12: Relationship Celebration and Program Exit
Standard of Practice: Programs should facilitate a relationship celebration and program exit process that ends the mentoring experience on a positive note and provides an opportunity for participants to express gratitude, share feedback, and process the experience of being part of the program.
Practices Supporting this Standard
The program has written policies and procedures for addressing various mentoring relationship closure scenarios, including, but not limited to, closures that are the result of typical program cycles (e.g., end of the school year) and those that result from unexpected circumstances (e.g., mentor or youth move away, instances of inappropriate behavior by a participant, a mentor or child being unreachable).
A program’s policies and procedures around relationship closure should include responses to a wide range of potential scenarios, especially those that may be sudden or negative and risk harming the youth or mentor, as well as steps to ensure the activities noted below are completed.
Regardless of why a mentoring relationship is ending, the program should prepare participants for the closure of their relationship and facilitate a series of closure activities, including, but not limited to:
The program has criteria for determining, and a process for assigning, new relationships to youth and mentors who are still eligible after their initial mentoring relationship has ended.
While programs may choose to re-assign youth or mentors to new relationships, they should only do so when participants are deemed a good fit for a new relationship based on established criteria related to how their initial relationship was received, the factors that led to its dissolution, and the potential for doing harm if an additional mentoring experience ends on a bad note. See the discussion section of this Element for more information on this nuanced need to weigh opportunity and risk when rematching participants.
The program holds a celebration event in each program cycle to celebrate the relationships and achievements of program participants.
For mentoring relationships that are continuing on to the next cycle, this is a nice way to honor their efforts; for those that are ending, these events can serve as a capstone to the experience and can easily be integrated into the other program exit practices detailed above.
Because there is tremendous diversity in how and where mentoring is delivered to young people, here we offer additional practices and recommendations related to this Element for some common mentoring contexts. Readers should note that there may be overlap in the following categories (e.g., a peer mentoring program in a school or a Boys & Girls Club offering a group mentoring program on-site) and read all that may be relevant to their work. The next recommendations can align relationship ending and program exit activities in a number of common mentoring programs and contexts.

GROUP MENTORING MODELS
Group mentoring programs may need to supplement the general practices above by also engaging in the following practices:
PEER MENTORING MODELS
Peer programs are encouraged to give mentors and their younger mentees additional time to engage in many of the closure practices noted above. Additionally, because peers in a program are likely to see each other outside of program contexts, closure activities should emphasize the rules around confidentiality and stress the importance of adhering to them in social situations after their time in the program has ended.
E-MENTORING MODELS
The virtual context of e-mentoring programs requires some adaptations to the general practices noted above, namely:
SCHOOL- AND OTHER FORMAL SITE-BASED MODELS
For school and site-based programs, the general relationship closure and celebration practices noted at the beginning of this Element will likely be sufficient. However, the end of school years (or program cycles in other organizations) are often hectic and filled with many competing tasks and priorities. Thus, we recommend that school- and site-based models start the celebration and closure processes early, ideally closing matches before the very end of the year so that these celebrations and reflections are not rushed or skipped altogether.
We also encourage school- or site-based programs to recognize the site-based staff who have supported the work of the mentoring program over the course of the year (e.g., teachers, counselors, administrative staff). These individuals often provide critical support to the functioning of the mentoring program and honoring their contributions during celebration events is also important.
INFORMAL MENTORING MODELS
Given that informal relationships between staff mentors and youth participants start of organically and without formal matching, it makes sense that the ending stages of these relationships will also look differently than in more formalized programs. In many cases, saying goodbye to a staff mentor can be challenging for a young person who is leaving the broader youth development organization — it may feel like an additional loss given the potentially close relationship they may have formed. For organizations that offer informal mentoring, we encourage practices such as:
- Clarifying with youth and mentors that their mentoring relationship is ending and providing an opportunity to debrief the experience.
- Teaching youth how to find additional mentors, either with other staff at the site or through other individuals or services in the community.
- Informing caregivers, as needed, about the shift in the youth’s mentoring engagement.
- Reminding all participants in the relationships about rules governing confidentiality and ongoing communication or contact, especially if youth are continuing to participate in the broader services offered.
Programs may want to set benchmarks and track progress around metrics such as:
Finding Mentors, Finding Success. YouthBuild U.S.A., National Mentoring Resource Center. This guide can be used to support youth with finding their next mentor and incorporated into closure practices.
Match Closure–Fostering Progress. Silver Lining Mentoring,
This webinar explores match closure as a critical consideration when mentoring programs serve youth involved in the child welfare system.
“They Always Come, and Never Say Goodbye”: Healthy Closure in Mentoring. National Mentoring Resource Center.
This webinar provides an overview of research on closure, types of relationship endings, when and how to facilitate closure, and approaches to closure across programs and settings.
Tools to Strengthen Match Support and Closure. National Mentoring Resource Center.
Includes tools developed by Big Brothers Big Sisters of Massachusetts Bay to support closure practices.

