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MentorNet: An Electronic
Partnership
to Retain Women in Science and Engineering
By Carol Muller
Mentoring
is a known strategy for improving the retention of women students
in engineering and related sciences. Students benefit from mentors
who can help acquaint them with opportunities in their fields, offer
guidance and advice based on experience, and provide support, encouragement,
and access to professional networks for further career development.
Mentoring offers personal, one-on-one attention and assistance in
decoding less obvious cultural and structural elements of a field.
Structured
mentoring programs have proliferated. Research shows, however, that
mentoring relationships may falter due to the failure of mentor
and protégé to communicate because of time and distance
constraints. Many students don't even have access to mentors in
the first place because of these limitations.
E-mail
and the World Wide Web have the potential to reduce or even eliminate
the time and effort required to arrange mentoring meetings. MentorNet,
a two-year-old partnership among colleges and universities, corporations,
government agencies, and professional socie-ties, pairs undergraduate
and graduate women studying engineering and related sciences with
volunteers in industry in year-long structured mentoring relationships
conducted via e-mail. It offers on-line applications, matching,
training, and ongoing coaching for participants, as well as evaluation.
In 1999, MentorNet matched nearly 1,200 students from 38 campuses
nationwide with mentors.
Mentors and Protégés
Student
participants in MentorNetthe protégésare women studying
engineering, science and math fields at any post-secondary level
(first-year undergraduate through postdoctoral). These students
are considering scientific or technical careers in industry and
are currently enrolled in one of MentorNet's participating campuses
[see sidebar for list]. Through MentorNet, they receive information,
support and encouragement. They gain an experienced professional
in their field who cares about their success, along with the opportunity
to explore and visualize the future. Protégés also
learn about the process and value of mentoring, which will be helpful
to them as they continue in their careers.
Industry
professionals trained in scientific and technical fields volunteer
their time as mentors to demonstrate their support of retaining
more women in science and engineering. Mentors gain greater understanding
of their own profession and competence as well as links to new professional
networks. Through participation in MentorNet and its mentor training,
mentors are likely to acquire information about the causes and potential
remedies for women's under-representation in scientific and technical
fields.
Mentors
are recruited primarily through corporations, government labs, and
professional societies. Industrial mentors represent an increasingly
wide variety of disciplinary backgrounds (e.g. computer science,
chemistry, geology, physics, biochemistry, and the various branches
of engineering) and different industries (e.g. computers, automobiles,
pharmaceuticals, chemical products, electronics, gas and petroleum,
biotechnology, environmental engineering, manufacturing, technical
consulting). Despite a very short time period for recruitment, MentorNet's
start-up semester attracted 241 mentors; in 1998-99, 693 mentors
volunteered; for the 1999-2000 program, 1,525 mentors applied.
Other
active participants in MentorNet are the designated program representatives
in colleges and universities, corporations, government labs, and
professional societies. These are the people who identify and recruit
participants, certify eligibility, provide information about their
organization, participate in evaluation, and are available to solve
problems.
How E-mentoring Works
"E-mentoring,"
also sometimes termed telementoring, cybermentoring, or virtual
mentoring, describes a mentoring relationship which uses the tools
of electronic communications either to extend and enhance an existing
mentoring relationship, or to create one where it would not otherwise
exist. For those of us who have become quite comfortable with the
use of e-mail over the last decade or more, the benefits of using
e-mail for mentoring include:
- The
technology is relatively easy, comfortable, and accessible for
regular computer users.
- Communication
is not dependent on location or geographic proximity of mentors
and protégés.
- The
asynchronous quality of e-mail allows for convenient communication
across time zones and across lifestyle differences. A student
can query a mentor at 2 a.m., and the mentor can respond early
the next morning, each at times convenient for the individual.
- In
using e-mail to exchange information and "converse,"
we avoid the additional time and related costs of setting up appointments,
determining when we will talk, where we will meet, how we will
travel to meet. Though electronic communications are not a perfect
substitute for face-to-face communication, and examples of miscues
and misunderstandings abound, through training and/or experience,
users find many cases in which the advantages of e-mail outweigh
the disadvantages, and learn to discern when other forms of communication
may be preferable.
