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The Contributions of Mentees to Mentors

August 5, 2011, 3:41 pm

Research tells us that mentoring is important to the development of graduate students. Those students with involved mentors tend to be more successful in their careers. Mentors provide critical feedback to students, make introductions for them, and help them understand the social dynamics and politics of the academy. Today, however, I’m thinking about the ways that mentees contribute to their mentors.

I often tell people that my very favorite part of being a professor is mentoring students. I enjoy watching them develop ideas and grow over time. Given the feedback that I get, I know that I provide a rich experience for both my students and those I mentor throughout the country. And, I’m always striving to do a better job at mentoring.

I contribute a lot, but I also gain so much from my mentees. I co-author articles, book chapters, and books with mentees on a regular basis. Once they get comfortable enough with themselves and the skills that they bring to the relationship, they are very good at providing feedback, challenging me, and offering constructive criticism. Each time I write with a mentee, I learn immensely. Sometimes I learn new ways of writing. Other times, I learn alternative methods of constructing arguments. Perhaps more than anything else, I have been exposed to new ways of seeing the world and the challenges that exist in it.

In addition to teaching us a lot, our mentees can be wonderfully inspiring. I gain a lot of energy from graduate students. I especially like working with them on ideas and then watching them take those ideas in new directions. Although some scholars pride themselves on producing students who do work just like their own, I encourage students to find their own voice and to put their own spin on their research. It’s that spin that is most exciting to me as I learn the most from it.

Given my research interests, the majority of my advisees and mentees are students of color. As a white scholar conducting research on minority institutions and populations, I think it is essential to have input and feedback from graduate students of color. I am especially grateful for their pushback on my interpretation and analysis of data. Of course, I provide the same kind of critical feedback to them as they approach their own research.

There have been many times that I have heard faculty members talk about how much time mentoring takes. Yes, it takes time, but the rewards for both the mentee AND mentor are immense. Mentoring graduate students of color, in particular, is a way to ensure that the racial and ethnic makeup of the professoriate is diverse and reflects the student population in the United States. It is also a way to ensure that opportunities are given to all students.

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  • richardtaborgreene

    nice

  • iris411

    does the mentoring business count in tenure and promotion? if no, I guess most assistant professors will just ignore it until tenured.

  • pacifica888

    The two-way flow of teaching and learning also takes place when graduate students mentor undergraduates. We recently documented that these graduate student mentors develop an enhanced reflexivity about teaching, which with hope will render them aware of the multiple values of mentoring that Professor Gasman discusses here as they progress in their careers. With luck, many of them will some day be professors and follow her example. Here’s the research:
    http://www.isetl.org/ijtlhe/pdf/IJTLHE799.pdf

  • graddirector

    In the sciences, being a good mentor is essential to get tenure and builds your overall reputation in the field.  This results from the collaborative nature of scientific publication.  If you are a good mentor, your students are productive, they get first authorship on journal articles and you as the mentor get last authorship for directing the work.  This results in a win-win situation.  I tell my students all of the time that my job is to teach them the profession so that they can succeed while their job is to do good work to make me famous.  Further, having a record of successful students makes it easier to recruit the best new students into the laboratory.  Luckily for me, this has led to career success for both myself and my students.

  • var1234

    Also called reverse mentoring in corporate world, yes, mentors can learn from mentees.