The contribution of formal and informal mentorship to faculty productivity: Views of faculty in public affairs programs

IF 2.4 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH JOURNAL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS EDUCATION Pub Date : 2023-06-08 DOI:10.1080/15236803.2023.2220096
Gina Scutelnicu Todoran
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This study examines how mentorship opportunities contribute to the productivity and career growth of public affairs faculty, stratified by gender and race. The study uses primary data coming from an original survey administered at two different points in time (2017 and 2021) to faculty who are part of NASPAA member schools. Results indicate that women and faculty from racially under-represented groups are more likely to receive formal mentoring whereas men and white faculty are more likely to benefit from informal mentoring. Additionally, results show that the relationship between mentoring approaches and research effort differed by the faculty’s member gender and race with formal mentoring contributing to the research effort of men and white faculty across all academic ranks and university types, and informal mentoring contributing to the research effort of mid-career faculty of all genders and races. This study aims to inform individuals and universities about mentoring trends and contributions.
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正式和非正式导师制对教师生产力的贡献:公共事务项目中教师的观点
本研究探讨师徒机会对公共事务系教师生产力及职业成长的贡献,并以性别及种族划分。该研究使用的主要数据来自于在两个不同的时间点(2017年和2021年)对NASPAA成员学校的教师进行的原始调查。结果表明,来自种族代表性不足群体的女性和教师更有可能接受正式的指导,而男性和白人教师更有可能受益于非正式的指导。此外,研究结果显示,师徒关系与研究成果的关系因教师的性别和种族而异,在所有学术级别和大学类型中,正式指导对男性和白人教师的研究成果有贡献,而非正式指导对所有性别和种族的职业中期教师的研究成果有贡献。本研究旨在告知个人和大学有关师徒关系的趋势和贡献。
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来源期刊
JOURNAL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS EDUCATION
JOURNAL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS EDUCATION EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
36.00%
发文量
34
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