Business_Spotlight_No3_202..

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72 Business Spotlight 3/2020 CAREERS & MANAGEMENT


INTERVIEW

“The biggest challenges as a mentor are


the things outside the area of my influence”


JANE WALTON (www.janewalton.org.uk) is a social
entrepreneur in Yorkshire, northern England. She has
a background in enterprise and has been involved in
campaigns and projects to increase young people’s
entrepreneurial awareness, skills and aspirations.
She provides business mentoring and training for
young people and is a director of Yorkshire Mentor-
ing. (www.yorkshirementoring.org.uk)

What’s your definition of mentoring?
It’s a mechanism that uses a set of skills, knowledge
and qualities to help an individual to move from one
place to another. It doesn’t matter where those places
are — the final definition of mentoring has to be
agreed by the mentor and the mentee, depending on
the context in which they’re working.

Tell us about your work at Yorkshire Mentoring.
Yorkshire Mentoring was established 13 years ago.
At that time, the government was looking to stop
funding an initiative called “Aim Higher”, which
was designed to encourage young people to raise
their aspirations through mentoring. A number of
local authorities and other interested parties de-
cided to set up a social enterprise to carry on and
develop this work. So, Yorkshire Mentoring was

established. Initially, most of our work was setting
up peer mentoring programmes in schools, but
we worked on getting other funding and started
working with women coming out of prison. Our
biggest contract at the moment is working with
children who have been referred to us by the men-
tal health services. We recruit and train volunteer
mentors from the community and then match
them with the children.

What achievements are you particularly proud
of?
The peer mentoring project that we set up in one
school became sustainable and the school now
runs its own scheme, which involves all the pupils,
with the senior pupils mentoring the more junior
ones. It’s also very satisfying when so many peo-
ple who have been mentored in our programmes
now tell us that they have become mentors.

What are your biggest challenges?
The biggest challenges as a mentor are the things
outside the area of my influence. For example,
when I’m supporting a young person who is strug-
gling in a relationship with their parents and, in
fact, it’s the parents who need support. Or when
a young person is struggling at school and the
school doesn’t want to work with you.

If Yorkshire Mentoring suddenly received a
windfall donation, how would you spend it?
I’d use it on our “Women Supporting Girls” proj-
ect. It’s at the pilot stage at the moment, but I’d
like every girl at school and in the community in
Wakefield here in Yorkshire to be able to receive
the support of a mentor if she requested it.

aspiration
[)ÄspE(reIS&n]
, Ambition,
Bestrebung
design sth. [di(zaIn]
, etw. konzipieren
enterprise
[(entEpraIz]
, Unternehmen;
hier: Unternehmer-
tum

entrepreneur
[)QntrEprE(n§:]
, Unternehmer(in)
entrepreneurial
[)QntrEprE(n§:riEl]
, unternehmerisch
(denkend)
fund sth. [fVnd]
, etw. finanzieren

look to do sth.
[)lUk tE (du:]
, hier: erwägen,
etw. zu tun
mental [(ment&l]
, hier: psychisch
mentee [)men(ti:]
, Mentee, von
einem Mentor/einer
Mentorin betreute
Person

peer [pIE]
, hier: unter
Schülern/
Schülerinnen
pilot stage
[(paIlEt steIdZ]
, Erprobungsphase
recruit sb.
[ri(kru:t]
, jmdn. anwerben

scheme
[ski:m]
, Programm
senior
[(si:niE]
, hier: in den
höheren Klassen

sustainable
[sE(steInEb&l]
, nachhaltig;
hier: eine dauerhafte
Einrichtung
windfall donation
[)wIndfO:l
dEU(neIS&n]
, unerwartete
Spende

Mentor:
Jane Walton

Mentoring
uses a set
of skills,
knowledge
and qualities
to help
individuals
Free download pdf