Sept 2024 T/MI newsletter

September 2024 - Issue 234

Tutor Mentor Institute LLC newsletter heading with blue background

Tutor/Mentor Programs Kick Off New Year!

During the last two weeks of September, volunteer-based tutor and/or mentor programs across the country will be hosting orientations and training for volunteers and students in organized tutor, mentor and learning programs. By the first week of October most volunteers will have had their first meeting with students they are assigned to work with through the 2024-25 school year.

 

That was the what happened every year from 1975 to 2011 in the Chicago programs that I led.

 

Use the ideas and resources shared in this monthly newsletter to help you build and sustain mentor-rich, school and non-school, tutor, mentor and learning programs that reach K-12 youth in all areas of persistent poverty. These resources can be used by anyone, in Chicago, or around the world.

 

Please share this so others in your city can find and use these resources!

Visit Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC Website

If programs are able to provide adequate support and keep volunteers involved for multiple years, many will take on greater roles to help kids.

This graphic was created several years to show the potential growth of volunteers in organized tutor/mentor programs. Visit this Tutor/Mentor blog article and view the graphic, then look at animations created by interns to provide their own interpretation.

 

One of the reasons I'm passionate about volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs is that they connect people who don't live in high poverty areas with kids, families and schools that are in these areas. As volunteers learn more of the challenges many will do more to help the kids, their programs and their communities overcome these challenges.

 

Increasing the number of people who care is essential. That requires an on-going effort.

 

This won't happen unless individual programs have an on-going volunteer support and learning strategy in place with these goals in mind. When you view a program's website, see if there is an explanation of how they support and retain volunteers.

 

And, unless programs have on-going operating dollars to hire and retain staff, few will be able to provide the continuous support this strategy requires.

 

The second lesson from the article I'm sharing is that interns from Chicago universities spent time reading my article then created their own interpretation. This is an activity that could be duplicated in hundreds of schools, throughout the world, with the end result that more people become personally involved in trying to solve the problems facing people living in areas of persistent poverty.

 

Visit this Tutor/Mentor blog to see work interns did between 2005 and 2015. If you have students doing similar work, do you have a blog or website that shares their projects?

Changes to Constant Contact email address. Due to a new policy, all email coming from services like Constant Contact will have a different format. This may cause email to go into your spam box. That means the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. will now be different.

This is the address that will be on the email for this newsletter. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Tips for volunteers and staff based on my own leadership of tutor/mentor programs

I led two tutor/mentor programs in Chicago between 1975 and 2011. I was a volunteer with a full time advertising job while I led the Tutor/Mentor program at the Montgomery Ward Corporate Headquarters in Chicago from 1975 to 1990. That program connected 2nd to 6th grade kids from the Cabrini-Green public housing complex with workplace volunteers in weekly sessions that ran from 5:15 to 6:30 pm. In 1975 we had 100 pairs of kids and volunteers. By 1990 we had 300 pairs. We converted that program to a nonprofit in 1990 and I led it's first two years of growth, serving 440 kids and 550 volunteers by June 1992.

 

I left that program in October 1992, and with the help of a few other veteran volunteers, created a second program, to help kids who aged out of the first program after 6th grade have continued support from 7th through 12th grade. We started our first sessions in January 1993 with 7 volunteers and 5 teens and grew each year. By 1998 we had 80 teens and 100 volunteers, and some of our fist teen members were graduating from high school. Due to space limitations we kept that enrollment number from 1998 to 2011.

 

I give this background to offer credibility to the lessons I share on the "How to start a program" page of the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC website, and in articles, like this one, on the Tutor/Mentor blog.

 

I learned much of what I know from other tutor/mentor programs, beginning back in 1973 when I first became a volunteer tutor/mentor. One reason I host a list of Chicago and national programs, and organized Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conferences every six months from May 1994 to May 2015, was to encourage other programs to share their strategies and learn from each other.

 

While I have not hosted a conference since 2015 I am on social media everyday, looking at information posted by other programs and trying to draw attention to those posts, so others connect and learn from each other. The need to learn from each other is on-going.

 

How are youth programs in your community sharing their strategies and networking with each other?

 

Become familiar with the on-line learning resources in the Tutor/Mentor Library.

 

The Homework Help concept map in the top graphic can be found at this link. Each node on the map has links to sections of the tutor/mentor library with a wide range of learning resources. Our role as volunteers, parents and leaders is to help students find and use these resources to achieve whatever life goals they aspire to achieve. Use your email newsletters, blogs, social media and bulletin boards to call attention to these resources.

 

The second concept map shows resources in the Tutor/Mentor library that program leaders, volunteers and donors can use to help on-going tutor/mentor programs grow.

 

Visit this Tutor/Mentor blog article and consider how you and your volunteers are learning from Internet libraries. Look at the "Cool Cash" program we tried at the Cabrini Connections program in 2008-09. Borrow some of the ideas. Share your own.

