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Article
Mutual but unequal: Mentoring as a hybrid of familiar relationship roles
New Directions for Youth Development (2010)
  • Thomas E. Keller, Portland State University
  • Julia M. Pryce
Abstract
This chapter employs a conceptual framework based on the relationship constructs of power and permanence to distinguish the special hybrid nature of mentoring relationships relative to prototypical vertical and horizontal relationships common in the lives of mentor and mentee. The authors note that mentoring occurs in voluntary relationships among partners with unequal social experience and influence. Consequently, mentoring relationships contain expectations of unequal contributions and responsibilities (as in vertical relationships), but sustaining the relationships depends on mutual feelings of satisfaction and commitment (as in horizontal relationships). Keller and Pryce apply this framework to reveal the consistency of findings across several qualitative studies reporting particular interpersonal patterns in youth mentoring relationships. On a practical level, they suggest that the mentor needs to balance the fun, interest, and engagement that maintain the relationship with the experienced guidance, structure, and support that promote the growth and well-being of the mentee.
Keywords
  • Youth -- Counseling of,
  • Social work with youth,
  • Mentoring
Disciplines
Publication Date
Summer 2010
Publisher Statement
Copyright 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., A Wiley Company
Citation Information
Thomas E. Keller and Julia M. Pryce. "Mutual but unequal: Mentoring as a hybrid of familiar relationship roles" New Directions for Youth Development Vol. 2010 Iss. 126 (2010)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/thomas_keller/21/