Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Does your youth-serving org have a blog?

I've been sharing images from the Kumu.io project created by the IVMOOC student team at Indiana University in my last few posts.  Below is another.  This shows participation in the two 2011 conferences. 

I created this after spending time yesterday updating the list of blogs written by tutor/mentor program staff and leaders.  One was by a college student working at Femi Memorial Outreach.  I looked at the 2011 conferences to see if I could find the program and created this image. I circled Femi Memorial Outreach.  You can do the same.  Open the map at this link.

If you search the Femi blog for "tutor/mentor" you'll find a few articles written about the conference. 

In this one she wrote:

Keeping up the Tutor Mentor Connection
If you guys have been keeping up with our posts, you'd know that I mention the Tutor Mentor Institute more than any other organization. When I started working seriously with Femi Memorial Outreach, my first big non-profit conference was sponsored by the Tutor Mentor Institute. I think I learned more in that one, activity packed, day than I had in my first month as an administrator and program developer.

In this one she wrote:

This past Friday I went to the Tutor-Mentor Conference. There was an outstanding turnout from various different education and mentor programs from across the Chicago area. I don't think I fully realized the impact and breadth of education non-profits throughout the Chicago area until Friday.

On the surface, the scene looked like a group of regular people, sleepy eyed, and pounding back cups of coffee as the 8a.m conference began. But, throughout the day people slowly removed their shell and opened up about their projects: executive directors, media relation managers, tutors, and people with projects so new, they hadn't even started yet. The level of enthusiasm was unending.

If you explore the conference participation map you'll find many organizations who participated multiple times.  If you browse the conference tab on this blog, you'll see more than 200 articles.  In a few you'll find links to stories others wrote about their participation.

In 2014 Steve Sewell wrote this article and Valerie Leonard wrote this article.

Kelly Fair of Polished Pebbles wrote this article in 2014. 

I was prompted to look at the list after seeing an announcement from Jeffrey Beckham, Jr., the Executive Director of Chicago Scholars, introducing an article he posted on Substack.com.  It was titled, "The Democracy our Young People Deserve".  I hope you'll read it.

Sadly, my list of blogs has many that are no longer being written and too few from the more than 100 Chicago area youth serving programs on my lists.  

I look at the websites on my list at least once each year, just to make sure the links are working. I'm also trying to find out if they are writing blogs or are using media like Substack.com or YouTube to share their ideas. 

I need your help.  Please look at what local programs are doing and how they are sharing their "What works and what does not work." messages. If you find blog articles or other places where programs are sharing, please send the link to me via LinkedIn, Twitter, BlueSky or Facebook.

In response to the comment I posted on his article, Jeffrey Beckham, Jr. wrote, "And I deeply agree with your invitation. We need more tutor and mentor leaders telling their stories publicly through blogs and reflection. The narrative must belong to those building hope, not only those creating fear."

I agree.  

Are you hosting events and want to map participation? Visit this page to learn about the open source mapping tool created in 2025 by IVMOOC students at Indiana University.  

Thanks for reading.  If you're able to support my work with a contribution, please visit this page

Saturday, January 24, 2026

Planning a conference? Building a network?

Last week I posted an article on Substack.com titled, "Start Planning for Fall 2026 Tutor/Mentor Programs". 

You can view the article here. In it I showed a few slides from a planning calendar that I developed in the late 70s, which helped me grow the tutor/mentor programs I led from 1975 to 2011.  The annual January celebration of mentoring should boost the planning process so that existing programs improve from year-to-year and new programs form where more are needed.  I'd love to find visual essays from other programs that describe their planning cycle.

I started connecting with leaders of other Chicago youth programs in the mid 1970s and that led to the formation of the Tutor/Mentor Connection in 1993.  One strategy led to the Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conferences which we held in Chicago every six months from May 1994 to May 2015. These were part of the public awareness strategy we launched and an effort to draw leaders and supporters of Chicago area volunteer-based tutor, mentor and learning programs together to share ideas and build relationships. 

A few years ago I created the concept map shown below, as a guide others could use in organizing their own conferences.

At the far right I've added a section focused on collecting data to help event organizers understand who attended, who they connected with, and "who's missing".  This points to the event mapping resource created in late 2025 by a team of IVMOOC students from Indiana University.  

In a previous article I showed the front page of an "Open Source Network Mapping" app created by the team. click here to open


If you open the "learn" tab at the top of the home page  you'll find some really clear information about how to design forms that collect network data effectively and how to turn this into visualizations on Kumu, Gephi or Tableau.  I show a few of the pages below.  Click on an image to enlarge it. 

