CONCEPT
The Mentor Relationship
Nakamura's empirical finding that the <em>transmission of standards</em> — not knowledge, not technique — is the single most important function the mentor provides, and the function AI most thoroughly fails to replicate.
Nakamura conducted extensive research on mentoring alongside her flow and vital engagement work, producing a body of evidence that mentoring's core function is not the transmission of knowledge or technique but the transmission of standards — the implicit, often inarticulate criteria for what counts as excellent work within a domain. Standards cannot be written in manuals. They are transmitted socially, through the specific mechanism of sustained proximity between a master and an apprentice, watching the master reject what looks acceptable and accept what looks ordinary, gradually absorbing the distinction between competence and mastery. The AI moment threatens this transmission mechanism by making mentoring functionally optional — the junior builder can solve any implementation problem by consulting Claude — while the developmental function of the relationship remains essential.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Nakamura's research on 'good mentoring' emerged from a large Good Work project she conducted with Csikszentmihalyi and Howard Gardner. The project examined how excellent practitioners in various domains developed and
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