February 2023 T/M eNews

February 2023 - Issue 219
Learn to use these resources
 
February is Black History Month and my library points to dozens of websites where you can learn the history of slavery and racism in America. While I focus on Black History, many websites also point to discrimination against other minorities.

I also point to on-line learning resources that can be used by educators, tutors, mentors and parents, and by students, throughout the year.

Building awareness of these resources and motivating people to use them is an on-going challenge.
Do a search on Google, Bing or Duck Duck Go for "tutor mentor, plus one more word, like maps, planning, or strategy. My websites show up among the first five to 10 listings.

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!
Use this concept map to guide you to different homework help resources
 
Click on the small box at the bottom of each node, then the link, and a list of websites opens. You can also access the homework help resources on this page. My Black History links are in this section.

This week I wrote an article and pointed to a virtual tutoring resource that I've added. It's free to students as long as school districts can pay. In the article I highlight the role mentors, tutors and peers can take to help students find and use these resources.

That's why it's important to have organized programs that more k-12 kids in high poverty areas can access. And if you already lead such a program, you need to be training your volunteers to use these resources.
Who is helping youth tutor/mentor programs grow in your city?
This map shows participants in a 2013 on-line learning event that connected educators from around the world. I was one of the participants and I've been part of similar events since then. Many of the ideas from these gathering are shared on blogs in this section of my library.

Imagine if each of these icons represented an ecosystem of donors, volunteers, educators, businesses, youth programs, researchers, parents and youth who were focused on building and sustaining a mentor-rich system of support that helps all kids through school and into careers, with a special focus on reaching youth living in high poverty areas. If you're part of such a group, please share your link.
Do the Planning
 
What does a birth-to-work support system look like to you?

I've been creating visualizations since the 1990s to show the structure of the tutor/mentor program I was leading and to visualize strategies to make similar programs available in more places.

View the graphics in this article then create and share your own.
Who is hosting an information base? Who is using it?

We all want more youth to stay in school, be safe in non-school hours, graduate, and move to careers. But we won't get there unless someone is gathering information from around the world that shows how some people are solving this problem, and ways you might borrow from their work. See this article.
 
Understand issues. Use resources shared in Tutor/Mentor library and on our blogs.

Redlining has had a long, and on-going impact on the quality of life and economic opportunity in Chicago. See links that I've aggregated in this article.

Open this concept map and see other blog articles where I'm aggregating links to important topics.
Every non-profit youth-serving program is competing for a share of a small funding pot. What will it take to work together to expand funds available?

First, understand the challenges facing non profits. View articles in this, and this section of the Tutor/Mentor Library.

We're up to our neck in alligators, so can't think about draining the swamp. This is common challenge. Here's two articles showing complexity of problems we face. Click here and here.

Share these articles and help build coalitions that work together.
Create your own visualizations and share with blog articles, videos and social media!

Too few people will ever see the ideas I share in this newsletter. Unless....

This concept map shows how interns who worked with me between 2006 and 2015 spent time reading my articles and viewing my websites, then creating visualizations that shared their understanding.

Your students and volunteers can do the same!

This is one article where I describe this potential.
Below are resources to use to help youth in your community.
View latest links added to tutor/mentor library - click here
 
Recent Tutor/Mentor Blog articles:

Super Bowl, Tutoring and Mentoring - click here

Fix how youth programs are funded - click here

We can help kids through school, but can we keep them safe from racism? - click here

Changing Demographics for Chicago Children - click here

Learning from Internet Libraries - click here

Help Build Networks of Support for Youth in High Poverty Areas - click here

Creating Economic Justice. Opportunity for All - click here

Using Maps - In my Dreams - click here


Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

* 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

* 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

* Chicago Digital Equity Coalition - click here

* Connect Illinois Digital Equity Coalition - click here

* Illinois Broadband Lab - 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

* Brooklyn Public Library National Teen E-card. Makes books available to teens throughout USA - click here

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

* Chicago Public Schools locator map - click here

* Chicago Health Atlas - click here

* Thrive Chicago collaboration - click here

* Chicago Learning Exchange - click here

* Chicago STEM Pathways Cooperative - click here

* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

* AfterSchool Alliance - resource center - click here

* Blogs on learning, education, fund raising - click here

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

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

March 2023 Tutor/Mentor eNews

March 2023 - Issue 220
Finish the School Year Strong
 
As we near the end of this school year youth serving programs need to find innovative ways to keep students and volunteers engaged so they have a strong finish and momentum heading into the 2023-24 school year.