Below are resources to use. View latest links added to tutor/mentor library, click here

Recent Tutor/Mentor Blog articles that point to Tutor/Mentor Connection archived files:

(Do you have a blog? Share it on social media)

 

Remembering 9/11. How much sacrifice is enough? - click here

 

Mapping Birth-to-Work Strategies - click here

 

Do you think of mentoring as a jobs creation strategy? I wrote this on Labor Day 2024 - click here

 

Mapping Participation - An Example - click here

 

What are issues facing our next President? View my concept map - click here

 

Sharing the successes we each have. My 1995 vision - click here

 

"Yummy's" story - Not New for Me. - click here

 

Browse the archives. Apply the ideas. - click here

 

30-year history of reaching out to universities - click here

 

 

 

Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

* Lists of Chicago area tutor, mentor programs - click here

 

* Resource Library - click here

 

* Strategy PDFs by Tutor/Mentor - click here

 

* Work done by interns - click here

 

* Maps and Map-Stories from past 30 years - click here

 

* Political Action resources - click here

 

* Featured collections on Wakeletclick here

 

* Tutor/Mentor Institute Videos - click here

 

* About T/MI articles on blog - click here

 

* History of T/MC - T/MI articles - click here

 

* Create a New Tutor/Mentor Connection - click here

 

 

* Chicago Youth Serving Organizations in Intermediary Roles - click here to view a concept map showing many organizations working to help improve the lives of Chicago area youth. Follow the links.

Resources & Announcements

(New additions are at top of this list)

 

* National Writing Project. Get your students involved - click here View this sample post on Twitter (X) - click here

 

* Explaining Achievement Gaps: The Role of Socioeconomic Factors - click here

 

* Addressing Wealth Inequality in America - click here

 

* Why Philanthropy Needs to Invest in Social Capital - click here

 

* Persistent Poverty in America - click here

 

* The Color of Wealth - Institute on Race, Power and Political Economy - click here

 

* Minnesota Executive Map Portfolio - click here

 

* American Inequality Data Portal - click here

 

* MyChiMyFuture - Chicago youth programs map and directory. click here; visit the website - click here

 

* To & Through Project website - click here: Follow on Twitter - @UChiToThrough

* Center for Effective Philanthropy - click here

 

* Forefront -Illinois' statewide association of nonprofits, foundations and advisors. click here

 

* AfterSchool Alliance resources - click here

 

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

 

* Chicago Public Schools locator map - click here

 

* Chicago Health Atlas - click here

 

* Digital Divide resources - click here

 

* Proven Tutoring clearinghouse - click here

 

* Chicago STEM Pathways Cooperative - click here

 

* South Side STEM Asset maps - read about using maps - click here

 

* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

 

* Prison Policy Initiative - click here

 

* ChiHackNight - remote civic technology meet-up; every Tuesday in Chicago - see weekly agenda

Thank you for reading.

 

While I try to send this only once a month, I write blog articles weekly. Throughout the newsletter I post links to a few of the articles published in the past month or earlier. I encourage you to spend a little time each week reading these articles and following the links. Use the ideas and presentations in group discussions with other people who are concerned about the same issues.

 

I encourage others to duplicate what I'm doing. Write a blog and share your own vision, strategy and challenges. Share your link and I'll add it to this list in the Tutor/Mentor library.

 

view current and past newsletters at this link.

Please encourage friends, family, co-workers to sign up to receive this newsletter. Click here.

(If you subscribe, don't forget to respond to the confirmation email).

Please help me keep this resource available. Visit this page and contribute to help the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC

Tutor/Mentor Connection, Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC

Serving Chicago area since 1993

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | http://www.tutormentorexchange.net

 

Thank you for reading. And thank you to those who help fund the

Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC and this newsletter. Please send a 2024 contribution.

 

Connect with Dan (tutormentor) on one of these social media platforms.

Twitter (X)

Linkedin
Facebook

Bluesky

Instagram

Oct 2024 TM eNews

October 2024 - Issue 235

Tutor Mentor Institute LLC newsletter heading with blue background

After the Election, What's Next?

The next three weeks will be a stress-filled period as we determine who will be our next President of the United States, and our representatives in Congress and state and local governments.

 

As volunteers and students are starting a new school year, this question has huge ramifications.

 

I posted a blog article on October 14, showing some issues that need to be addressed, and some thoughts on how we connect with each other to find solutions to challenges we, and our students, are facing.

I'm sharing some parts of that article in this newsletter.

 

Use the ideas and resources shared in this monthly newsletter to help you build and sustain mentor-rich, school and non-school, tutor, mentor and learning programs that reach K-12 youth in all areas of persistent poverty. These resources can be used by anyone, in Chicago, or around the world.

 

Please share this so others in your city can find and use these resources!

Visit Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC Website

In August 2024 I shared this concept map, asking "What are the issues facing the next President?"

I featured this concept map and that question again in today's article, which you can read at this link.

 

My article includes a link to the official Kamala Harris for President website issues page, which is at https://kamalaharris.com/issues/

 

A project that youth and volunteers in school and non-school programs might engage in would be to compare the issues on my map, with the issues on the Harris website. Then, create your own map, showing issues that are important to you, your students and your community.

