JOURNAL ARTICLE

Peer mentorship and transformational learning: PhD student experiences

Jane P. PrestonMarcella OgenchukJoseph Nsiah

Year: 2014 Journal:   Canadian Journal of Higher Education Vol: 44 (1)Pages: 52-68   Publisher: Canadian Society for the Study of Higher Education

Abstract

The purpose of the paper is to describe our peer mentorship experiences and explain how these experiences fostered transformational learning during our PhD graduate program in educational administration. As a literature backdrop, we discuss characteristics of traditional forms of mentorship and depict how our experiences of peer mentorship was unique. Through narrative inquiry, we present personal data and apply concepts of transformational learning theory to analyze our experiences. Our key finding was that it was the ambiguous boundaries combined with the formal structure of our graduate program that created an environment where peer mentorship thrived. We conclude that peer mentorship has great capacity to foster human and social capital within graduate programs for both local and international students.

Keywords:
Mentorship Transformational leadership Peer mentoring Graduate students Pedagogy Transformative learning Graduate education Psychology Sociology Medical education Medicine Social psychology

Metrics

51
Cited By
20.70
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
58
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Adult and Continuing Education Topics
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Education
Higher Education Practises and Engagement
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Education
Mentoring and Academic Development
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Social Psychology
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.