Academic professional development: A reflexive account of informal mentorship in a transformative context

Transformation in Higher Education

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Academic professional development: A reflexive account of informal mentorship in a transformative context
 
Creator Reuben, Shanya Bobat, Shaida Makhaba, Vukani L.
 
Subject Education; Higher Education Studies; Professional Development; Transformative Pedagogy higher education; reflexivity; transformative learning; informal mentoring; mentorship; pedagogy; community of practice; autoethnography.
Description Despite policy directives prioritising professional academic development within South Africa’s higher education context, mentorship, as a key mechanism for situated learning, has yet to be embedded as a consistent, institutionalised practice. While various policies emphasise academic capacity building, the relational, performative and embodied nature of mentorship is seldom in the foreground. In this reflective account, I draw on my personal experience as a lecturer preparing to assume teaching responsibility for a master’s module on workplace counselling. I reflect on the role of informal mentorship, which emerged organically through relational exchanges in a community of academic practice. In this autoethnographic account, located within Wenger’s Community of Practice framework, I reposition mentorship from the academic periphery and recast it as integral to my academic professional development. My reflections draw on informal mentorship relationships with two mentors, an Indian woman (Mentor A) and an African man (Mentor B), whose contrasting but complementary approaches allowed me to express a critical voice I had long suppressed. This article reflects on a series of journal entries that informed the basis of two central themes: learning in practice, which centres on developing competence, and becoming through practice, which speaks to my academic professional development. Both are understood as relational, embedded practices. At their intersection, learning and becoming merge, revealing how competence and identity formation are shaped within communities of practice. This reflexive account consequently addresses a central question: How did relational, informal mentorship within a community of practice shape my academic professional development?Contribution: The article offers a contribution to higher education discourse by reframing mentorship as a dynamic, relational practice, fostering both professional competence and a deeper sense of academic self.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor
Date 2026-04-09
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Autoethnography; reflexive methodology; qualitative; narrative inquiry; community of practice framework
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/the.v11i0.708
 
Source Transformation in Higher Education; Vol 11 (2026); 10 pages 2519-5638 2415-0991
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/708/1187 https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/708/1188 https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/708/1189 https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/708/1190
 
Coverage South Africa Post-apartheid South African higher education transformation (1994–present) University lecturers; early-career academics; mentors; mentees; academic practitioners
Rights Copyright (c) 2026 Shanya Reuben, Shaida Bobat, Vukani L. Makhaba https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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