 

I use cMapTools to create my concept maps, but there are other visualization tools you can use. Another activity students and volunteers might do is to go through the links in this page of my library, to learn more about visualization tools they might use for a project like this.

 

Finally, share your maps via blogs, videos, social media, etc. You can influence what local and national leaders focus on over the next decade.

 

New Resource: Today I learned of a "Stop Project 2025 Comic Book Project" site, created by comic book writers and artists who are furious about the Heritage Foundations' plan to consolidate power under authoritarian rule. Visit their site and share the comics.

Changes to Constant Contact email address. Due to a new policy, all email coming from services like Constant Contact will have a different format. This may cause email to go into your spam box. That means the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. will now be different.

 

This is the address that will be on the email for this newsletter. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

In my blog article I pasted text from previous articles, with links to those pages. I'm repeating that here. I hope you'll take a look at these over the next few weeks and months. Click on the graphic to find links to articles with these quotes.

 

 

.

.

.

Below are resources to use. View latest links added to tutor/mentor library, click here

Resources & Announcements

(New additions are at top of this list)

 

 

* National Writing Project. Live now! Get your students involved - click here View this sample post on Twitter (X) - click here

 

* Registration now open for 2025 National Mentoring Summit, Jan 19-31, 2025 - click here

 

* National Mentoring Resource Center - click here

 

Trust Talks - podcast by The Chicago Community Trust highlights the Trust's strategic priority to close Chicago region's racial and ethnic wealth gap - click here

 

* Addressing Wealth Inequality in America - click here

 

* Why Philanthropy Needs to Invest in Social Capital - click here

 

* Persistent Poverty in America - click here

 

* The Color of Wealth - Institute on Race, Power and Political Economy - click here

 

* Minnesota Executive Map Portfolio - click here

 

* American Inequality Data Portal - click here

 

* MyChiMyFuture - Chicago youth programs map and directory. click here; visit the website - click here

 

* To & Through Project website - click here: Follow on Twitter - @UChiToThrough

* Center for Effective Philanthropy - click here

 

* Forefront -Illinois' statewide association of nonprofits, foundations and advisors. click here

 

* AfterSchool Alliance resources - click here

 

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

 

* Chicago Public Schools locator map - click here

 

* Chicago Health Atlas - click here

 

* Digital Divide resources - click here

 

* Proven Tutoring clearinghouse - click here

 

* Chicago STEM Pathways Cooperative - click here

 

* South Side STEM Asset maps - read about using maps - click here

 

* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

 

* Prison Policy Initiative - click here

 

 

* ChiHackNight - remote and face-to-face civic technology meet-up; every Tuesday evening in Chicago - see weekly agenda

 

 

 

Recent Tutor/Mentor Blog articles that point to Tutor/Mentor Connection archived files:

(Do you have a blog? Share it on social media)

 

Connecting networks - the Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conferences - click here

 

Disaster Recovery, Mentoring Kids to Careers - Long Term Commitment Needed - click here

 

Hey CEO! Take this Role! - click here

 

Dave Winer - a blogger for 30 years! - click here

 

The Role of Intermediaries - click here

 

Browse the archives. Apply the ideas. - click here

 

30-year history of reaching out to universities - click here

 

 

Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

 

* Lists of Chicago area, volunteer-based tutor, mentor programs - click here

 

* Homework help and volunteer training resources - click here

 

* Resource Library - click here

 

* Strategy essays by Tutor/Mentor - click here

 

* Work done by interns in past - click here

 

* Maps and Map-Stories from past 30 years - click here

 

* Political Action resources - click here

 

* Featured collections on Wakeletclick here

 

* Tutor/Mentor Institute Videos - click here

 

* About T/MI articles on blog - click here

 

* History of T/MC - T/MI articles - click here

 

* Create a New Tutor/Mentor Connection - click here

 

 

* Chicago Youth Serving Organizations in Intermediary Roles - click here to view a concept map showing many organizations working to help improve the lives of Chicago area youth. Follow the links.

Thank you for reading.

 

While I try to send this only once a month, I write blog articles weekly. Throughout the newsletter I post links to a few of the articles published in the past month or earlier. I encourage you to spend a little time each week reading these articles and following the links. Use the ideas and presentations in group discussions with other people who are concerned about the same issues.

 

I encourage others to duplicate what I'm doing. Write a blog and share your own vision, strategy and challenges. Share your link and I'll add it to this list in the Tutor/Mentor library.

View current and past newsletters at this link.

Please encourage friends, family, co-workers to sign up to receive this newsletter. Click here.

(If you subscribe, don't forget to respond to the confirmation email).

Please help me keep this resource available. Visit this page and contribute to help the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC

Tutor/Mentor Connection, Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC

Serving Chicago area since 1993

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | http://www.tutormentorexchange.net

 

Thank you for reading. And thank you to those who help fund the

Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC and this newsletter. Please send a 2024 contribution.

 

Connect with Dan (tutormentor) on one of these social media platforms.

Twitter (X)

Linkedin
Facebook

Bluesky

Instagram

Nov 2024 eNews

November 2024 - Issue 236

Kids Need Help More than Ever

The election did not turn out as many of us wished it would and now there is great fear about what the next few years will bring to America and the world.

