King's College London, Department of Academic Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK.
BMC Med Educ. 2011 Apr 7;11:13. doi: 10.1186/1472-6920-11-13.
The professional development of under-represented faculty may be enhanced by mentorship, but we understand very little about the mechanisms by which mentoring brings about change. Our study posed the research question, what are the mechanisms by which mentoring may support professional development in under-represented groups? The study aims to: (i) to pilot a mentoring scheme for female academics; (ii) to compare various health-related and attitudinal measures in mentees at baseline, 6 months, and 1 year into the mentoring relationship and, (iii) to compare pre-mentoring expectations to outcomes at 6 months and 1 year follow-up for mentees and mentors.
Female academic mentees were matched 1:1 or 2:1 with more senior academic mentors. Online surveys were conducted to compare health-related and attitudinal measures and expectations of mentoring at baseline with outcomes at 6 months and 1 year using paired t-tests and McNemar's test for matched cohort data.
N = 46 mentoring pairs, 44 (96%) mentees completed the pre-mentoring survey, 37 (80%) at 6 months and 30 (65%) at 1 year. Job-related well-being (anxiety-contentment), self-esteem and self-efficacy all improved significantly and work-family conflict diminished at 1 year. Highest expectations were career progression (39; 89%), increased confidence (38; 87%), development of networking skills (33; 75%), better time-management (29; 66%) and better work-life balance (28; 64%). For mentees, expectations at baseline were higher than perceived achievements at 6 months or 1 year follow-up. For mentors (N = 39), 36 (92%) completed the pre-mentoring survey, 32 (82%) at 6 months and 28 (72%) at 1 year. Mentors' highest expectations were of satisfaction in seeing people progress (26; 69%), seeing junior staff develop and grow (19; 53%), helping solve problems (18; 50%), helping women advance their careers (18; 50%) and helping remove career obstacles (13; 36%). Overall, gains at 6 months and 1 year exceeded pre-mentoring expectations.
This uncontrolled pilot study suggests that mentoring can improve aspects of job-related well-being, self-esteem and self-efficacy over 6 months, with further improvements seen after 1 year for female academics. Work-family conflict can also diminish. Despite these gains, mentees' prior expectations were shown to be unrealistically high, but mentors' expectations were exceeded.
导师制度可以促进代表性不足的教职人员的专业发展,但我们对导师制度如何带来变化的机制知之甚少。我们提出了一个研究问题,即导师制度是如何支持代表性不足群体的专业发展的?本研究旨在:(i)为女性学者试行导师计划;(ii)比较导师关系开始后 6 个月和 1 年内被指导者的各种健康相关和态度措施,以及(iii)比较被指导者和导师在 6 个月和 1 年随访时的预先指导期望和结果。
将女性学术被指导者与更资深的学术导师进行 1:1 或 2:1 的匹配。通过配对 t 检验和 McNemar 检验,对基线时的健康相关和态度措施以及指导期望与 6 个月和 1 年时的结果进行比较,采用在线调查对数据进行比较。
共有 46 对指导关系,44 名(96%)被指导者完成了预指导调查,37 名(80%)在 6 个月时,30 名(65%)在 1 年时完成了调查。工作相关的幸福感(焦虑-满足)、自尊和自我效能都显著提高,工作-家庭冲突在 1 年内减少。最高的期望是职业发展(39 人;89%)、增强信心(38 人;87%)、发展网络技能(33 人;75%)、更好的时间管理(29 人;66%)和更好的工作-生活平衡(28 人;64%)。对于被指导者,基线时的期望高于 6 个月或 1 年随访时的预期。对于导师(N=39),36 名(92%)完成了预指导调查,32 名(82%)在 6 个月时,28 名(72%)在 1 年时完成了调查。导师的最高期望是看到人们取得进步感到满意(26 人;69%)、看到初级员工发展和成长(19 人;53%)、帮助解决问题(18 人;50%)、帮助女性职业发展(18 人;50%)和帮助消除职业障碍(13 人;36%)。总的来说,6 个月和 1 年的收益超过了预先指导的期望。
这项无对照的初步研究表明,导师制可以在 6 个月内改善与工作相关的幸福感、自尊和自我效能等方面,1 年后女性学者还会有进一步的提高。工作-家庭冲突也会减少。尽管有这些收益,但被指导者之前的期望被证明是不切实际的,但导师的期望得到了超出。