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Program staff perspectives on implementing youth-initiated mentoring with systems-involved youth

NCJ Number
303482
Journal
Journal of Community Psychology Volume: 49 Issue: 7 Dated: 2021 Pages: 2781-2794
Author(s)
R. Spencer; et al
Date Published
2021
Length
14 pages
Annotation

This study explored youth-initiated mentoring (YIM) implementation at the organizational level through interviews with mentoring program staff (n = 11) and addressed motivations of mentoring program staff to implement YIM, how their programs implemented this approach, and their perceptions of the facilitators and barriers to successful YIM implementation.

Abstract

Youth-initiated mentoring (YIM) is an approach to mentor recruitment that represents a significant departure from how formal mentoring typically has been conceptualized and implemented, most notably by having youth identify their own mentors. Despite enthusiasm for YIM, implementation can require significant shifts in program practices. Given the limited resources with which most mentoring programs must work, it is important to discern staff investment in YIM and what it takes for programs to implement this approach. (publisher abstract modified)