E-Mentoring Female Underrepresented Public Health Student Researchers: Supporting a More Diverse Postpandemic Workforce.

Health Secur

Ponn P. Mahayosnand, MPH, and Sheilamae Ablay, PhD, are Research Scholars; both at the Ronin Institute for Independent Scholarship, Montclair, NJ. Lavezza Zanders is a Student, School of Medicine, International University of Health Sciences, St. Kitts, West Indies. Z. M. Sabra and D. M. Sabra are Students, Faculty of Medicine, Islamic University of Gaza, Gaza Strip. Saman Essa is a Student, Department of Psychological, Health, and Learning Sciences, College of Education, University of Houston, Houston, TX. Samiha Ahmed is a Student, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, College Park, MD. Diana Mora Bermejo is a Student, Department of Health, Policy, and Management and Department of Global Studies, Providence College, Providence, RI. Maryam Funmilayo, MA, is a Student, Department of Health and Kinesiology, College of Education and Health, Lamar University, Beaumont, TX.

Published: June 2021

Within higher education, underrepresented students continue to face inequalities and discrimination, with unique challenges surfacing during the COVID-19 pandemic. Mentoring through formal or informal channels is one way to offer assistance to such students. During COVID-19 lockdowns, as classes and work moved online, mentoring also transitioned online. Electronic mentoring, or e-mentoring, was implemented formally by some universities and informally by independent researchers. This article describes the informal mentoring experiences of the lead author with 8 female student researchers, 6 of whom were mentored online. The students represented different racial and ethnic backgrounds, offering a collection of e-mentoring case studies during the pandemic. These independent field reports should not be assumed to represent any of the students' 6 universities, but they are a sample of what can be achieved by invested e-mentors. By sharing these anecdotal experiences, the authors call on all researchers of underrepresented groups to consider e-mentoring to support underrepresented student researchers and diversify the public health research field.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/hs.2021.0042DOI Listing

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