viii Contents 5. Promises and Pitfalls of Mentoring Women in Business and Academia 79 Michele Paludi, Jennifer Martin, Tina Stern, and Darlene C. DeFour 6. Service Learning as a Model for Mentoring Women 109 Arvilla Payne-Jackson, Kathleen ScoĴ, Ajeenah Haynes, and Germon Miller PART III: FOCUS ON WOMEN OF COLOR 7. Enhancing Capabilities of Women and Ethnic Minorities 129 Asuncion Miteria Austria and A. Marie M. Austria 8. Mentoring Asian American Women 149 Reiko Homma-True 9. Madrinas, Comadres, and Luminarias: Latina Mentors in Action 161 Lillian Comas-Diaz 10. Women of Color as Mentors 173 Melba J. T. Vasquez and Jessica Henderson Daniel PART IV: MENTORING FOR ALL WOMEN 11. A Mentor—A Friend in Deed 189 Mary E. Reuder 12. Mentoring Needs of EVERYWOMAN: The Accidental Mentor and Beyond 197 Carole A. Rayburn 13. Perspectives from a Nontraditional Mentor 223 Helen D. PraĴ 14. Beyond Mentoring: Opening Doors and Systems 233 Shari E. Miles-Cohen, Gwendolyn Puryear Keita, Gabriel H. J. Twose, and Susan J. Houston PART V: MENTORING FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF MENTAL HEALTH 15. The Road to Leadership Roles 251 Jean Lau Chin
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