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Roles, Risks, and Benefits of Peer Mentoring Relationships in Higher Education

431

Citations

27

References

2010

Year

Abstract

Successful peer mentoring in university settings is the result of relationships among students, mentors, and instructors. Findings from this study indicate that even in programs where training is ongoing and established, assumptions cannot be made about the understanding of the roles, risks, and benefits involved in such relationships. This study demonstrates that students, instructors, and mentors all have different perspectives about a mentor’s role and how that role should be enacted. Connecting link, peer leader, learning coach, student advocate, and trusted friend were identified as predominant roles enacted by mentors. Also described are risks and benefits for being or having a peer mentor.

References

YearCitations

1968

46.6K

1968

38.8K

1999

2.6K

2000

895

1998

577

1997

413

2002

368

2008

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2007

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2000

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