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Mentoring: Some ethical considerations
Authors:Dr. Vivian Weil
Affiliation:(1) Center for the Study of Ethics in the Professions, Illinois Institute of Technology, 3101 South Dearborn, 60616-3793 Chicago, IL, USA
Abstract:To counter confusion about the term ‘mentor’, and address concerns about the scarcity of mentoring, I argue for an “honorific” definition, according to which a mentor is virtuous like a saint or hero. Given the unbounded commitment of mentors, mentoring relationships must be voluntary. In contrast, the role of advisor can be specified, mandated, and monitored. I argue that departments and research groups have a moral responsibility to devise a system of roles and structures to meet graduate students’ and postdoctoral fellows’ needs for information and advice. An earlier version of this paper was presented at a conference sponsored by the National Science Foundation on Mentoring and Research Values: Students as Vital Human Resources, Chicago, March 1995.
Keywords:mentor  advisor  role model  voluntary  ethical duty  collective responsibility  department  research group  laxity  scarcity  transmission  ethical standards
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