This monthly newsletter shares links to youth programs in Chicago and around the country with the goal that each program spends time learning from all others. That's a recipe for constant improvement.

Building awareness of these resources and motivating people to use them is an on-going challenge.
Encourage your volunteers, board members and supporters to help you find ideas you can use to support program operations and improvement. Do a search on Google, Bing or Duck Duck Go for "tutor mentor, plus one more word, like learning, planning, or collaboration. My websites show up among the first five to 10 listings.

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!
Where are you finding ideas to help you build stronger programs for youth in your city? What does the carrot represent in this graphic?
 
This newsletter and Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC websites and blog article point to information that youth program leaders, donors, policy makers, businesses, etc. can use to fill high poverty neighborhoods with comprehensive, on-going, youth development and learning programs.

What do the carrot and rabbit represent? Ideas. Front runners. Innovators. People you can learn from.

I show this idea in this blog article.

I wrote about the Edison effect in this article.
Who is helping youth tutor/mentor programs grow in your city?
This map shows youth serving tutor and/or mentor programs in the Chicago region. View it in this article. Each organization has a unique history and story that shows who they are, what they do and who they serve. Ideally program websites would show this information and it would be shared regularly on social media in an effort to attract volunteers and donors needed to support on-going operations.

Some programs do this well. Others need help. Volunteers from communications industries and students from high schools and colleges could be telling stories of programs in different areas. City leaders could be encouraging this. Maybe the next Mayor of Chicago will take this role. Maybe Mayors in other cities already do this.
Do the Planning
 
What information should volunteers, parents, donors and media find on youth program websites?

How well do youth programs in your city communicate their history, strategy, successes and challenges on their websites? Do they use blogs to share info regularly? Is their enough information for volunteers, donors and/or parents to make an informed choice of helping them?

Take a look at the PDF essays in this blog article.
Ideas for innovation, collaboration, process improvement.

One section of the Tutor/Mentor library contains links to articles and websites that focus on collaboration, community building, knowledge management, innovation, mapping and process improvement.

These are resources that anyone in for-profit or non-profit organizations can use to support constant improvement. Open this link to view one section of this library.

Encourage your students to learn from these articles.
 
Steps to start and sustain a youth serving program.

I led a volunteer-based tutor/mentor program in Chicago from 1975 to 2011 and in this section of the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC website I share PDF essays that anyone can use to start a new tutor/mentor program or help an existing one grow.

These same ideas can be applied to building and sustaining an intermediary network intended to help well-organized tutor/mentor programs reach k-12 youth in all high poverty areas of any city.

I'd love to see blog articles showing strategies other programs are using to start programs and keep them going!
It takes 20-25 years for each child to grow from birth to work.

Few cities have comprehensive support systems that help kids in every high poverty area make this journey safely and successfully.

I've been focusing on long-term support systems since starting the Tutor/Mentor Connection in Chicago in 1993 and via blog articles written since 2005.

Open this link and browse through some of the articles that focus on building and sustaining youth tutor/mentor programs. Apply the ideas in your own city.
New resources on "misinformation and disinformation" added to library.

MisInfoDay is an event hosted by the Center for an Informed Public at the University of Washington. It's one of many important resources you'll find on their website.

I added the link to this section of the Tutor/Mentor library where you'll find a few similar resources and where I'll add more as I find them.
 
What do you know about ChatGPT and AI in education?
I'm part of a group of educators who are gathering information and will be exploring uses of AI and ChatGPT during coming months. Here's one Google doc where ideas are being shared.

Here's a blog article where I shared my first experiment with ChatGPT. Follow the #ETMOOC group on Twitter to see updates.
Below are resources to use to help youth in your community.
View latest links added to tutor/mentor library - click here
 
Recent Tutor/Mentor Blog articles:

Creating more luck for kids in high poverty areas - click here

Borrow from Lessons of Tutor/Mentor Connection - click here

What Youth Programs Exist in Your Area? - click here

Super Bowl, Tutoring and Mentoring - click here


Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

* Resource Library - click here

* Strategy PDFs by Tutor/Mentor - click here

* Concept Map library - click here

* Work done by interns - 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


* 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

* Google Analytics is changing. Are you prepared? Here's one article to read. click here

* Connect Illinois Digital Equity Coalition - click here

* Illinois Broadband Lab - 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

* Brooklyn Public Library National Teen E-card. Makes books available to teens throughout USA - click here

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

* Chicago Public Schools locator map - click here

* Chicago Health Atlas - click here

* Thrive Chicago collaboration - click here

* Chicago Learning Exchange - click here

* Chicago STEM Pathways Cooperative - click here

* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

* AfterSchool Alliance - resource center - click here

* Blogs on learning, education, fund raising - click here

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

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 this work.

