Psychosocial Intervention (Jan 2020)

Can Mentoring Promote Self-esteem and School Connectedness? An Evaluation of the Mentor-UP Project

  • Claudia Marino,
  • Massimo Santinello,
  • Michela Lenzi,
  • Paolo Santoro,
  • Marisa Bergamin,
  • Marta Gaboardi,
  • Antonio Calcagnì,
  • Gianmarco Altoè,
  • Douglas D. Perkins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5093/pi2019a13
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

Read online

Research in the United States has shown that youth mentoring is a promising strategy for increasing self-esteem and school connectedness in at-risk youth. There has been little confirmation of those findings internationally. The current study evaluates the impact of mentoring by trained university students on children’s self-esteem and school connectedness compared to schoolmates not involved in the program. Mentor-UP is a school- and community-based weekly mentoring program implemented in northern Italy over a period of seven months. Participants (209 students – 34 in the experimental group and 175 in the comparison group – aged between 11 and 13, 56% male, 27% immigrants) reported their levels of self-esteem and school connectedness at the beginning and at the end of the program. Results showed a significant increase in mentees’ self-esteem compared to the control group, while the difference in school-connectedness was nonsignificant. The findings support the effectiveness of Mentor-UP in nurturing youth’s self-esteem.

Keywords