Evaluation of the Arthur Project: Evidence-Based Mentoring in a Social Work Framework with a Social Justice Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Need for the Arthur Project
1.1.1. General Need
1.1.2. Middle School Students
1.1.3. The Arthur Project Program Goals
- Cultivate youths’ social-emotional wellness and mental health.
- Increase academic engagement.
- Provide youth with leadership, goal achievement, problem-solving, knowledge, self-advocacy, and communication skills to reach their full potential.
- Provide the skills to successfully transition to high school and beyond.
- Foster family engagement.
- Encourage culturally responsive community and civic engagement.
- Apply an antiracist, social justice lens to mentoring in furtherance of awareness and attunement to wider social impacts and social change.
1.1.4. The Arthur Project Focus
2. Methods
2.1. Participating Students
2.2. Participating Mentors
2.3. Therapeutic Mentoring
2.4. Mentor Training and Activities
2.5. Academic Engagement
2.6. Mattering
2.7. Purposeful and Positive Relationship Ending
2.8. Documentation of TAP: Surveys and Forums
2.8.1. Quantitative Surveys
- Mentee surveys were retrospective pre- then post-tests.
- Mentor surveys were post-tests.
- Teacher surveys were post-tests.
- Family/caregiver surveys were post-tests.
2.8.2. Qualitative Forum Groups
2.8.3. Measurement Tools and Data Collection
2.9. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Goal 1: Cultivate Youths’ Social-Emotional Wellness and Mental Health
My mentor makes me feel like I matter. (6th-Grade Mentee)
I have a mentee who was so quiet. She started speaking up and now helps others.(Mentor)
3.1.1. Persistence, Perseverance, and Confidence
3.1.2. Self-Advocacy and Self-Help
3.1.3. Mattering
3.1.4. Mental Health
3.1.5. Qualitative Themes
My kids have grown in different ways. One mentee was so quiet. She broke out of her shell and now comes to the office to ask if we can have a session! (Mentor)
My mentor supports my opinions.
They trust you and you trust them.
They listen.
I trust her because she knows how I feel. She understands.
She keeps my stuff to herself and doesn’t judge.
I feel comfortable and safe.
I can say whatever I want.
You feel more important.
My mentor makes me feel like I matter.
If I am upset, she always asks if I am ok and makes me feel comfortable.
If I feel down, she makes me have faith in my mind.
We can tell our mentor anything and they listen to us and give to us.
We have to be our authentic self to build trust.
I opened myself more to my mentees. Once I revealed myself to them, they began to reveal themselves to me.
I recall what they told me, so they know I am listening.
They share more and have increased self-awareness.
She is not as shy and started asking questions in class.
They have more self-awareness.
3.2. Goal 2: Increase Academic Engagement
I was going to fail. My mentor helped me. (Mentee)
His mentor sees the potential in him, and she lets him know it. (Caregiver)
TAP is a tremendous help with teachers and school staff. (Caregiver)
3.3. Goal 3: Provide Youth with Leadership, Goal Achievement, Problem-Solving and Communication Skills to Find Their Strengths and Reach Their Full Potential
We looked up the word “charming”. We found her strengths. (Mentor)
We reminded them of their awesomeness. (Mentor)
We worked on a goal for me to stay quieter when the teacher is talking.
I got my grades up.
I tell her I want to be a dancer. Sometimes I want to give up and she tells me to keep my dream.
There are people I don’t like and things that are happening at school. She gives me coping strategies.
I have anger issues and it used to bottle up. She helped me express myself.
We don’t offer solutions. There is a lot of room for problem solving.
We support them in resolving difficult situations.
At first, my mentee was always late. He is not late anymore and goes to bed earlier.
I see them opening up in class and communicating more.
3.4. Goal 4: Provide the Skills to Successfully Transition to High School
3.5. Goal 5: Foster Family Engagement through the Family Educational Advocacy Program
3.6. Goal 6: Encourage Culturally Responsive Community and Civic Engagement
3.7. Goal 7: Apply an Antiracist, Social Justice Lens to Mentoring in Furtherance of Awareness and Attunement to Wider Social Impacts and Social Change
My mentor helped with how I could be better. (6th-Grade Mentee)
I understand my mentees’ racial identities and I am able to perceive social, political and community cultures. (Mentor)
We talk about unjust systems, how they are perceived, and how they perceive. (Mentor)
I revealed myself to them and they began to reveal themselves to me. (Mentor)
3.8. Limitations
4. Discussion: Recommendations and Conclusions
4.1. Evaluation and TAP Goals
4.2. Similarities with Other Programs
4.3. Program Recommendations
- To address the youths’ mental health symptoms, especially regarding PTSD and ongoing depression, TAP is instituting a program in which students with the greatest needs are matched with mentors with the highest levels of experience. TAP has hired an additional supervisor to oversee these matches and will delay matching pending thorough assessments.
