Researching and reorienting mentorship practices to empower the success of Indigenous Australian young people

This article discusses mentorship provided to Indigenous Australian secondary school leavers. The authors suggest that although current scholarship in the field is insightful, there is a dearth focussing on mentorship provided during the post-secondary school transitional phase. Also, much literatur...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education
Main Authors: Matilda Harry, Michelle Trudgett, Susan Page, Rebekah Grace
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit, The University of Queensland 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.55146/ajie.v52i1.46
https://doaj.org/article/f151aac1330143fc9f2649873eaa56ca
Description
Summary:This article discusses mentorship provided to Indigenous Australian secondary school leavers. The authors suggest that although current scholarship in the field is insightful, there is a dearth focussing on mentorship provided during the post-secondary school transitional phase. Also, much literature problematizes Indigenous mentees and is contextually bound to individual programs, singular communities or cohorts. Although governments, industries, communities and further education providers have funded and facilitated many mentorship programs across the nation, little systemic or institutional impact has been made. Current data demonstrates a continuous downward trajectory in the full engagement of Indigenous Australian secondary school leavers, that is, those who are full-time working, studying or both studying and working (Australian Bureau Statistics, 2021; Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, 2018). This is concerning as the post-secondary school transitional phase is cited as a critical stage for combating or embedding inequities young Indigenous Australians often endure intergenerationally (O’Shea, McMahon, Priestly, Bodkin-Andrews & Harwood, 2016). By centring national and international First Nations scholars the authors argue for reconceptualisations of Indigenous mentee success through Indigenous ontological lenses and reorientations of mentorship frameworks towards approaches which strengthen young peoples’ connections with culture, community, Elders and Country.