Apri-May 2023 eNews

April - May 2023 - Issue 221
Are You Learning About Artificial Intelligence
Tools like ChatGPT?
 
Is anyone in your family, or organization, discussing ways to use Artificial Intelligence tools like ChatGPT?

Do you know what this is?

I've just been learning about it and see many potential uses and opportunities. In this month's newsletter I'll point to some of these.
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!
Celebrate volunteers during April Volunteer Recognition events
National Volunteer Week, April 16 to 22, is an annual celebration of the countless individuals who selflessly donate their time and effort to make a difference in their communities. This week serves as an opportunity to recognize and thank volunteers for their contributions, while also encouraging others to get involved and make a positive impact.

As we journey through National Volunteer Week this year, there is no better time to shine a light on the importance of youth tutor mentor programs in Chicago and other cities across the country, and to encourage more volunteers to get involved in these initiatives.

Youth tutor mentor programs play a vital role in the development and success of young people, particularly those who come from underprivileged or disadvantaged backgrounds. These programs provide students with the resources and support they need to succeed academically and build important life skills. By volunteering with a youth tutor mentor program, you can help to provide young people with the tools and guidance they need to reach their full potential.

In Chicago and other cities, there are many different youth tutor mentor programs that are in need of dedicated and passionate volunteers. I maintain lists of Chicago youth serving programs, and point to directories that can help you find similar programs in other cities.

Whether you have experience working with children or not, there is a place for you to make a difference. By volunteering just a few hours a week, you can help to create a brighter future for young people in your community.

So as we celebrate National Volunteer Week this year, let's remember the importance of supporting youth tutor mentor programs, and let's encourage more volunteers to get involved. By working together, we can help to ensure that every young person has the resources and support they need to succeed, both in school and in life.


Disclaimer:
Almost everything in the above paragraphs was written in less than a minute by ChatGPT. I just added a few links, a photo, and information about Chicago youth tutor/mentor programs that I point to from this list. Visit the Tutor/Mentor blog and see the entire article and how I included the ChatGPT text.
What youth tutor/mentor programs are in your city?
Volunteer-based tutor mentor programs are making a significant impact in the education of students in Chicago. These programs are run by various non-profit organizations and community groups, and they all share a common goal of helping students succeed in school.

One such program is Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metropolitan Chicago, which pairs adult volunteers with children who need a positive role model and mentor. This program has been operating in Chicago for over 50 years and has helped thousands of young people through its one-to-one mentoring relationships.

Another program is the Chicago Scholars Foundation, which provides mentoring and support to first-generation college-bound students from under-resourced communities. This program has helped over 7,000 students since its inception in 1996.

In addition, the Becoming A Man program (BAM) provides group counseling and mentoring to young men in Chicago Public Schools. This program focuses on social-emotional development and has been shown to decrease arrests and increase graduation rates.

There are numerous other programs operating in Chicago, and they all play a critical role in helping students succeed. While it is difficult to estimate the exact number of volunteer-based tutor mentor programs in the city, it is clear that they are an important part of the educational landscape in Chicago. These programs rely on the dedication of volunteers and the support of community members to continue making a positive impact on the lives of students in the city.


This was also written by ChatGPT.
The prompt I used was: "You're a newspaper reporter. Your story describes some of the volunteer-based tutor mentor programs in Chicago."
 
Imagine the ways you, or your students, could be creating these stories
I am participating in the ETMOOC2 on-line learning community where people from many countries are sharing ideas and resources and talking about ways to use ChatGPT and other Artificial Intelligence tools.

I wrote about this group in this blog article.

The ETMOOC2 website is at this link.
Steps to Start a Volunteer-Based Tutor/Mentor Program
I asked ChatGPT to provide steps to start a volunteer-based youth tutor/mentor program. Below is the response.

