A model of mentorship for students from historically underrepresented groups in STEM [CL]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2209.03395


Mentorship is critical to student academic success and persistence, especially for students from historically underrepresented (HU) groups. In a program designed to support the academic success of HU undergraduates in STEM who wish to pursue a PhD in those fields, students experience comprehensive support including financial aid, highly-engaged mentoring, dual faculty mentorship, professional development workshops, and summer research experiences. Scholars in this program, the Cal-Bridge program, consistently report that faculty mentorship is the most impactful feature. While mentorship was rated highly, preliminary evaluation indicated an early deficit in a sense of community among scholars. In response, faculty professional development and support for peer networking were implemented to expand and enhance the relationships that support scholar success. Here we present a promising multifaceted model of mentorship that can support the academic success of HU undergraduates.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Wimberly, A. Rudolph, C. Hood, et. al.
Fri, 9 Sep 22
37/76

Comments: Submitted to Understanding Interventions. 23 pages. 4 figures. Comments welcome!