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How to Start a Peer Mentoring Program for Your Student-Athletes

TrueSport

February 18, 2020 | 1 minute, 52 seconds read

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When student-athletes act as mentors, everyone wins. Those athletes learn how to become better leaders, their mentees learn valuable life lessons, and their communities experience the benefits of young leaders.

Michael Karcher, PhD, is the author of Increases in Academic Connectedness and Self-Esteem Among High School Students Who Serve as Cross-Age Peer MentorsHe writes that when “students themselves assist in the delivery of guidance lessons and learning experiences for other students, the number of students affected by the developmental guidance program may be greatly magnified or doubled.”

Here’s practical advice on how to launch a peer mentoring program at your school or on your team.

CONNECT THE DOTS

Peer mentorship programs can exist in a broad spectrum of forms, but athletic teams are naturally suited for setting up this kind of mentorship. Take the already-developed social role of teammates and let student-athletes shift it from teammate to mentor.

Older teammates can be paired with freshman, or a high school varsity team can work with an elementary school team playing the same sport. From a practical standpoint, using sports to foster mentorship opportunities also allows athletes to add leadership roles to college resumes.

CREATE A TRAINING PROGRAM

As teachers and coaches, it’s easy to assume that being a mentor is a simple task: be a good role model and teach younger students how to navigate school and sport situations. But that can a Herculean task for teenagers.

A training program led by a professional, like a school guidance counselor or sport coach, that teaches student-athletes how to be good mentors and use strong communication skills can help a program succeed.

The Society for Safe and Caring Schools & Communities has developed a toolkit for mentorship training and notes that the two primary functions of training should be to outline the role of mentors and mentees and provide ground rules and set expectations for mentors. It might seem obvious, but a simple document laying out the expectations can help structure your program.