- E-mail
allows communication to be thoughtful and deliberate. MentorNet
participants can take time in composing a message, to get their
query or response to a point where it reflects just what they
want to say.
- E-mail
provides a record of communication. A protégé inspired
by a mentor's advice can return to it again and again; a mentor
can review a previous e-mail message sent by a student to recall
an exchange which may have taken place several weeks previously.
- Electronic
communications downplay status differences. Protégés
can easily communicate without being intimidated or unnecessarily
influenced by differences in age, style of dress, office furnishings,
security and/or secretarial screening.
- Through
e-mail, those who may be on the margins of mainstream groups have
more opportunities to participate fully in conversational exchanges.
When a student is the only woman or one of few women in an engineering
or physics classroom, she may feel isolated from her peers and
may be less likely than her male classmates to participate fully
in discussions and exchanges.
While
research to understand the full extent of human interactions with
electronic communications is fairly new, it is evident from early
findings that the Internet represents a social technology which
connects and affiliates people. While some MentorNet students and
mentors do hold meetings or use telephones, videoconferencing or
other forms of communication, many of them use e-mail exclusively.
Mentor Training
Few
people can serve as effective mentors without prior guidance and
understanding of the purpose and process of mentoring. The mentoring
experience often requires support and follow-up. MentorNet's on-line
Guide for Mentors and the Guide for Students offer
suggestions for developing successful mentoring relationships. How
electronic communication differs from face-to-face communication
is explained along with advice on how to communicate via e-mail.
Obstacles underrepresented students face in engineering and related
scientific fields are explored, as are issues of cross-gender and
cross-cultural mentoring.
Mentors
are encouraged to learn about the specific needs and issues of their
protégés. For example, first- year undergraduate students
often begin their college careers in euphoria, but become concerned
about their academic work during their first midterms; some students
actually do believe that a "B" in introductory calculus
means they are not capable of succeeding in a science or engineering
field. An industrial mentor can help put performance in perspective,
as well as encourage the student to take advantage of available
assistance.
Long-Term
Sustainability
A
project of the magnitude of MentorNet requires a consortium of partners.
All of the participating colleges and universities, corporations,
government agencies, and professional societies commit resources
including labor, technical expertise, and financial support. The
salience of the program is high for partnering organizations whose
mission incorporates the retention of women in scientific and technical
fields.
The
pilot semester for MentorNet was funded with start-up grants provided
by the AT&T and Intel Foundations; a one-year grant from the
U.S. Department of Education's Fund for the Improvement of Post-
Secondary Education (FIPSE) and subsequent grants from AT&T,
Intel, IBM, Microsoft, Hewlett Packard, Texaco, SPIE, and the IEEE
Foundation. In 1999-2000, additional funding has been provided by
Ford Motor Company, Los Alamos National Lab, SAP Labs, and FIPSE
(for a three-year planning and implementation project to extend
MentorNet to community colleges).
Future Plans
MentorNet has many prospects and ambitions for the future. First
among these must be securing resources to support the program's
goals and objectives. Plans are underway for dues-based memberships
to supplement MentorNet's funding.
Opportunities
abound for extending electronic mentoring. In 2000-01, for example,
MentorNet will begin to include students attending community colleges,
after developing specialized materials and a program designed specifically
for the needs of this population. Other future initiatives may involve
extending MentorNet opportunities beyond the borders of the United
States; to young professionals; to other under-represented groups;
and/or to pre-college students. The potential for leveraging Internet
technology to connect mentors and protégés is limitless,
with priorities established by those joining the partnership.
Acknowledgments:
MentorNet
is the result of the generous funding provided by sponsors including
the AT&T Foundation, the Intel Foundation, IBM, Ford Motor Company,
Hewlett-Packard Company, Microsoft Corporation, Texaco, SAP Labs,
the U.S. Department of Education's Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary
Education (FIPSE), Los Alamos National Labs, the IEEE Foundation,
and SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering, and
facilities space provided by the College of Engineering at San Jose
State University.
Carol B. Muller is founder and executive director of MentorNet,
based at San José State University; a consulting associate
professor of engineering at Stanford University; and a senior research
associate at Dartmouth College. With 22 years of experience in higher
education administration, Muller has long been interested and active
in research, policy and practice related to gender issues in education
and employment.
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