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The Journal of Positive Psychology
Dedicated to furthering research and promoting good practice
Volume 9, 2014 - Issue 5
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Articles

Elevation and mentoring: An experimental assessment of causal relations

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Pages 402-413 | Received 10 Jul 2013, Accepted 28 Mar 2014, Published online: 29 Apr 2014
 

Abstract

Mentoring is a prosocial behavior in which an experienced person guides someone with less experience. Elevation refers to the responses elicited when a person witnesses others upholding the highest standards of moral virtue. Three experimental studies bring these two domains together. For all three studies, participants were randomly assigned to either read a story of someone exhibiting moral excellence or to a control condition. Participants in the elevation condition reported feeling more elevated, more positive attitudes toward mentoring, less negative attitudes toward mentoring, greater intentions to become a mentor (Study 1); an increased proclivity to gather information about becoming a mentor (Study 2a); and, an increased tendency to engage in mentoring directly via submitting advice to students (Study 2b). In their totality, the current studies link another prosocial outcome with elevation and demonstrate a condition under which individuals are more likely to be motivated to become a mentor.

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