 

Yet, we still need to do the work of raising kids. Our own, and those in different places and with different life circumstances.

 

Over the Holiday Season youth serving organizations will be reaching out for financial support. Please use my lists to find and choose programs to aid with your contributions.

Use the ideas and resources shared in this monthly newsletter to help you build and sustain mentor-rich, school and non-school, tutor, mentor and learning programs that reach K-12 youth in all areas of persistent poverty. These resources can be used by anyone, in Chicago, or around the world.

 

Please share this so others in your city can find and use these resources!

Visit Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC Website

This is what I've focused on for the past 30 years.

Since forming the Tutor/Mentor Connection in Chicago in 1993 I've created many visual essays to share strategies for connecting networks and drawing support to youth, and youth-serving programs, in every high poverty area of Chicago and other cities. View this PDF at this link.

 

During the past year I've updated most of my visual essays and put them on the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC website. There are three pages of essays! This is page 1. In the past interns have created their own interpretations of some of these. This video was created in 2013 by an intern from South Korea. This is is another interpretation, created using Prezi. I share these as an INVITATION for youth and adults to create their own versions of these, applying the strategies to helping kids in their own communities. Just include a link back to my website to show where the ideas originated.

 

NOTE: I updated all of my PDFs in 2024 and showed my account on Twitter. In the past month there has been a growing movement of people leaving the platform. I'll still check there for people trying to reach me, but also am on other social media platforms.

Changes to Constant Contact email address. Due to a new policy, all email coming from services like Constant Contact will have a different format. This may cause email to go into your spam box. That means the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. will now be different.

 

This is the address that will be on the email for this newsletter. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Identifying existing youth tutor, mentor and learning programs in Chicago and drawing attention to them has been my goal since 1993. See my lists at http://www.tutormentorexchange.net

This list is on the left site, middle, of the www.tutormentorexchange.net site. The first link opens to my lists of Chicago area volunteer-based tutor, mentor and learning programs. The second link opens to lists of other types of youth-serving programs in the Chicago region, and to similar programs throughout the country. Further down you'll see that I've created lists showing Chicago tutor/mentor program accounts on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter.

While many programs post regular updates on one or more of these social media sites, many don't post anything at all. How can they expect volunteers and donors to find them if they are not broadcasting an invitation to visit their website?

 

In the past year the change in ownership as Twitter has caused many accounts to move from the site. Some have created new accounts on BlueSky and/or Mastodon. Some use Threads. I use all three, but am beginning to use BlueSky more frequently. If you're part of a youth serving program or afterschool network please connect with me and others on one or more of these platforms.

 

I studied history in college, then spent three years in the US Army, trained in intelligence gathering. These are habits of learning and innovation that I've applied to leading tutor/mentor programs for 35 years and to trying to help similar programs reach k-12 kids in every high poverty area of Chicago and other cities.

 

Visit the Tutor/Mentor blog and read this article about "unfurling", "unflattening" and "the adjacent possible". These are learning habits that adults need to adopt and help kids learn.

How to apply information to problem- solving I've posted many articles on the Tutor/Mentor blog showing how information can support decision-making and help build and sustain more effective youth serving programs in more places. Here's an article title "If more youth-serving programs took this role..."

Giving Tuesday will be December 3, 2024

 

Many of the organizations that I point to from the Tutor/Mentor library will be raising money on Giving Tuesday. I'll give small donations to 6-8 myself. I wish I could do more.

 

You can help. If you're a non profit, share your Giving Tuesday information on social media. If you're anyone who want's to make a difference, watch for these notices and pick one, or many, to support. Find more information here.

 

Happy Thanksgiving

 

This is a graphic created by one of our Cabrini Connections students in the mid 2000s. Like much of the work done by interns and students, it has a long life.

 

I hope you enjoy gathering with friends and family, or just watching a football, basketball game, or movie by yourself.

 

Then, have a safe, happy and healthy holiday season.

Below are resources to use. View latest links added to tutor/mentor library, click here

Resources & Announcements

(New additions are at top of this list)

 

* Community Commons resource center - click here

 

* Public Health & Equity Resource Navigator (PHERN) - click here

 

* Science of Social Capital - on Community Commons website - click here

 

* A Curious Mind - How educators and parents can encourage and guide children's natural curiosity - in the classroom and at home (and in tutor/mentor programs) - click here

 

* Registration now open for 2025 National Mentoring Summit, Jan 19-31, 2025 - click here

 

* National Mentoring Resource Center - click here

 

Trust Talks - podcast by The Chicago Community Trust highlights the Trust's strategic priority to close Chicago region's racial and ethnic wealth gap - click here

 

* Addressing Wealth Inequality in America - click here

 

* Why Philanthropy Needs to Invest in Social Capital - click here

 

* Persistent Poverty in America - click here

 

* The Color of Wealth - Institute on Race, Power and Political Economy - click here

 

* Minnesota Executive Map Portfolio - click here

 

* American Inequality Data Portal - click here

 

