cross-age peer mentoring in a regional Australian school
23
Citations
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References
2012
Year
Teacher-student RelationPeer MentorshipEducationPeer RelationshipStudent EngagementMentoringHelping RelationshipPeer LearningYouth Well-beingRegional Australian SchoolCross-age Peer-mentoring ProgramYoung PeopleSocial SkillsSchool PsychologyStudent SuccessEducational LeadershipAdolescent LearningCommunity Practice EducationMiddle Level EducationSecondary StudentsCross-age Peer Mentoring
Cross-age peer mentoring is an educational model that builds on peer support and mentoring to assist young people to enhance social relationships, develop cognitive skills, and promote positive identity development. In this article, we outline the evaluation process of a cross-age peer-mentoring program implemented in an Australian secondary school. This program had a distinctive focus on blending cross-age peer mentoring, academic tutoring, and social support roles. We focus on the program's consumers – the voices of Year 7 students (mentees) and Year 10 students (mentors). Student perspectives were gathered using qualitative methods through repeated focus groups. Data were thematically analysed, and the findings show observed changes in social relationships, problem-solving skills, and engagement with literacy. We discuss the importance of this relationship for effective learning and examine the reported changes to engagement with relationship building. Implications for developing whole-of-school support and increasing wider participation are discussed.
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