Wednesday, February 16, 2011

To Mentor...or to Navigate?

I posted on Twitter the other day that I had just presented to the student government budget committee asking for increased funding for the program I supervise. I work at Green River Community College where I oversee the Commencement Achievement Program, an initiative out of Diversity and Multicultural Affairs geared toward helping students independently navigate the college system. I received a response from Lisa Endersby, a student affairs guru out of our neighbor to the north, which led to an email conversation about mentorship. She asked me why we call my student staff Peer Navigators, rather than mentors, and how that structures the paradigm of their work.

Many of us work in some capacity supporting or supervising student mentors. This mentorship appears in various paradigms, such as student leadership, peer tutoring, or, quite often, explicitly defined mentorship. Each of these different titles describes the various roles and functions our students fill in our programs/departments/divisions/colleges/etc., yet each title was intentionally chosen to frame their work within a specific paradigm and provide them a framework for reflection on how they serve their peers. Our exchange got me thinking a little deeper about why our program chooses to call them "navigators" rather than something more common, like "mentors." It was a term I inherited, but my director and I built it explicitly into my program's mission statement. Why do we consider it such a unique and valuable title?

Over the past two years, I've worked with our Student Life graphic designer to come up with a graphic to use in our literature and our promotional materials. Because we call our students "Peer Navigators," and the program has a mission around college navigation, she recommended a compass. I loved the idea as it symbolizes navigation, and the concept of direction (North, South, East, and West) has cross-cultural meaning. It provides a conceptualization of the college environment as a stormy sea, and our program provides navigation and direction to help students keep afloat above the waves. We work with mostly first-generation, low income, and otherwise underserved students, for whom the college environment is terribly unfamiliar and very intimidating. Our students can become overwhelmed by the process of attending college itself, let alone their coursework to complete their degrees, and quickly feel strong feelings of isolation and the desire to return to "friendlier shore."

I train the Peer Navigators to be a mentor to their students, but also to guide their peers toward developing their own skills to independently navigate the college system. Since many of them had similar college experiences, they can empathize with the students who access our program and authentically guide them from that common understanding. Often if a student thinks a question she has is stupid, she begins to believe she is the only one with that question, and that college staff may belittle her for not having all the information needed to attend in the first place. Asking another student can be much more comfortable, especially if the response is, "Oh yeah, I had that same question. Let me show you how I got that information."

Transitioning from high school to college includes a huge cultural shift in how each institution functions. College requires a greater degree of independence and self-motivation on the part of the student, and also requires prior knowledge of the lingo and processes on which all the aspects of college attendance operate. For students who do not have access to this information prior to admission to college, the transition becomes a barrier to degree completion. The college becomes a stormy sea, and the student a solitary captain navigating the murky waters rising on all sides. We call our students Peer Navigators because they become a compass, map, and literal navigator to walk side-by-side with their peers relying on their own experiences to help navigate the storms toward calmer waters.

Bryce

2 comments:

  1. Great post Bryce! Thanks for the shout out, but remember that you're even more of an inspiration - I wouldn't have even been thinking about mentoring in cool new ways without you!

    I like the use of the word 'navigator' mainly because it removes some of the implied 'power over' connotations that often come with the use of the word 'mentor'. The 'mentor' label implies that the individual holds most (or all!) of the valuable knowledge that a student needs to succeed. While this person may indeed have valuable experience and expertise (hindsight is 20/20 after all!), this label can ignore the role of the 'mentee' in the mentoring relationship. Implying a 'power over' role of the mentor negates the very real agency of the 'mentee' in critically examining this knowledge and advice in order to integrate it into their own goals, ideas and expectations for their first year. A more valuable and productive mentoring relationship is one where, instead of a unidirectional flow of knowledge from the 'expert' to the 'novice', there is instead a dialoge or exchange that fosters critical thinking on the part of the student. The mentor's role is therefore to offer advice and insight while also encouraging the student to examine this advice for its utility in their unique circumstances.

    I love the use of the word 'navigator' as a way to highlight the responsibility of these peers to, as you describe it, 'navigate the storms toward calmer waters'. The 'mentor' is then one who can refer students to appropriate resources (the life rafts or other key areas on the 'map' they should visit on their 'trip') while also pointing out potential icebergs (to use the Titanic reference). There's lots of potential here to shift the paradigm of what it means to mentor students. Great post! Looking forward to continuing this chat!

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    1. Such a amusing post. I am really happy to read your post. Thanks a ton for sharing this.

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