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THE Latest
Volume 1, Number 2
September 2003
Guidance by a research mentor strongly influences career
direction
Clinical psychology students who build a professional relationship with a research
mentor during their training are more likely to pursue research opportunities
as professionals than those who don't, according to research by psychologist Faith-Anne
Dohm, PhD, and her former student Wendy Cummings.
In two separate studies, Dohm and Cummings surveyed clinical psychologists571
men and 616 womento determine the impact those mentors had on their career choices.
The articles appeared in Men & Masculinity (Vol. 4, No. 2) and Psychology
of Women Quarterly (Vol. 26, No. 2).
Nearly 40 percent of female clinical psychologists who were doing research
reported having a research mentor in graduate school. On the other hand, only
11 percent of women who did not have a research mentor during training were doing
research in their job.
The researchers found a similar trend in men: Nearly 50 percent of male clinical
psychologists who were doing research reported having a research mentor in graduate
school. However, 17 percent of men who did not have a research mentor were doing
research. The gender of the mentor did not significantly influence whether a student
eventually went on to do research in their professional career, according to the
study.
Participants were most likely to pursue research opportunities as a professional
and become research mentors themselves if their mentor had provided them with
practical experience and had assigned them high-responsibility research taskssuch
as collaboration on writing articles for publication, writing grants or presenting
at conventions, the researchers found.
Mentors have a greater influence on students' career direction when they give
them "tasks that say 'I'm a junior professional' rather than 'I'm an extra
pair of hands,'" says Dohm, a Fairfield University associate psychology professor.
Such responsibility can help students gain a variety of professional experiences
too, the researchers found. Mentored research students are more likely to meet
experts, present at conventions, write grants and articles for publication, and
supervise junior students, according to the study.
Despite these benefits, some students still might shy away from research because
they consider it daunting to collect and analyze data, Dohm says. "But mentors
should encourage them to face that fear, even if they end up choosing another
career path," she says.
M. DITTMANN
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