* MyChiMyFuture - Chicago youth programs map and directory. click here; visit the website - click here

 

* To & Through Project website - click here: Follow on Twitter - @UChiToThrough

* Center for Effective Philanthropy - click here

 

* Forefront -Illinois' statewide association of nonprofits, foundations and advisors. click here

 

* CANDID - demographic data for NPOs and funders - click here

 

* AfterSchool Alliance resources - click here

 

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

 

* Chicago Public Schools locator map - click here

 

* Chicago Health Atlas - click here

 

* Digital Divide resources - click here

 

* Proven Tutoring clearinghouse - click here

 

* Chicago STEM Pathways Cooperative - click here

 

* South Side STEM Asset maps - read about using maps - click here

 

* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

 

* Prison Policy Initiative - click here

 

* ChiHackNight - remote and face-to-face civic technology meet-up; every Tuesday evening in Chicago - see weekly agenda

 

Recent Tutor/Mentor Blog articles that point to Tutor/Mentor Connection archived files:

(Do you have a blog? Share it on social media)

 

Veterans Day 2024click here

 

Scary Reading - Pre Election. I wrote this before Nov 5. The articles and links I point to may be even more important now and over the next few years - click here

 

After the Election This Work is Still Needed. I also wrote this before Nov. 5. The message still applies - click here

 

It Takes a Village! - click here

 

Tell This Story in Your Own Words - click here

 

Create Learning Groups to Understand Goals of Tutor/Mentor blog - click here

 

What is a Tutor/Mentor Learning Network? - click here

 

30-year history of reaching out to universities - click here

 

 

Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

 

* Lists of Chicago area, volunteer-based tutor, mentor programs - click here

 

* Homework help and volunteer training resources - click here

 

* Resource Library - click here

 

* Strategy essays by Tutor/Mentor - click here

 

* Work done by interns in past - click here

 

* Maps and Map-Stories from past 30 years - click here

 

* Political Action resources - click here

 

* Featured collections on Wakeletclick here

 

* Tutor/Mentor Institute Videos - click here

 

* About T/MI articles on blog - click here

 

* History of T/MC - T/MI articles - click here

 

* Create a New Tutor/Mentor Connection - click here

 

 

* Chicago Youth Serving Organizations in Intermediary Roles - click here to view a concept map showing many organizations working to help improve the lives of Chicago area youth. Follow the links.

Thank you for reading.

 

While I try to send this only once a month, I write blog articles weekly. Throughout the newsletter I post links to a few of the articles published in the past month or earlier. I encourage you to spend a little time each week reading these articles and following the links. Use the ideas and presentations in group discussions with other people who are concerned about the same issues.

 

I encourage others to duplicate what I'm doing. Write a blog and share your own vision, strategy and challenges. Share your link and I'll add it to this list in the Tutor/Mentor library.

View current and past newsletters at this link.

 

Please encourage friends, family, co-workers to sign up to receive this newsletter. Click here.

(If you subscribe, don't forget to respond to the confirmation email).

Please help me keep this resource available. Contribute to help me continue the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC in 2025.

Since 2011 I've created a fund-raising page to enable people to support my work by making a gift to support my birthday, which is on December 19th.

 

This year I'll be 78 and your help is needed more than ever for me to keep doing this work.

 

Visit this page to make a birthday gift.

Since forming the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC in 2011 I've depended on a small group of donors to make contributions throughout the year and in December to support my efforts. Please add your support, or repeat it if you've given in the past. Visit this page.

 

Thank you for your help.

Tutor/Mentor Connection, Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC

Serving Chicago area since 1993

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | http://www.tutormentorexchange.net

 

Thank you for reading. And thank you to those who help fund the

Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC and this newsletter. Please send a 2024 contribution.

 

Connect with Dan (tutormentor) on one of these social media platforms.

Twitter (X)

Linkedin
Facebook

Bluesky

Instagram

April 2024 Tutor/Mentor eNews

April 2024 - Issue 231

Tutor Mentor Institute LLC newsletter heading with blue background

Celebrate volunteers. National Volunteer Month.

If you lead a volunteer-based youth tutor, mentor program, or other types of activity that engages volunteers, they need to be recognized, and well-supported, throughout the year.

 

In one of the graphics I share in this month's newsletter is a "volunteer growth cycle" that shows how volunteers who stay with programs for multiple years often become leaders, advocates and resource builders who help the host organization attract needed resources.

This planning should lead to a constant improvement in what programs do to help kids and volunteers connect and build relationships.

 

The ideas and resources shared in this monthly newsletter point to a library of resources that can be used by anyone, in Chicago, or around the world, to help mentor-rich youth programs thrive in all of the neighborhoods where they are most needed.

 

Encourage others in your city to find and use these resources!

Visit Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC Website

Volunteer Growth Cycle. Take a look.

The top graphic is a concept map created in the late 2000s to show volunteer growth in an organized, on-going, tutor, mentor program. The second graphic was created by a volunteer from the University of Michigan School of Information, to communicate the same idea. See it in this video. I describe the elements of the concept map in this blog article

Changes to Constant Contact email address. Due to a new policy, all email coming from services like Constant Contact will have a different format. This may cause email to go into your spam box. That means the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. will now be different.