Starting a volunteer-based youth tutor/mentor program can be a rewarding experience, but it requires careful planning and execution. Here are some steps to get started:

Define the program's goals and objectives: Determine what the program aims to achieve and identify the target audience. You may want to consider what subjects the program will cover, what age group of youth it will serve, and what type of volunteers you want to recruit.

Identify potential partners and volunteers: Consider partnering with local schools, community centers, or other organizations that work with youth. Identify potential volunteers, such as college students, retired teachers, or community members with relevant skills and experience.

Develop a program structure: Create a program schedule and curriculum that outlines the goals, objectives, and activities for the program. Consider how many volunteers will be needed, the frequency and duration of tutoring sessions, and how progress will be tracked.

Establish volunteer requirements: Determine what qualifications and expectations you have for volunteers, such as background checks, training, and availability. Provide training and support for volunteers to help them be successful.

Secure a location: Determine where tutoring sessions will be held, such as a community center, school, or library. Make sure the location is safe, accessible, and equipped with necessary resources.

Advertise the program: Promote the program to potential participants, such as schools, community centers, and parents. Use social media, flyers, and other outreach methods to reach your target audience.

Recruit and train volunteers: Develop a recruitment plan to attract volunteers, such as posting flyers at local community centers, schools, and libraries, or promoting the program on social media. Train volunteers on program objectives, teaching strategies, and safety protocols.

Start operations. Collect participation and attendance data.

Evaluate and improve the program: Regularly assess the program's effectiveness by monitoring progress and collecting feedback from volunteers and participants. Use this information to make improvements and refine the program structure.

Starting a youth tutor/mentor program can be a challenging and rewarding experience. By following these steps, you can create a successful program that makes a positive impact on the lives of youth in your community.


Compare this to the blog article I wrote in 2016 with "steps to start a tutor/mentor program.
 
What's a Prompt Engineer? Can they really earn this type of income?

"The expected salary range for a Prompt Engineer and Librarian is $175k to $335k."

This caught my eye because so many of us have kids who don't yet know what to do with their lives and so many of us work with youth living in areas with too few opportunities. Some of us may be looking for new, or second, career options, too.

Here's the presentation where the Prompt Engineer information was shared during the first #ETMOOC2 session.

Here's a link provided to help you learn what a Prompt Engineer is and how you can build your skills.
Don't know how to code? Ask ChatGPT to generate code for you.

Another feature that attracted my attention was the ability for ChatGPT to generate html code that you can use to build a website or a webpage.

People are talking about this in the Discord channel for #ETMOOC2 and in the Twitter #ETMOOC2 network.

I've been looking at experiments by Kevin Hodgson, a middle-school teacher from Massachusetts. Here's one article on his blog.

Here's a "how to" page I found that illustrates what's possible. Find more like this by using prompt "using ChatGPT to build a website" in your browser search.
 
Blogs are a big part of the #ETMOOC2
I first connected with this group of educators in 2013 when the first ETMOOC was held. Blogging was encouraged as a way to share ideas and build deeper interaction among participants. I point to many of those blogs in this section of the Tutor/Mentor library.

The ETMOOC2 has created a list of blogs (including mine) which you can find on this page
 
Start your own learning journey
Visit the ETMOOC2 site and begin to learn more about ways to use AI and tools like ChatGPT.

There is a vast library of articles, videos and examples along with a group of people helping each other learn. It's FREE. Participate as much, or as little as you want. Share the resources with others and start your own study group.
Below are resources to use to help youth in your community.
View latest links added to tutor/mentor library - click here
 
Recent Tutor/Mentor Blog articles:

Create a WebQuest to learn AI tools and share Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC strategies - click here

Sharing on Twitter - posts following election of new Mayor for Chicago - click here

Chicago has a new Mayor. Same Problems. - click here

Crime and Violence in Chicago Not New - click here

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


Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

* Resource Library - click here

* Strategy PDFs by Tutor/Mentor - click here

* Concept Map library - click here

* Work done by interns - 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


* 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

* Chicago Learning Exchange - click here

* Chicago STEM Pathways Cooperative - click here Learn about Landscape Surveys - click here

* Connect Illinois Digital Equity Coalition - click here

* Illinois Broadband Lab - 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

* Brooklyn Public Library National Teen E-card. Makes books available to teens throughout USA - click here

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

* National Mentoring Resource Center - click here

* Chicago Public Schools locator map - click here

* Chicago Health Atlas - click here
* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

* AfterSchool Alliance - resource center - click here

* ChiHackNight - remote civic technology meet-up; every Tuesday in Chicago - see weekly agenda
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 past newsletters from 2022 and in past years..

