Assessments

Assessment Insight for Better Mentoring Decisions

GMI helps institutions use MLA and MEA instruments to understand mentor readiness, mentee engagement, matching fit, developmental support needs, and program-level improvement opportunities.

Request Assessment Information
Assessment Practice Brief How the assessment architecture fits
MLAMentor readiness and development insight
MEAMentee engagement and support insight
ReviewHuman interpretation and context
PlatformIMPACT operating and evidence fit
PilotLearning before broader implementation

Assessment Architecture

The Assessment Layer Behind Standards-Based Mentoring

Assessment connects human development insight with mentor preparation, mentee support, program design, and accountable implementation. Research design and validation are addressed through the GMI pilot and research agenda.

MLA Mentor Inventories

Prototype mentor-side instruments clarify readiness, strengths, risks under pressure, motives, values, and development priorities.

Supports
Mentor preparation, coaching, matching insight

MEA Mentee Inventories

Prototype mentee-side instruments clarify engagement readiness, learning orientation, support needs, stress risks, and developmental context.

Supports
Mentee preparation, engagement support, fit insight

IMPACT Operating Workflows

The intended operating and evidence layer for intake, assessment delivery, interpretation support, support planning, lifecycle tracking, and reporting.

Supports
Operational consistency and program visibility

Human Review & Interpretation

Assessment results are interpreted with context, participant voice, privacy awareness, ethical boundaries, and professional judgment.

Supports
Responsible use, trust, and non-exclusionary practice

Decision Support

How Results Support Decisions

Assessment outputs support mentoring decisions while preserving professional judgment, participant voice, and program leadership.

Decision AreaPractical UseInstitutional Value
Individual Development

Helps mentors and mentees identify strengths, risks, needs, and next developmental actions.

Creates a more structured basis for participant growth and support.

Mentor Preparation

Informs coaching, preparation, and development before or during a mentoring relationship.

Improves consistency in mentor readiness and support quality.

Mentee Support

Clarifies readiness, engagement needs, learning preferences, and potential barriers to progress.

Helps programs respond to participant needs earlier and more responsibly.

Matching Insight

Supports matching conversations and relationship setup with human review and contextual judgment.

Strengthens fit decisions without reducing people to automated labels.

Program Design

Helps program leaders strengthen training, facilitation, support resources, and implementation quality.

Gives institutions practical feedback loops for continuous improvement.

Institutional Reporting

Provides aggregated insight into participation needs, support patterns, and program improvement areas.

Supports clearer reporting for leaders, funders, and implementation partners.

Responsible Use Guardrails

Assessment supports growth, not gatekeeping.

GMI assessments support growth and program learning, not gatekeeping or automated judgment.

Developmental

Used to support growth, coaching, preparation, and relationship quality.

Human-Reviewed

Not treated as automated judgment or a replacement for professional interpretation.

Non-Exclusionary

Not used as a standalone gatekeeping or punitive screening tool.

Context-Aware

Interpreted with attention to role, culture, accessibility, and program purpose.

Pilot Participation

How Institutions Participate in the Assessment Pilot

The pilot conversation is intended for institutions evaluating how MLA, MEA, and assessment-enabled workflows could support responsible mentoring implementation.

Best Fit

Institutions with an active or planned mentoring program, a defined participant audience, and a need for stronger preparation, matching, support, or reporting.

What Participants Receive

A structured pilot conversation, assessment-use planning, interpretation guidance, and practical insight into how MLA and MEA may support program decisions.

Validation Boundary

Assessment outputs are used for learning, support, and program improvement. Formal validation findings and research claims belong on the research pathway.

Express Interest

Share your program type, audience, goals, and likely participant group.

Align Use Case

Clarify where assessment insight would support preparation, matching, development, or reporting.

Participate in Pilot

Coordinate assessment use, participant communication, interpretation support, and implementation workflow.

Review Insights

Use pilot learning to refine support models, operating needs, reporting logic, and future validation priorities.