Mentoring
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Other Publications


Adult/Youth Relationships Pilot Project: Initial Implementation Report

Amachi In Brief

Amachi: Mentoring Children of Prisoners in Philadelphia

Big Brothers/Big Sisters: A Study of Program Practices

Big Brothers/Big Sisters: A Study of Volunteer Recruitment and Screening

Building from the Ground Up: Creating Effective Programs to Mentor Children of Prisoners (The Amachi Model)

Building Relationships With Youth in Program Settings: A Study of Big Brothers/Big Sisters

Building Relationships: A Guide for New Mentors

College Students as Mentors for At-Risk Youth: A Study of Six Campus Partners in Learning Programs

Contemporary Issues in Mentoring

Evaluating Mentoring Programs

Group Mentoring: A Study of Mentoring Groups in Three Programs

Guides for the Journey: Supporting High-Risk Youth with Paid Mentors and Counselors

High School Mentors In Brief: Findings from the Big Brothers Big Sisters School-Based Mentoring Impact Study

High School Students as Mentors: Findings from the Big Brothers Big Sisters School-Based Mentoring Impact Study

High School Students as Mentors: Findings from the Big Brothers Big Sisters School-Based Mentoring Impact Study Executive Summary

I Have a Dream in Washington, D.C.: Initial Report

Making a Difference in Schools: The Big Brothers Big Sisters School-Based Mentoring Impact Study
Executive Summary


Making a Difference: An Impact Study of Big Brothers/Big Sisters
(Re-issue of 1995 Study)


Measuring the Quality of Mentor-Youth Relationships: A Tool for Mentoring Programs

Mentoring Former Prisoners: A Guide for Reentry Programs

Mentoring Formerly Incarcerated Adults: Insights from the Ready4Work Reentry Initiative

Mentoring in the Juvenile Justice System: Findings from Two Pilot Programs

Mentoring School-Age Children: A Classification of Programs

Mentoring School-Age Children: Relationship Development in Community-Based and School-Based Programs

Mentoring Sexual Minority Youth

Mentoring, Policy and Politics

Mentoring: A Synthesis of P/PV's Research: 1988-1995

P/PV Preview: Mentoring Ex-Prisoners in the Ready4Work Reentry Initiative

Partners in Growth: Elder Mentors and At-Risk Youth Executive Summary

Positive Support: Mentoring and Depression Among High-Risk Youth

Recruiting Mentors: A Guide to Finding Volunteers

Relationships in a Career Mentoring Program: Lessons Learned from the Hospital Youth Mentoring Program

Same Race and Cross Race Matching

School-Based Mentoring: A Closer Look

School-Based Mentoring: A First Look Into Its Potential

Supporting Mentors

The ABCs of School-Based Mentoring

The Kindness of Strangers: Reflections on the Mentoring Movement

The Promise and Challenge of Mentoring High-Risk Youth: Findings from the National Faith-Based Initiative

Training New Mentors

Understanding How Youth and Elders Form Relationships: A Study of Four Linking Lifetimes Programs

Youth Development: Issues, Challenges and Directions


Making a Difference in Schools: The Big Brothers Big Sisters School-Based Mentoring Impact Study

by Carla Herrera, Jean Baldwin Grossman, Tina J. Kauh, Amy F. Feldman and Jennifer McMaken with Linda Z. Jucovy
August 2007, 126 pages


School-based mentoring is one of the fastest growing forms of mentoring in the US today; yet, few studies have rigorously examined its impacts. This landmark random assignment impact study of Big Brothers Big Sisters School-Based Mentoring is the first national study of this program model. It involves 10 agencies, 71 schools and 1,139 9- to 16-year-old youth randomly assigned to either a treatment group of program participants or a control group of their non-mentored peers. Surveys were administered to all participating youth, their teachers and mentors in the fall of 2004, spring of 2005 and late fall of 2005.

The report describes the programs and their participants and answers several key questions, including: Does school-based mentoring work? What kinds of mentoring experiences help to ensure benefits? How much do these programs cost? Our findings highlight both the strengths of this program model and its current limitations and suggest several recommendations for refining this promising model—recommendations that Big Brothers Big Sisters agencies across the country are already working to implement.



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