Erickson Lance D, McDonald Steve, Elder Glen H
Brigham Young University.
Sociol Educ. 2009 Oct;82(4):344-367. doi: 10.1177/003804070908200403.
Few studies have examined the impact that mentoring (i.e., developing a special relationship with a non-parental adult) has on educational achievement and attainment in the general population. In addition, prior research has yet to clarify the extent to which mentoring relationships reduce inequality by enabling disadvantaged youth to compensate for a lack of social resources or promote inequality by serving as a complementary resource for advantaged youth. Results from a nationally representative sample of youth show (1) a powerful net influence of mentors on the educational success of youth and (2) how social background, parental, peer, and personal resources condition the formation and effectiveness of mentoring relationships. The findings uncover an interesting paradox-that informal mentors may simultaneously represent compensatory and complementary resources. Youth with many resources are more likely than other young people to have mentors, but those with few resources are likely to benefit more from having a mentor-particularly teacher mentors-in their lives.
很少有研究考察了指导(即与非父母的成年人建立特殊关系)对普通人群教育成就和学业水平的影响。此外,先前的研究尚未阐明指导关系通过使弱势青年弥补社会资源不足来减少不平等的程度,或者通过作为优势青年的补充资源来促进不平等的程度。一项全国代表性青年样本的研究结果表明:(1)导师对青年教育成功具有强大的净影响力;(2)社会背景、父母、同伴和个人资源如何影响指导关系的形成及其有效性。研究结果揭示了一个有趣的悖论——非正式导师可能同时代表补偿性资源和补充性资源。拥有多种资源的青年比其他年轻人更有可能有导师,但资源匮乏的青年可能从生活中有导师——特别是教师导师——中受益更多。