This is the address that will be on the email for this newsletter. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Think of volunteering as a form of adult service-learning

This graphic is the first page of an animation created in 2011 by an intern from South Korea to visualize the growth of volunteers in organized tutor/mentor programs. You can view it in this video, since Flash animation no longer works. This visualization was actually started in 2007 by an intern from Hong Kong. You can see his version in this blog post.

 

These visualizations illustrate work that youth in schools, non-school programs and colleges and universities can do to help mobilize and sustain volunteers involvement in organized tutor, mentor and learning programs.

 

If you read this final post by Sam Lee, who created this animation, you'll see that she said "As a result of internship, I learn more than I expected. So it's very special time to me." Schools and non-school programs who engage youth in projects like this are creating valuable learning opportunities while engaging youth in actual efforts to create a better world.

 

Look at the conversations posted in this Tutor/Mentor Connection group and see the ways I have coached interns to create visual interpretations of our ideas. Anyone could use these same conversations to engage their own students in doing the same type of projects.

 

"None of us is as smart as ALL of us" - read the president's message at the bottom of this April 2007 Tutor/Mentor Connection eMail newsletter.

Expand youth tutor/mentor program availability

In March I watched two Friends of the Children-Chicago discussions, titled - "Sounding the Alarm: Understanding the price we pay for illiteracy and what we can do about it". I wrote about them in this Tutor/Mentor blog article.

 

A week later I posted another article, pointing to a resource created by Matt Desmond, focused on "How We Can End Poverty in America". He has created a "teaching resource" that anyone can use to be what he calls a "Poverty Abolitionist"

 

As you view the first graphics about supporting volunteer involvement, think of ways you can point your volunteers and donors to these articles, and others like it on the Tutor/Mentor blog.

Look at the archives from 35 years of leading volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs in Chicago.

 

In this article, which I titled, "What motivates me?" I shared year-books and annual reports that showed the activities we offered to support the on-going involvement of youth and volunteers in our programs.

 

I've created archives of these that you can access, along with copies of our Tutor/Mentor Report newsletter, at this link.

 

If you're part of a volunteer-based tutor/mentor program I encourage you to look at the activities we used and consider including similar in your own programs. I also encourage you to create blogs and a page on your website to share what you do to help kids and volunteers connect, and stay connected, for many years.

Media, Maps and Map Story archives

 

The Tutor/Mentor Connection began creating maps and map stories in 1993, to draw attention and resources to organized, volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs in every high poverty area of Chicago.

 

In this article I point to these archives.

 

In this article I point to media stories that were generated by the Tutor/Mentor Connection event strategy.

 

Does someone in your city have a similar 30 year collection?

What you can do to end Poverty

In 2005 I wrote an article on the Tutor/Mentor blog titled "What you can do to end poverty". I reposted it in this April 2024 article. In March 2024 I included the graphic above, in this article, under the headline "Tutor/Mentor Connection needed in many places.

 

Most of my maps and graphics show where poverty is concentrated in Chicago. Some of the recent research I've pointed to uses maps to show areas of persistent, long-term poverty. They are the same places!

 

I use a "birth to work" timeline to show the long-term investment needed in each of the high poverty areas and I use a "hub and spoke" graphic to visualize organized programs that expand the network of "who you know" for kids who have limited connections to work and opportunity because of where they live.

Draw attention to these ideas - share them. Create your own.

The idea for the Tutor/Mentor Connection was born in late 1992 following the shooting death of 7-year-old Dantrell Davis in Chicago, and the media attention that followed it. Having worked in retail advertising for the Montgomery Ward corporation, I knew how we used weekly advertising, throughout the year, to draw attention and shoppers, to our 400 stores in 40 states. I recognized that Chicago needed a similar strategy, to draw volunteers, students and donors to every volunteer-based tutor/mentor program operating in Chicago, and to new programs that needed to grow where too few existed.

 

We did our planning in 1993 and launched in January 1994. Part of that planning was learning to use GIS maps to show "where" programs were located and where they were needed. Part of it was developing an event strategy, anchored by May and November leadership and networking conferences and an August/September volunteer recruitment campaign, to motivate the local news media to tell our story.

 

In this blog article I share links to a Google archive that shows dozens of media stories resulting from this strategy being followed for over 20 years.

 

I share this so leaders in other cities might develop their own strategy, borrowing from my archives and the history of the Tutor/Mentor Connection from 1993 till the present (since 2011 the T/MC has been led by the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC and our website is http://www.tutormentorexchange.net)

 

Some day you should be able to find archives like mine in every city where there are areas of persistent poverty.

New Visual Essay. 30-Year History For 30 years I've reached out to universities in Chicago and beyond, to forge partnerships and campus commitments intended to help volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs grow in high poverty areas of Chicago and other places and help more kids through high school, college, and into jobs. Now you can review this in a new visual essay which I share in this issue of the Tutor/Mentor blog. Share this in your network and help find donors who will bring this strategy to colleges and the cities where they operate.

