“Sometimes, all a student needs to stay in school is someone who’s been through it—and stayed.”
— Serene Planet Mentor, Manikganj Team
In Bangladesh, school dropout rates remain a critical challenge, especially at the secondary level. Despite improvements in enrollment over the past decade, a significant percentage of students still leave school before completing Grade 10, with girls and rural youth disproportionately affected.
Multiple factors contribute to this issue:
🚫 Financial hardship
🚫 Early marriage
🚫 Lack of parental support
🚫 Gender-based violence
🚫 Irrelevant or rigid curricula
🚫 Academic failure and low self-confidence
But one often overlooked solution to these issues lies in something both simple and powerful: peer mentorship.
At Serene Planet, we believe that students learn best from those they can relate to. That’s why many of our education-focused programs are rooted in peer-to-peer mentorship models—where students help students stay, thrive, and succeed in school.
Peer mentorship is a non-hierarchical support system where more experienced or confident students guide and assist their peers academically, emotionally, and socially.
Unlike traditional teacher-student relationships, peer mentors act more like big siblings—offering relatable advice, empathetic support, and academic assistance. Whether it’s help with tough math problems, time management, or just being a listening ear, peer mentors bridge the gap between struggle and success.
Here’s why peer mentorship is especially effective in contexts like Bangladesh:
Students often hesitate to speak openly with teachers or adults. But when someone their age—or just a little older—offers guidance, it feels safer and more authentic.
“My mentor was from the same area, wore the same uniform, and walked the same muddy path to school. If she could do it, so could I.”
— A mentee from Cox’s Bazar
Research shows that students who teach others often solidify their own learning. In Serene Planet’s peer groups, mentors not only help their juniors, but also improve their academic retention and leadership skills.
For students facing personal challenges like abuse, poverty, or low self-esteem, peer mentors offer a safe space to talk—reducing feelings of isolation, which often lead to dropping out.
When a school or community embeds peer mentorship, it creates a cycle of support: mentored students become mentors themselves. This multiplies impact over time.
At Serene Planet, we’ve implemented peer mentorship programs across multiple districts including Manikganj, Cox’s Bazar, and Chittagong. Here’s how it works:
We select students from higher grades (Class 9–12 or college level) based on their academic record, empathy, and communication skills. We prioritize students from similar backgrounds to ensure relatability.
Mentors undergo a 2-day basic training on:
Active listening
Study techniques
Gender sensitivity
Mental health basics
Referral pathways for serious cases
They are also given journals and guides developed by our education and youth teams.
Each mentor is assigned 2–3 mentees, matched based on age, needs, and proximity. They meet weekly for:
Homework help
Study planning
Self-esteem building activities
Sharing coping strategies
Goal setting
Mentors keep a simple logbook and receive monthly check-ins from Serene Planet team leaders. We also collect feedback from mentees, teachers, and parents.
In hathazari,chsattogram, Nila dropped out of school after Grade 8 due to household responsibilities and peer pressure. When she met Arna, a peer mentor from our local team, everything changed.
Arna began visiting her every week, helping her with lessons and talking about her own struggles in balancing work and school. With her encouragement, Nila re-enrolled. Today, she’s preparing for SSC and hopes to become a teacher.
“If it weren’t for Arna, I’d be married by now. She saw the spark in me when I couldn’t see it myself.”
— Nila, age 16
In Cox’s Bazar, dropout rates spiked due to poor academic performance. So Mehedi, one of our peer mentors, started a weekend “Math Club” under a tree in his village. Within three months, dropout risk among his 8 mentees dropped by 60%. The school now supports and has adopted the initiative.
Peer mentorship is not just anecdotal—it’s backed by global research:
🔹 According to UNESCO, peer mentoring can increase school retention by up to 35% in marginalized communities.
🔹 A study by Save the Children in Nepal found peer-led tutoring significantly improved girls’ re-enrollment.
🔹 Programs in Kenya and Ghana showed that mentorship improved both academic scores and emotional resilience among at-risk students.
In contexts similar to Bangladesh—where teacher shortages, family constraints, and financial hardship are common—low-cost, high-impact models like peer mentoring are essential.
Interested in replicating this model in your school or community? Here’s a simple roadmap:
Begin with 5–10 mentors and a pilot group. Track attendance, feedback, and academic performance.
Teachers can help identify potential mentors and support mentees’ learning needs.
Explain the benefits of mentorship to gain community trust and buy-in.
Recognition certificates, letters of recommendation, or leadership titles motivate youth to stay committed.
Nothing inspires like real impact. Celebrate mentee progress through community events or school meetings.
We are currently expanding our mentorship programs to urban slums in Chittagong and remote hill tracts in collaboration with local volunteers and community leaders. Our goal is to:
Train 500+ mentors by 2026
Reach 5,000 at-risk students
Integrate mentorship into formal school systems through policy advocacy
In the fight against school dropout, no solution is one-size-fits-all. But peer mentorship is a proven, accessible, and sustainable model that works—especially when powered by youth.
When students believe in each other, they stay in school. When young people lead, entire communities rise.
“Peer mentorship helped me stay in school. Now, I’m helping others stay too. This is how we build a future.”
—Turzo, A Serene Planet mentor, Chittagong
🧑🏫 Are you a teacher who wants to implement mentorship in your school?
📚 A student who wants to become a mentor?
🤝 An organization that wants to collaborate?
We’d love to hear from you.
📧 Reach us at: [YourContact@sereneplanet.org]
Together, let’s make education a chain of hope that no child slips through.