Play, Talk, Learn: Promising Practices in Youth Mentoring - New
Directions for Youth Development, Number 126
Book description
This volume brings together the findings from separate studies of
community-based and school-based mentoring to unpack the common response
to the question of what makes youth mentoring work.
A debate that was alive in 2002, when the first
New Directions for Youth Development
volume on mentoring, edited by Jean Rhodes, was published,
centers on whether goal-oriented or relationship-focused interactions
(conversations and activities) prove to be more essential for
effective youth mentoring. The consensus appeared then to be that the
mentoring context defined the answer: in workplace mentoring with
teens, an instrumental relationship was deemed essential and resulted
in larger impacts, while in the community setting, the developmental
relationship was the key ingredient of change.
Recent large-scale studies of school-based mentoring have raised this
question once again and suggest that understanding how developmental
and instrumental relationship styles manifest through goal-directed
and relational interactions is essential to effective practice.
Because the contexts in which youth mentoring occurs (in the
community, in school during the day, or in a structured program after
school) affect what happens in the mentor-mentee pair, our goal was to
bring together a diverse group of researchers to describe the focus,
purpose, and authorship of the mentoring interactions that happen in
these contexts in order to help mentors and program staff better
understand how youth mentoring relationships can be effective.
This is the 126th issue of
New Directions for Youth Development
the Jossey-Bass quarterly report series dedicated to bringing
together everyone concerned with helping young people, including
scholars, practitioners, and people from different disciplines and
professions. The result is a unique resource presenting thoughtful,
multi-faceted approaches to helping our youth develop into
responsible, stable, well-rounded citizens.