Research suggests being a mentor builds leadership skills
Mentoring isn’t just good for the person on the receiving end. New research suggests those who serve as mentors benefit too.
Mentoring isn’t just good for the person on the receiving end. New research suggests those who serve as mentors benefit too.
In a mentoring relationship, a more experienced person (or mentor) provides a less experienced person (or protégé) with information, support and friendship. Mentoring can happen in almost any context, including workplaces and universities. We often assume that, in mentoring relationships, protégés are those who benefit the most. As such, the majority of mentoring research has focused on the benefits to people who are at the receiving end of mentoring support.
But what about mentors? Do they benefit from mentoring as well?
To answer this question, we focused our research on the benefits of mentoring for actual mentors. We examined whether mentors gain leadership skills through providing mentoring support.
Why did we focus on leadership development as an outcome?
The majority of leadership research has examined leadership development in classroom settings or through training programs. However, people can practise their leadership qualities — including negotiation, communication, emotional, interpersonal and problem-solving skills — every day throughout many activities and assignments. That includes helping and mentoring others.
Mentors help their protégés solve problems, communicate many topics with their protégés and use their emotional skills to cheer up, encourage or influence their protégés. Our research suggests that performing these services helps mentors practise their own leadership skills and contributes to their development as leaders.
To conduct our study, we initiated an eight-month mentoring program for PhD students. Through various means (newsletters, graduate program directors and word of mouth, to name just a few), we invited senior PhD candidates to volunteer in the program. Ultimately, 46 agreed to participate in our study. These senior PhD students were assigned to first-year PhD students who had contacted us to be mentored.
At four times throughout the mentoring program, we measured the extent to which mentors identified themselves as leaders (or leader identity) and the extent to which they had confidence in leading a team project (or leader self-efficacy).
Towards the end of the mentoring program, we also measured the extent to which mentors provided their protégés with mentoring support. This way, we could see the relationship between mentors’ engagement in the practice of mentoring and the extent to which they gained leader identity and leader self-efficacy.
Our analysis showed that the more mentors provided mentoring support, the more they saw themselves as leaders (gained leader identity) and the more confident they became in leading a project (gained leader self-efficacy).
Our research suggests that mentoring can be used to improve and enhance leadership skills among the members of an organization, namely students or employees. Administrators and practitioners can initiate mentoring programs not only to welcome new team members, but also to develop leadership skills in their senior personnel.
It is often more difficult for mentoring program administrators to attract volunteer mentors than protégés. Our research suggests that they can now encourage their senior members to volunteer as mentors as a way to gain or enhance their leadership skills.
Mostafa Ayoobzadeh, Lecturer, Leadership Development, Concordia University and Kathleen Boies, Associate Dean, Research and Research Programs, Concordia University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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