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Mentoring relationships of New Zealand nurses: an empirical study (Part 1)
Authors:L Hall
Affiliation:University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Abstract:A national, random, postal survey (n = 298) of mentoring behaviour among New Zealand nurses was undertaken. The initial research problem was to seek an explanation for the apparent lack of mentoring in New Zealand nursing. However, as the study evolved the lack of agreement concerning the definition of mentoring became a major research obstacle. A new conceptual framework of mentoring grounded in the work of Kathy Kram (1985) was devised. A quantitative global measure of mentoring behaviour (the TMS score) was used to measure levels of mentoring behaviour. This score was used as the dependent variable in subsequent statistical tests of: the definitional hypothesis-the study's validity check; the peer mentoring hypothesis which explored selected dynamics of mentor protégé relationships, and four allied research questions. The conceptual framework and approach are discussed in part one.
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