Below are resources to use. View latest links added to tutor/mentor library, click here

Recent Tutor/Mentor Blog articles that point to Tutor/Mentor Connection archived files:

 

More maps now in my archive" - click here

 

What you can do to end poverty - click here

 

What motivates Me? - click here

 

Using maps to draw attention and resources to high poverty areas - click here

 

Helping Tutor/Mentor Programs grow- for over 30 years - click here

 

Letters to the Editor - Was anyone listening? - click here

 

Visual essays created since 1990s - click here

 

30 years later. Same goals. - click here

 

These "Calls to Action" need new energy - click here

 

This is what I was doing in 2001 - click here

 

Tutor/Mentor Connection Vision - 2001 - click here

 

Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

 

* Chicago Volunteer-Based tutor, mentor program list - click here

* Resource Library - click here

 

* Strategy PDFs by Tutor/Mentor - click here

 

* Concept Map library - click here

 

* Work done by interns - click here

 

* Digital Divide resources - click here

 

* Political Action resources - click here

 

* Featured collections on Wakeletclick here

 

* Tutor/Mentor Institute Videos - click here

 

* About T/MI articles on blog - click here

 

* History of T/MC - T/MI articles - click here

 

* Create a New Tutor/Mentor Connection - click here

Resources & Announcements

 

* Arts Education in Chicago. View Ingenuity map and State of Arts Report.

 

* South Side STEM Asset maps - read about using maps - click here

 

* Extending Employee Volunteer Impact. From Realized Worth blog. click here

 

* MyChiMyFuture - Chicago youth programs map and directory. click here; visit the website - click here

 

* To & Through Project website - click here: Follow on Twitter - @UChiToThrough

* Center for Effective Philanthropy - click here

 

* Forefront -Illinois' statewide association of nonprofits, foundations and advisors. click here

 

* AfterSchool Alliance resources - click here

 

 

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

 

* Chicago Public Schools locator map - click here

 

* Chicago Health Atlas - click here

 

* Proven Tutoring clearinghouse - click here

 

* Chicago Learning Exchange - click here

 

* Chicago STEM Pathways Cooperative - click here

 

* Chicago Digital Equity Coalition - click here

 

* Illinois Broadband Lab - click here

 

* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

 

 

* ChiHackNight - remote civic technology meet-up; every Tuesday in Chicago - see weekly agenda

 

* Chicago Youth Serving Organizations in Intermediary Roles - click here to view a concept map showing many organizations working to help improve the lives of Chicago area youth. Follow the links.

About this newsletter.

 

While I try to send this only once a month, I write blog articles weekly. Throughout the newsletter I post links to a few of the articles published in the past month or earlier. I encourage you to spend a little time each week reading these articles and following the links. Use the ideas and presentations in group discussions with other people who are concerned about the same issues.

View current and past newsletters at this link.

Encourage friends, family, co-workers to sign up to receive this newsletter. Click here.

(If you subscribe, don't forget to respond to the confirmation email).

Thank you for reading. Please help fund the T/MI.

Tutor/Mentor Connection, Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC

Serving Chicago area since 1993

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | http://www.tutormentorexchange.net

 

Thank you for reading. And thank you to those who help fund the

Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC and this newsletter. Please send a 2024 contribution.

 

Connect with Dan (tutormentor) on one of these social media platforms.

Twitter (X)

Linkedin
Facebook

Bluesky

Instagram
 

 

Dec 2024 TM eNews

December 2024 - Issue 237

Support youth serving organizations with year-end and on-going contributions!

During the Holiday Season youth serving organizations are reaching out for financial support. Please use my lists to find and choose programs to aid with your contributions.

 

I wish you all a safe, healthy, happy and HOPE-filled holiday season.

The ideas and resources shared in this monthly newsletter are intended to help you build and sustain mentor-rich, school and non-school, tutor, mentor and learning programs that reach K-12 youth in all areas of persistent poverty. Use these in Chicago, or anywhere in the world.

While I spend most of my time every year trying to help hundreds of youth tutor, mentor and learning programs, I ask you to help me with a contribution in December.

Since 2011 I've created a fund-raising page to enable people to support my work by making a gift to support my birthday, which is on December 19th.

 

This year I'll be 78 and your help is needed more than ever for me to keep doing this work. Visit this page to make a birthday gift.

Since forming the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC in 2011 I've depended on a small group of donors to make contributions throughout the year and in December to support my efforts. Please add your support, or repeat it if you've given in the past. Visit this page.

 

Thank you for your help.

Visit Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC Website

 

Ten additions to the Tutor/Mentor Library in 2024

I started putting the Tutor/Mentor library on the Internet in 1998 and have added new links each year. In 2024 I added 98 new links, which you can see on this page. Below are some of those.

1-2-2024 - Seek - Sense - Share - Personal Knowledge Mastery Process - https://jarche.com/pkm - I've followed Harold Jarche since 1990s and his ideas about learning motivate much of my own thinking.

