The Functions and Longitudinal Outcomes of Adolescents’ Naturally Occurring Mentorships

Citation

Miranda-Chan, Thomas; Fruiht, Veronica; Dubon, Valeska; & Wray-Lake, Laura (2016). The Functions and Longitudinal Outcomes of Adolescents’ Naturally Occurring Mentorships. American Journal of Community Psychology. vol. 57 (1-2) pp. 47-59

Abstract

Adolescence is a time during which positive adults outside the familial context may be most influential to development. A growing body of research on naturally occurring mentors has found favorable outcomes for youth who have these types of positive adult figures in their lives. Less is known, however, about how these naturally occurring mentors influence youths’ development in the long-term. This study examines the long-term outcomes related to having a naturally occurring community mentor in adolescence. Results from longitudinal analyses of a nationally representative sample of adolescents revealed that having a mentor in adolescence was related to higher educational attainment, lower criminal activity, higher psychological well-being (i.e., optimism, self-efficacy, and lack of depressive symptoms), and greater romantic relationship satisfaction in adulthood. Additionally, a taxonomy of mentoring functions was created from qualitative responses and drawing upon the youth, work, and academic mentoring literature. This taxonomy aims to serve as a framework for understanding the functions of youth mentors to provide a foundation for future research. Implications of findings and future directions are considered.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajcp.12031

Keyword(s)

Youth mentoring Adolescent development Mentoring functions Longitudinal Add Health

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

American Journal of Community Psychology

Author(s)

Miranda-Chan, Thomas
Fruiht, Veronica
Dubon, Valeska
Wray-Lake, Laura

Year Published

2016

Volume Number

57

Issue Number

1-2

Pages

47-59

Edition

April 20, 2016

ISSN/ISBN

1573-2770

DOI

10.1002/ajcp.12031

Reference ID

9101