Getting Started: What This Tool Does


Scroll down on the Getting Started page and you'll see "The Complete Workflow"


Continue scrolling down to descriptions of "External Visualization Software" such as Kumu and Gephi.  


Continue to scroll down and you'll see brief descriptions of "Key Concepts" and "Why Use Network Graphs?"


Next, open the Form Creation Guide tab - click here


Scroll down and you'll see "Every Network Form Needs These 3 Sections"


Next is a section showing "Form Design by Experience Level --  Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced".


Continue to scroll down to "After You Create Your Form". 


Perhaps before you create your form you want to learn more about "Nodes and Edges".  click here and open the page shown below.


The next section shows how to export your data to Kumu or Gephi. click here


The next sections describes some "Real-World Use Cases". click here


Some examples of Kumu Network Visualizations are shown - click here


Another example is the visualization of Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conference participants from 1994 to 2015.  I've shared a few examples of this in previous articles, such as this one.


I've also pointed to many other examples of using Kumu and/or NodeXL.  This concept map points to a few of them.  Follow Kumu on LinkedIn and you'll see examples that they post every week.

I hope you'll agree with me that the work done by the IVMOOC team is excellent, and valuable.

Share this article with anyone who is creating events intended to bring people together on an on-going basis, to stimulate learning, reinforce work already being done, and innovate new solutions where they are needed.  Every city in the world should have a group doing what the Tutor/Mentor Connection has been doing since 1993.  This network mapping tool event planning process can become a valuable asset.

Please connect with me on LinkedIn, Facebook, BlueSky, Twitter, Instagram and/or Mastodon (see links here) and share how you're using these ideas, and work you're already doing.  

If you'd like to connect on ZOOM or another platform to learn more about this resource or any of the ideas I share on this blog, just reach out to me.  

Finally, if you value what I'm sharing, please visit this page and make a contribution to help Fund the work. 

Monday, January 19, 2026

Will any ML King, Jr. events include maps?

This weekend marks the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech. The important messages I've taken from this are "Just don't forget." and "There's a lot of work still to do."

I've written on this topic often in the past. Here are some articles I encourage you to revisit. If you look at January articles since 2005, you'll find a few more.

January 20, 2025 article - Notebook LM review of Tutor/Mentor Connection  (1993-present) and Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC (2011 - present) 

January 15, 2024 article - What if Dr. King, Jr. Followers Had Applied Spatial Thinking?

January 13, 2023 article - "I Have a Dream, too" 

January 18, 2021 article - Service Learning in Support of Dr. M.L. King, Jr's Dream.

January 20, 2019 article - How I'll Honor ML King Jr. Holiday

January 19, 2013 article - following my participation in a Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. event at the University of Chicago.

October 11, 2012 article - General Powell saying "This isn't Charity."

Nov 11, 2011 article - "War on Poverty Continues"

July 4, 2011 article "Freedom is not Free"

Jun2, 2, 2005 article "Jesus or Martin Luther King, Jr. As CEO: Think about it."

Imagine if Dr. King, Jr. had had a projection screen at his events, on which he produced a map showing the high poverty areas of the US, with overlays showing racial demographics. What if he said, "This map shows all the places where people live in poverty, have less access to education and jobs, and have less chance for their children and grandchildren to share in the American Dream."

Then, imagine that he said "I'm going to check this map every 10 years from now for the next 50 years so I see a growth in learning opportunities, social justices programs, increased jobs opportunities, growing personal engagement from people who don't live in these areas, lending a hand to those who do."

With that he could have said, "Sharing this stage in 50 years will be young men and women of all colors who started life in one of these high poverty areas, but who now not only are well placed in jobs and careers, but are examples of leadership that is still working to fill this entire map with resources, talent, programs and opportunities that help future generations speed along this path to the American Dream."

He did not have those tools and I don't know if he ever thought this way. However, in 50 years we could see evidence of work done by many to create such a future.

After the prayer meetings, service projects, and other things you'll do today, dedicate some time to reading my posts and sharing them with others.  If you know of people using GIS maps, or Concept Maps, in their blog posts and/or events today, please share the links.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Use Internet Archive while my website is not opening

My Tutor/Mentor website has not been opening for the past week. I'm working to get that fixed.

In the meantime, you can view the site on the Internet Archive.  This link points to the last update in December 2025.  All of the internal links seem to be working.


As you celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr's birthday, learn to use websites like mine as an on-going resource.