 

1-17-2024 - Mapping Police Violence in America - https://mappingpoliceviolence.org

 

2-13-2024 - Art Makers Club - creative activities. shared in articles like this by Sherri Edwards of the CLMOOC group that I've followed since 2013 - https://sheri42.net/2024/02/12/fun-with-photo-doodles - Volunteers in tutor/mentor programs should look at Sheri's blog for ideas about creative work they can do with students

 

4-2-2024 - Daily STEM Learning Activities - weekly newsletter - https://dailystem.com/news

 

5-10-2024 - American Inequality Data Portal - https://www.americaninequality.io/maps

 

6-25-2024 - The Color of Wealth - Chicago - http://colorofwealth.org

 

7-10-2024 - Beyond the School Building: Examining the Association Between Out-of-School Factors and Multidimensional School Grades - https://epaa.asu.edu/index.php/epaa/article/view/8497

 

7-16-2024 - My Chi My Future - community collaboration pages - https://explore.mychimyfuture.org

 

8-18-2024 - Why Philanthropy Needs to Invest in Social Capital - https://www.insidephilanthropy.com/home/2024/7/16/should-we-pay-for-relationships-why-philanthropy-needs-to-invest-in-social-capital

 

12-5-2024 - The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How our Government Segregated America - https://www.epi.org/publication/the-color-of-law-a-forgotten-history-of-how-our-government-segregated-america

 

Twelve Tutor/Mentor blog articles from 2024

1-22-2024 - 30 years later. New Year. Same Goals - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/01/30-years-later-new-year-same-goals.html

 

1-4-2024 - National Mentoring Month - Infrastructure focus - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/01/national-mentoring-month.html

 

2-28-2024 - Opportunity for All? Involvement of More. See maps - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/02/opportunity-for-all-involvement-of-more.html

 

2-12-2024 - Multiplying Good - Map the Sports Network - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/02/multiplying-good-map-network.html

 

3-28-2024 - What Motivates Me - See yearbooks from past - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/03/what-motivates-me.html

 

4-11-2024 - 30 year history of reaching out to universities - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/04/30-year-history-of-reaching-out-to.html

 

5-28-2024 - Repeat After Me! Try it! - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/05/repeat-after-me-try-it.html

 

5-14-2024 - Drawing Resources to Chicago Tutor, Mentor and Learning Programs - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/05/drawing-attention-resources-to-chicago.html

 

7-18-2024 - Understanding complex problems using concept maps - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/07/understanding-complex-problems-using.html

 

7-13-2024 - Build information base to support anti violence efforts - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/07/build-information-base-to-support-anti.html

 

8-5-2024 - Adopt this 4-part strategy to help kids in your community - https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/08/adopt-this-4-part-strategy-to-help-kids.html

 

11-25-2024 - What comes after the election? https://tutormentor.blogspot.com/2024/11/what-comes-after-election.html

Below are resources that I point to each month.

* What's next for the nonprofit sector - Dec. 2024 article in The NonProfit Times - click here

 

* Community Commons resource center - click here

 

* Registration now open for 2025 National Mentoring Summit, Jan 19-31, 2025 - click here

 

* National Mentoring Resource Center - click here

 

* Trust Talks - podcast by The Chicago Community Trust highlights the Trust's strategic priority to close Chicago region's racial and ethnic wealth gap - click here

 

* Addressing Wealth Inequality in America - click here

 

 

* Forefront -Illinois' statewide association of nonprofits, foundations and advisors. click here

 

* CANDID - demographic data for NPOs and funders - click here

 

* AfterSchool Alliance resources - click here

 

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

 

* South Side STEM Asset maps - read about using maps - click here

 

* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

 

* Prison Policy Initiative - click here

 

 

Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

* Lists of Chicago area, volunteer-based tutor, mentor programs - click here

 

* Homework help and volunteer training resources - click here

 

* Resource Library - click here

 

* Strategy essays by Tutor/Mentor - click here

 

* Work done by interns in past - click here

 

* Intermediary organizations serving youth in Chicago area - click here

 

* Maps and Map-Stories from past 30 years - click here

 

* Political Action resources - click here

 

* Featured collections on Wakelet - click here

 

* Tutor/Mentor Institute Videos - click here

 

* About T/MI articles on blog - click here

 

* History of T/MC - T/MI articles - click here

 

* Create a New Tutor/Mentor Connection - click here

 

Thank you for reading.

 

I encourage others to duplicate what I'm doing. Write a blog and share your own vision, strategy and challenges. Share your link and I'll add it to this list in the Tutor/Mentor library.

View current and past newsletters at this link.

Please encourage friends, family, co-workers to sign up to receive this newsletter. Click here.

(If you subscribe, don't forget to respond to the confirmation email).

Changes to Constant Contact email address. Check your spam box to make sure this newsletter is coming to you.

This is the address that will be on the email for this newsletter. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Tutor/Mentor Connection, Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC

Serving Chicago area since 1993

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. | http://www.tutormentorexchange.net

 

Thank you for reading. And thank you to those who help fund the

Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC and this newsletter. Please send a 2025 contribution.

 

Connect with Dan (tutormentor) on one of these social media platforms.

Twitter (X)

Linkedin
Facebook

Bluesky

Instagram