The effects of the YCDI! mentoring program on secondary and higher education students' social-emotional skills

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Abstract

In this article, the outcomes of two studies on the effects of the You Can Do It (YCDI!) Mentoring Program on the social-emotional skills of students in secondary and higher professional education students are presented. The YCDI! Mentoring Program focuses on increasing students’ five key skills (the 5Keys), being the level of confidence, persistence, organisation, getting along and emotional resilience (Bernard, 2005). Both studies used a pretest–posttest control group design. In the first study, 144 secondary school students participated in the experiment, and in the second study, a total of 62 students in higher professional education participated. In both studies, the number of students was equally divided across the experimental and the control group. Questionnaires, covering the five key skills of the Mentoring Program, were administered to measure the self-reported level of students’ social-emotional skills at pre- and posttest. The results of the first study revealed that the YCDI! Mentoring Program had no significant effect on the social-emotional skills of secondary school students. However, the effect of the Mentoring Program on the social-emotional skills of the students in higher professional education was significant and substantial. Limitations and implications for theory and practice are discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102700
Number of pages11
JournalInternational Journal of Educational Research
Volume133
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Educational intervention
  • higher professional education
  • secondary education
  • Social-emotional learning (SEL)
  • YCDI! mentoring program

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