Monday, January 12, 2026

Use this resource to map and analyze your networks

The information below is from a new page on my website that I launched to show work done by a team of students from the Information Visualization (IVMOOC) class at Indiana University. This is a project they had been working on for me since September 2025.  

I'm very impressed with the work they did. This visualization shows participation in one of the Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conferences held in Chicago between May 1994 and May 2015. You can see it in this article.  Open the Kumu map - click here

In the article and on my website I show several other views that I created from the interactive Kumu project. However, this was only a demonstration of what's possible.  On social media I've been encouraging youth and volunteers from Chicago tutor/mentor programs to dig into the map and find their own organization, then share a screenshot showing what conferences you were part of.

To understand the value of this project, I urge you to read the IVMOOC team final report (click here).

Then take time to study the "Open Source Network Mapping" app created by the team. (click here).


Then look at the "How-To-Guide" that provides step by step information.

In the Project Overview the IVMOOC students wrote: "The Network Map is an event network visualization platform that helps event organizers collect participation and connection data, automatically convert it into network-ready nodes and edges, and explore insights through an analytics dashboard. Outputs can be exported to tools like Kumu.io and Gephi for deeper relationship mapping and network analysis." 

Then, look at the Git Hub page for the project. click here

On the home page you'll find this description. "Network Map - Event Network Visualization Platform. A full-stack web application for collecting, analyzing, and visualizing participant connections from events. Transform survey responses into interactive network graphs and analytics dashboards."

This is the third time since 2008 that the IVMOOC project has looked at the Tutor/Mentor Connection (which has been led through Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC since 2011).  Click here to read the 2015 project report.

I've been reaching out to universities for help since the 1990s. It's part of an on-going invitation to engage students, faculty and alumni of universities in Chicago and throughout the world.


Read this post and find a PDF that shows 30 years of engagement, yet also shows no strategic, long-term effort where a stream of students work on the T/MC project while in college, then when they are alumni, with the goal of creating long-term impact on the lives of people living in high poverty areas. 

I invite students and faculty to help me do that, by learning about the tool, and why it's important by reading articles on my blog and in my library.  Then, by creating your own event mapping project, perhaps showing how people at your university are connected around specific issues.

Please connect and introduce yourself to me on LinkedIn, BlueSky, Mastodon, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter (see links here). 

Friday, January 09, 2026

Learn to use concept maps

Over the past few years I've provided a growing number of examples of how concept maps can be used to share information and to help people connect with each other.  I keep finding these on my LinkedIn feed.

Below is one that shows information about "main disciplines, foundations, tools, influences, and products" of a single ecosystem." It's called The Concept Art Map. click here to open


On the "about" page they wrote

"The Concept Art Map started from the struggle of trying to understand the concept art industry just by scrolling walls of text, posts, and random portfolio links. I never felt like I could see the bigger picture or where my own niche actually sat inside it.

So I decided to build a visual version of that picture. As an artist, seeing the whole system visually is the best way to understand how everything connects and how different roles, skills, and tools relate to each other.

I also believe the way we learn is shifting toward more interconnected, systematic presentation of information rather than static, isolated pieces of data and this map is my attempt to reflect that."

This pretty well summarizes my own reasons for creating concept maps.  I point to blogs and websites hosted by other people because most of the time they communicate an idea better than I do. 

I use my concept maps to help people navigate my library. Below is one example, which is showing the four sections of the Tutor/Mentor library. click here


If you compare the two maps you'll see that both are sharing information from a vast library, but in different ways. 

The first was built using Kumu.io In other articles I've shown how most Kumu maps are interactive, meaning you can move the nodes around.  And, you can turn layers of information on and off.  In the Concept Map Art map you can zoom in to more easily read the information in each node cluster.  You can also click on different nodes and see more clearly how that node is connected to others.  You can click on a node and get a side bar with descriptive information, often including a website address or social media link.

My map was built using cMapTools.  These don't have the interactive features that Kumu.io has, but at the bottom of each node are small boxes.  One includes links to external websites and the other has links to additional, related, concept maps.  Thus, while a KUMU map might show a vast ecosystem on one screen, the cMapTools map shows layers of information, as you move from one map to another. This section of the Tutor/Mentor library points to other visualization tools that you might use to do this work. 

One feature that I liked about the Concept Art Map was the "how to" page which you can open by clicking on the top right menu bar.


I'm just showing the first view of the "how to" page. You can actually scroll down through several sections that describe how to use the information they have collected.