- Based on staff identification of further needs and students’ and families’ feedback, additional programming has been added. A new Young Men’s Group discusses life skills, health education, hygiene, and healthy relationships and is open to the school community for greater social networking opportunities and peer support.
- Based on previous mentor input, new training, supervision, support, and professional development will focus on several areas, including attention to youth with highly complex needs [25] and mentees’ political, social, and economic challenges. Beginning with the 2023–2024 school year, these youths were matched with the most experienced interns.
- Data collection and analysis software will be upgraded to serve more students and calculate results for larger numbers of students. During the school year, TAP will continue to track retention, attendance, grades, and state test scores and monitor disciplinary infractions.
- Several new tools will be employed. For example, instead of the Classroom Behavior form, the widely accepted and validated Functional Behavioral Assessment tool will be used [56]. This tool allows mentors to observe over many points in time students’ behavior in the classroom. A tool will be utilized that captures students’ perceptions of “mattering” regarding family, friends, school, and the community. Another new tool measures quality of the mentor–mentee relationship [57]
- Resource Library: In response to mentors’ requests, TAP increased the online resources and developed a new retrieval system. The resources are accessible to all mentors and staff.
- Youth Advocacy: TAP engaged the NYU Wagner School of Public Service for design of a youth advocacy plan to disrupt the school-to-prison pipeline. Youth advocacy serves youth and communities, including healing, empowerment, social engagement, and civic pride [58].
- Caregiver Engagement: The caregiver responses were minimal, likely for many reasons outlined in the literature [46]. With family engagement crucial to a child’s academic success [45], through the Education Advocacy Program, TAP will increase efforts to engage them with a series of open houses, orientations, and individual staff and mentor visits.
- Alumni Program Plan: With the first cohort of mentees transitioning to high school, TAP developed a means for maintaining support and engagement. The intention is that students remain in The Arthur Project for life, ultimately becoming mentors themselves. Based on research that indicates longer participation results in longer-term positive outcomes [37], TAP asks program alumni to facilitate the 8th Grade Emerging Leadership Institute. To this end also, TAP alumni will be contacted for surveys and interviews on high school outcomes.
- Emerging Leaders Institute: Following their 8th grade year, mentees may participate in TAP workshops and other opportunities that further prepare them for high school. These alumni may also become peer mentors, building on their social and interpersonal relationships, learn how to manage conflict, and take part in social justice advocacy in support of the important high school years [59].
- Town Halls: The Town Hall is a monthly meeting of stakeholders facilitated by the Student Leadership Council (TAP students) and held monthly for open communication with the students.
- Community: Research confirms the importance of shifting the influence and power to community residents [47], especially true in low-income communities and communities of color. Recently, at families’ requests, TAP hosted broader community events. Additional feedback will be sought from community members and stakeholders, for example, requesting input on program improvements and greater student engagement.
4.4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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The Author Project Goals | Measurements |
---|---|
1. Cultivate youth’s sense of mattering (social-emotional wellness and mental health) through therapeutic mentoring. |
|
2. Increase academic engagement. |
|
3. Provide youth with leadership, goal achievement, problem-solving, knowledge, self-advocacy, and communication skills to reach their full potential. |
|
4. Provide the skills to successfully transition to high school and beyond. |
|
5. Foster family engagement through the Education and Family Advocacy Programs. |
|
6. Encourage culturally responsive community and civic engagement. |
|
7. Apply an antiracist, social justice lens to mentoring in furtherance of awareness and attunement to wider social impacts and social change. |
|
Statement | before TAP | after TAP |
---|---|---|
I finish what I begin. | ||
6th Graders | 24% | 29% |
7th and 8th Graders | 34% | 49% |
When I have a goal I stick with it. | ||
6th Graders | 25% | 36% |
7th and 8th Graders | 55% | 78% |
I am more likely to stick with my homework. 6th Graders 7th and 8th Graders | 57% 59% | 75% 83% |
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Miner-Romanoff, K.; Greenawalt, J. Evaluation of the Arthur Project: Evidence-Based Mentoring in a Social Work Framework with a Social Justice Approach. Societies 2024, 14, 123. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14070123
Miner-Romanoff K, Greenawalt J. Evaluation of the Arthur Project: Evidence-Based Mentoring in a Social Work Framework with a Social Justice Approach. Societies. 2024; 14(7):123. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14070123
Chicago/Turabian StyleMiner-Romanoff, Karen, and Jessica Greenawalt. 2024. "Evaluation of the Arthur Project: Evidence-Based Mentoring in a Social Work Framework with a Social Justice Approach" Societies 14, no. 7: 123. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14070123
APA StyleMiner-Romanoff, K., & Greenawalt, J. (2024). Evaluation of the Arthur Project: Evidence-Based Mentoring in a Social Work Framework with a Social Justice Approach. Societies, 14(7), 123. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14070123