Mentorship
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| Mentoring
someone is a very subtle skill
and a great responsibility. Much
is talked about the need for mentoring,
particularly young people and
economically marginalized groups.
But how does mentoring happen?
Where is the skill taught? What
is involved in the relationship
between mentor and student? Both
Julian and his wife, Betty, embraced
the role of mentor with skill
and enthusiasm. They opened their
home and their hearts to students
and their families. That extra
encouragement was often the deciding
factor as to success or failure
of that student. Both Julian and
Betty took their responsibility
seriously. They got to know their
students. The students knew they
were not just numbers on a grant
application. The couple shared
meals with their students, listened
to their departmental problems,
helped them find housing, daycare,
and schools for their children.
In short, Betty and Julian built
community by spending time with
their community. |
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| Julian
Samora realized the importance
of preparing the next generation
of leaders, scholars, and community
activists very early in his career.
In the Fall of 1944, just two
years out from his college graduation,
Samora was appointed the associate
director of the San Luis Institute,
a branch of Adams State College
in San Luis, Colorado. The institute
was Samora's brainchild. He had
noticed a high dropout rate among
the GI's who enrolled at Adams
State. They had been to war and
they were finding it difficult
to attend classes with 18 year
olds. The Institute served its
purpose: the older students attended
their first two years in San Luis
and then transferred to Adams
State to finish their remaining
two years. Eventually the Institute
evolved into a community college
and trade school. |
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| Julian
began mentoring within his own
family. Mose Trujillo, Julian's
brother-in-law, was one of those
returning G.I.s. He credits Julian
for encouraging everyone in the
family to complete college. Julian's
students included his wife's two
sisters and their husbands. Being
their teacher gave Julian the
authority to insist they all finish
school. In his extended family,
the women all completed college
and all the men did post-graduate
work, quite a feat for that ethnic
group in that time period. |
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| Throughout
his career, Julian Samora was
aware of the need to formalize
his efforts and mentor more students
at the graduate level. He was
always in contact with students
as their teacher, but he was looking
for a way to be more effective
to a broader range of students. |
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| In 1971,
with a grant from the Ford Foundation,
Samora inaugurated the Mexican
American Graduate Studies Program.
The program was later funded by
the United States Office of Education.
Fifty-seven students were accepted
into the program during the fourteen
years the program was operational,
and most received advanced degrees.
Students were supported in law,
history, economics, sociology,
government, and psychology. |
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| Dr. Samora
required that his students attend
a weekly seminar as well as the
classes in their own discipline.
The community building that resulted
from the weekly Mexican American
seminar helped the students stay
in school. They learned to argue
their points, they learned to
write, and they learned the ropes
of graduate school. The fact of
his near 90% retention rate speaks
to the particular style of mentoring
Dr. Samora provided his students.
He also taught them to nurture
each other and their communities. |
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| There
are also undergraduate students
and post-doctoral students who
count themselves among the number
Samora mentored. He sent people
out into their communities to
be teachers, scholars, researchers,
lawyers, activists, and writers.
Their numbers grow exponentially
each year as they mentor others
who are now mentoring yet another
generation. |
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When
Samora earned his Ph.D. in 1953,
there were only 5 or 6 other Mexican
Americans with Ph.D.s in the United
States. Samora's mentoring was
purposeful in that he helped others
reach their goals of advanced
education. For their part, these
Samoristas are making it possible
for yet another generation of
students to realize their educational
goals.
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