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 this work.

June 2023 T/M eNews

June 2023 - Issue 222

Tutor Mentor Institute LLC newsletter heading with blue background

What is the level of poverty in your city?

This month's newsletter is going to focus on poverty research and ways volunteers in organized tutor/mentor programs can use this information to change conditions and do more to help K-12 youth move safely through school and into adult lives.

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

Join the conversation. "How can we end poverty in America?"

In early May I watched a presentation hosted by the Urban Institute, featuring Matt Desmond, author of a new book titled "Poverty in America". I provided links to the webinar, and to Matt Desmond's website, along with other articles on this topic, in this blog article.

 

One of the solutions was that "more people need to get involved" reading and sharing the research, so a growing movement of people, in Chicago and other cities and states, will do more to reduce the systems that have led to inequality and poverty in America.

 

Here's a link to Matt Desmond's End Poverty USA website page with data showing how each state compares in the fight against poverty. click here

 

Use other resources to understand levels of poverty, health disparities, education attainment and opportunity.

Data maps provide information in a visual way, making it easier to look at indicators for a small part of a city or state, or the entire city or state. This concept map points to many of the websites that I point to in the Tutor/Mentor library. Use them to build your understanding of where people need more help, and then to create stories that mobilize that help.

 

I've often asked "Who is teaching youth and adults to make sense of this data, and to share it in stories that get other people involved?" In a recent forum I was introduced to the New American History website. This page titled "Mapping Inequality: Redlining in New Deal America," shows lesson plans that can be used in school and non-school programs throughout the country. Take a look.

Why Volunteer-Based Tutor/Mentor Programs are Important

In order to reduce poverty, we first need to understand it, and empathize, so we're willing to do more with our time, talent, dollars and votes to change public and private practices and beliefs that have contributed to the levels of poverty and inequality that exist in America today.

 

If you've led a volunteer-based tutor/mentor program for multiple years, or volunteered for multiple years, you know the many different benefits these programs offer, to young people and adults. If your program operates in a big city like Chicago, with huge areas of concentrated poverty, you also know how difficult it is for one volunteer, or a single program, to reduce the many barriers caused by systemic racism and long-term government policies.

 

Over many years I've seen how some volunteers who have been well-supported by the programs they are part of, begin to do more to help the kids they work with, and the programs they are part of. Some may even become politically involved.

 

Why can't that be happening more frequently?

 

What if the poverty research that I point to above were part of the library of every volunteer-based organization and that efforts to keep volunteers involved, led to more taking greater roles?

 

Explore this graphic in this blog article.

 

Then read this "Mentor Role in a Larger Strategy" article.

As you do your planning, think of this formula.

I led a volunteer-based tutor/mentor program in Chicago for 35 years. For the first 15 years I was a volunteer with a full-time advertising job in the headquarters of a big retail store corporation. The program I led had 100 pairs of elementary school kids and workplace volunteers in 1975 when I became its leader and grew to over 300 pairs by 1990, with volunteers coming from more than 100 companies in the Chicago region. That program still serves Chicago, under the name of Tutoring Chicago.

 

I had to learn to recruit volunteers who would help with leading the program and doing all the work involved. Over time this became the formula - R&D+F&L. This means Recruit and Delegate. Follow-up and Lead. View this blog article to learn more about this strategy.

 

In the article I pointed to above, I share pages from the annual yearbook that I created each year from 1975 to 1999. One set of pages shows the tutoring program volunteer committee in 1975, with 13 people. The second is from the 1991-92 program, with a committee of more than 60 volunteers! There's an important lesson from these photos.

 

Great programs don't start great, they grow great over a period of many years of constant innovation and improvement. This is a lesson we need to share with donors so that more will provide the constant flow of dollars needed to build and sustain constantly improving programs.

 

Imagine the potential impact of this volunteer growth strategy in hundreds of volunteer-based organizations serving youth and families throughout the country. Imagine connecting these people to each other in a movement intended to reduce barriers to learning and opportunity.

 

What's you strategy for growing your program and getting volunteers involved? Do you have a blog where you share the work you do to make your program great? Please share it with me on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and/or Mastodon.

