“…Mentees’ perceptions of support and help from their mentors, happiness, and mentor satisfaction were positively associated with the mentees’ academic outcomes (e.g., liking school, scholastic efficacy, grades, education plans), social outcomes (e.g., social acceptance, parental trust, social support from parents, siblings, and other adults), and emotional outcomes (e.g., hope) in BBBS in Ireland [ 61 ]. Mentees with attuned mentors (i.e., exhibiting an ongoing capacity to identify and flexibly meet mentees’ needs; [ 62 ], who participated in a 12-week time-limited mentoring program, reported greater value for school, academic self-efficacy, and truancy, as compared with mentees with poorly attuned mentors [ 63 ]. Perceived mentors’ help and mentees’ dissatisfaction, the latter feeling hurt and betrayed, accounted for poor mentee outcomes in BBBS [ 18 ].…”