In the "about" page the creator wrote,

Right now this is v1 of The Concept Art Map. It already covers the main disciplines, foundations, tools, influences, and products, but there are more features I’d like to add if there’s enough interest, things like a "personal niche" views and deeper paths for career development and artist networking.

If you’ve got thoughts, questions, or ideas for where this could go, feel free to get in touch!  

A feedback form is included.

I hope you'll take a look.

Students at every age level (6 to 96) could be learning to create information maps like these.  Volunteers could be helping them learn, and be learning themselves! 

In my "mapping participation" articles I show more examples and reasons to build such maps. 

One application might be mapping ICE activity, aggregating videos and written testimony showing where the law has been broken, and mapping information showing how citizens can respond to the growing Fascism in the USA.

Every day my social media is filled with more and more stories of attacks on democracy and harm to vulnerable people.  It makes it difficult to continue trying to draw attention to work needed to reach kids in high poverty areas with long-term programs that help them through school and into adult lives free of poverty  (and filled with opportunity).


This graphic shows the need for extra youth support in areas where poverty and structural racism mean kids have fewer supports and opportunities than do kids in more affluent areas.  One reason this problem persists over so many years is the random nature of interventions and funding.  I continue to post ideas like this, even in the middle of a full-blown crisis, because of the need for continuous support of programs that connect K-12 kids with extra adult and extra learning.

At the left is a photo of me providing a motivational speech at the annual year-end dinner for the tutor/mentor program that I led from 1975 to 1992.  I'm asking people to return for another year, and do more to help the kids and the program.

I'm still asking for this extra involvement.

Thanks for reading. Connect with me on LinkedIn, Facebook, BlueSky, Mastodon, Instagram and Twitter (see links here).

If you value what I'm sharing please visit this page and make a contribution to help me pay the bills. 

Monday, January 05, 2026

Making Philanthropy Work Better

I've posted more than 100 articles since 2005 that focus on improving the distribution of philanthropic dollars to volunteer-based tutor, mentor and learning programs that reach K-12 youth in high poverty areas of Chicago and other places with multi-year support. 

I've used this graphic often to show the need for long-term funding.  You can find it in this article.


I've also written about the role of information-based intermediaries who collect and share information that volunteers and donors and policy-makers could use to help youth and families in areas of concentrated poverty.  Here's one example.


Furthermore I've shown my efforts over the past 30 years to create a map-based program locator that could help people better understand where youth and families needed more help, and what tutor/mentor programs existed in these areas, that also needed more help.

Thus, I was excited over the past two weeks to learn of an organization called Project 990, which is based out of Indiana University.   Visit their website and see how they are "Building a comprehensive data analytics platform that integrates information from millions of tax filings, grants, and other sources related to philanthropic giving."

This is far more extensive and sophisticated than anything I was able to do in the past.  View this Tableau site to see maps they have created from the data they are collecting. 

Then visit this Smart Charity page on LinkedIn and read the stories they are creating using this data.




I started connecting with Indiana University in the early 2000s when people from IUPUI began attending the Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conferences that I hosted in Chicago.  Then in 2008 I began connecting with an Information Visualization program on the Bloomington campus of IU.  This 2012 article shows work done in 2008.  This article shows work done in 2015 and again in 2025. 

This Tableau map shows that part of their focus is on Bloomington, where the IU campus is located.  


I've introduced myself and hope that one or more of their students will dig into my blog, website and archives and begin sharing what they are learning via the Smart Charity stories.  My goal is that some of the strategies I've piloted, that focus on active, on-going communications intended to draw donors to existing non profits, and to places where more are needed, will become part of their own efforts.  The 2006-2015 articles on the Tutor/Mentor Intern blog show what's possible.

Furthermore, I hope their model is duplicated by universities in every urban area and in every state and that over time, this fixes the funding and staff retention problems that I focus on in my articles.

1-13-2026 update - Here's another example of mapping philanthropic data. Take a look at the Nonprofit Ecosystem Mapping Project on the GivingTuesday Data Commons. click here

When I was working with the IVMOOC team last fall I suggested that they create a map showing all of the programs at Indiana University that focused on helping people.   Here's one article where I show what's possible.   Here's another.  If such a map of the IU ecosystem existed I suspect it would connect the IVMOOC program and the Project 990 group, and maybe others who are doing related work.  


I am constantly reminded of how much great work is happening that I'm not aware of.  I add links to the Tutor/Mentor Library to share much of what I find.  So, if you're aware of programs similar to Project 990 at other universities, please share the links.

Thanks for reading.  Find me on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, BlueSky, Twitter and Mastodon. Find links here.

If you'd like to help fund my work, visit this page