 

The graphic below shows just a few of the most recent additions to the tutor/mentor library - click here to view links.

Recent Tutor/Mentor Blog articles:

 

Learn about Artificial Intelligence tools you can use in your school or non-school program. Follow the links in these #ETMOOC blog articles and in these ChatGPT articles.

 

Memorial Day articles on Tutor/Mentor blog - click here

 

Chicago school closings. 2011 and now. click here

 

Building and Sustaining Mentor-Rich Supporty Systems for K-12 Youth - click here

 

Building Attention for Youth Tutor/Mentor Programs - click here

 

Planning. How do we know when we are "there"? - click here

 

 

Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

 

* Resource Library - click here

 

* Strategy PDFs by Tutor/Mentor - click here

 

* Concept Map library - click here

 

* Work done by interns - 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

 

* 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

 

* 2023 Points of Light Conference will be held in Chicago from June 14-16. click here for info. Follow on Twitter using #PointsofLight23.

 

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

 

* National Mentoring Resource Center - click here

 

* Chicago Learning Exchange - click here

 

* Chicago STEM Pathways Cooperative - click here Learn about Landscape Surveys - click here

 

* Connect Illinois Digital Equity Coalition - 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

 

* Chicago Public Schools locator map - click here

 

* Chicago Health Atlas - click here

 

* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

 

* AfterSchool Alliance - resource center - click here

 

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

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.
If the newsletter does not format correctly in your email, or if you want to return to it for future reading or to share with others, 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 this work.

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 2023 contribution.
Connect with Dan (tutormentor) on one of these social media platforms.
Twitter
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Facebook
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July 2023 Tutor/Mentor eNews

July 2023 - Issue 223

Tutor Mentor Institute LLC newsletter heading with blue background

Summer Planning Leads to Better Youth Programs

This month's newsletter focuses on planning that needs to be taking place during the summer months and leads to constant improvement in the quality and structure of existing youth tutor/mentor programs as well as to the launching of new programs more are needed.

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

Does your youth program, and community leadership, do year-round planning? What are you doing during the summer months?

This graphic shows events developed between 1994 and 1996 by the Tutor/Mentor Connection in Chicago, and continued through 2015, which were intended to support the growth of volunteer-based tutor, mentor and learning programs in all high poverty areas of the city and suburbs.

 

Since many youth programs work on a school year calendar the time between May and August needs to be spent on planning that leads to stronger programs as school starts the following year. I've written about this planning process often on the Tutor/Mentor blog. This link points to a recent article.

 

In the late 2000s interns created an animation to show the year-round strategy. You can view it in this YouTube video. While I no longer host these events they represent a template that leaders in any city might use to build their own year-round campaigns to build and sustain mentor-rich, non-school, youth serving programs in all high poverty areas.

 

Find more ideas for planning, starting a program and on-going improvement in this section.

What ways do you visualize the long-term support kids in high poverty areas need to move safely from birth-to-work?

I've used graphics like this for more than 25 years to visualize the long-term support kids need to move more successfully from birth to work, recognizing that kids in high poverty areas don't have as many of these resources as do kids in more affluent areas. Thus, leaders need to be intentional in making these available.

 

Very few non-school tutor/mentor programs have a 12-16 year strategy of helping youth through school. If you know of any, please share links so I can add them to the Tutor/Mentor Library. However, without a long-term strategy a neighborhood might need multiple programs reaching different age groups, with different types of age-appropriate programs. If kids can move from program to program over their school years, this offers the same benefit as a single long-term program.

 

How many zip codes have such a network of programs?

This concept map shows support kids need.

View this concept map at this link.

 

This is a different way to visualize the various support kids need at each grade level as they move through school and into adult lives.

 

A planning process at the neighborhood and community level needs to build an understanding of what types of support already exists. A communications plan would draw these support providers together to learn from each other while drawing volunteers and donors to each program so they have the resources to constantly improve.

 

An analysis of the information would determine where gaps in service are and would lead to building new programs to fill those voids.

 

I've used free cMapTools since 2005 to create my concept maps. Other tools are available.

 

Here are some articles to stimulate your planning.

Does your planning process include these steps?

View this concept map at this link,

 

Step 1 involves collecting and organizing information, or creating the knowledge base. Step 2 and Step 3 involve motivating a growing number of people to visit the library regularly and helping them find what they are looking for and understand how to apply the information in Step 4, different places where youth and families would benefit from organized, on-going, volunteer-based tutor, mentor and learning programs. Here's one article where I explain the four steps.

 

While different people and organizations in a city may be collecting some of this information and drawing some people together this needs to be an integrated, on-going strategy. If you can't find someone in your city who visualizes and leads a strategy like this, share it with business, university and philanthropic leaders with the goal that one, or many, will adopt it.

 

Who leads this process in your city? Is someone visualizing the planning steps? Share links if you have them.

 

Is there an intentional strategy to expand the network of adults supporting K-12 youth in high poverty areas or your city?

Total Quality Mentoring chart from 1990s is a hub and spokes design

I used this graphic in the 1990s and 2000s to visualize how the tutor/mentor program I led connected youth from high poverty areas of Chicago with volunteers from different background, different careers and different universities. Each youth had a primary one-on-one tutor/mentor who often stayed with the youth for several years and a network of other volunteers who they connected with in weekly activities. They were all supported by a paid staff (although in the original program that I led from 1975 to 1992 the leaders were all volunteers up until it became a non profit in 1990.)

 

I did not realize in the early years that we were helping expand social capital for these kids....and our volunteers ... by expanding the network of "who they know". I was first introduced to the concept in the late 1990s and I've written about it often on blog articles like this and in these.

 

If you view websites of Chicago youth programs on these lists you'll find very few (if any) using graphics like mine to describe their programs, or using social capital in articles about their program design, yet you will see photos and stories of volunteers with kids. Thus, many are helping build social capital, even if they don't talk about it as part of their theory of change.

 

By sharing my program design graphic with program leaders, volunteers, parents, donors and policy makers my long-term goal has been to nudge the entire sector to grow programs that expand networks of support for kids living in high poverty areas.

 

Share links to websites that you think do this well.

Your planning should also aim to influence resource providers.

From 1990 to 2011 I led a non-profit youth tutor/mentor program in Chicago, after having led one of these as a volunteer for the previous 15 years. I was constantly networking with peers, reading research and looking for ways to improve how my program supported youth and volunteers. However, I was constantly frustrated by how difficult it was to find the money and talent needed. Thus, this final visualization focuses on INFLUENCE of resource providers (#9 on the graphic), not just program leaders and staff (#7 on the graphic).

 

I've posted several articles using this graphic. Here's one.

 

If leaders in Chicago and other cities champion this strategy, your volunteers and donors can be looking for your program, and looking for ways to help you help kids, in just as many ways as you are trying to find them.

 

Does your city have a strategy like this? Share links if you have them.

Use these additional resources in your planning and networking. See latest additions to the Tutor/Mentor Library at this link.

Recent Tutor/Mentor Blog articles:

 

 

Tutor/Mentor Programs need time and resources to become great - click here

 

Building and Sustaining Mentor-Rich support systems for K-12 youth - click here

 

Building Attention for Youth Tutor/Mentor Programs - click here

 

Birth-to-Work Goal and Use of Knowledge Base - click here

 

Building a Segmented Understanding of Youth Serving Programs - click here

 

Learn about Artificial Intelligence tools you can use in your school or non-school program. Follow the links in these #ETMOOC blog articles and in these ChatGPT articles.

 

 

 

Bookmark these Tutor/Mentor Resources

 

* Resource Library - click here

 

* Strategy PDFs by Tutor/Mentor - click here

 

* Concept Map library - click here

 

* Work done by interns - 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

 

* 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. These sites regularly update the information they share so visit them often.

 

* Chicago Mentoring Collaborative - click here

 

* National Mentoring Resource Center - click here

 

* Chicago Learning Exchange - click here

 

* Chicago STEM Pathways Cooperative - click here Learn about Landscape Surveys - click here

 

* University of Chicago Civic Engagement news - click here

 

* Connect Illinois Digital Equity Coalition - 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

 

* Chicago Public Schools locator map - click here

 

* Chicago Health Atlas - click here

 

* Thrive Chicago collaboration - click here

* Incarceration Reform Resource Center - click here

 

* AfterSchool Alliance - resource center - click here

 

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

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. Connect with me and share links to resources, on any of the social media platforms shown below.

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 2023 contribution.

Connect with Dan (tutormentor) on one of these social media platforms.
Twitter
Linkedin
Facebook
Pinterest
Instagram