Saturday, February 21, 2026

Tribute to a Larger-than-Life Leader

I've seen many tributes in local and national media this week, recognizing the life of service and leadership of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who passed away this week.  Here's one from PBS.


I met Rev. Jackson in 1997 when I was part of the Chicago delegation to the President's Summit for America's Future. I'm in the back row of this picture, between General John Borling, who was CEO of the United Way/Crusade of Mercy and the Rev. Jackson.

I was in several meetings with him following the April 1997 Summit, but never built any kind of relationship.

Between 1998 and 2000 I participated in monthly planning meetings held at Operation PUSH headquarters, along with leaders of the Illinois Judicial Council.  The goal was to develop a strategy that the Judges could take to area Black churches to influence the growth of mentoring programs in more places.

Below is part of a plan that I developed for the group, titled "Join the Minister's Mobilization".


You can view the complete plan at this link, along with some related documents. 

Then open this document to see an updated version of this plan that I created in the late 2000s. 


My latest update can be seen in this visual essay.

Unfortunately, the strategy presented at Operation PUSH never went very far.  We reached a point in our meetings when I was asking the Rev Jackson to take the role shown in the graphic below, using his powerful voice to draw volunteers AND donors to individual churches, so they would have the resources to actually start AND operate mentor-rich programs.  


I was told that this was not what the Rev Jackson did, since he was constantly raising money for Operation PUSH programs.  That's when I stopped attending the meetings at Operation PUSH.

So we're in 2026 with still too few programs, and with a lot fewer Black kids living in the Southside neighborhoods of Chicago.

However, I've continued to share that strategy for the past 25 years.

What's a message that faith leaders might be delivering?  I asked Google Gemini to look at this speech, by the CEO of a company, then create a speech, delivered by a Faith leader. It's posted below.

--- begin Gemini version ---

From Prayer to Purpose: A Unified Covenant for Chicago’s Future Presenter:
[Leader Name/Title], [Faith Community/Organization Name]
Audience: Chicago Interfaith Council & Regional Religious Leadership

The "Why": Beyond Charitable Almsgiving
Friends and fellow laborers, we are all familiar with the call to "clothe the naked" and "feed the hungry." We pass the plate, we run our food pantries, and we offer our prayers. But if we are honest, our current approach is fragmented. We are tending to the wounds, but we are not stopping the violence that causes them.

If we were building a new sanctuary, we would not lay a single brick without a sanctified blueprint. Yet, when it comes to the "living stones" of our city—the children growing up in the shadows of systemic neglect—we often operate without a shared vision.

I am here today to ask our congregations to adopt a specific strategic blueprint: The Tutor/Mentor Connection Strategy Map.

The Blueprint: A Map for Mercy and Justice
This is more than a diagram; it is a systemic path to redemption for our neighborhoods. You can view this sacred map here: http://tinyurl.com/tmc-strategy-map.

As faith leaders, we understand the "Cradle-to-Calling" journey. If a child’s path is blocked by the thorns of poverty and a lack of guidance, the divine potential within them is stifled. This map shows us exactly where the path is broken and how we, as a community of faith, can mend it.

The Sacred Site: Our Buildings as Bridges
The research is clear: relationships save lives, but relationships need a place to grow. We cannot rely on informal or school-based connections alone. We need organized, site-based programs that serve as "hubs" of social capital.

Look around at our houses of worship. These are not just buildings; they are underutilized sanctuaries for the youth in our "service deserts." By hosting organized programs, we provide a safe, consistent space where a child knows a mentor will be waiting every week. These sites become the "glue" that attracts both the child and the volunteer, offering access to technology, quiet study, and a community of peers that many cannot find elsewhere.

The Four-Part Ministry of Presence
To make Chicago "mentor-rich," we must apply the same discipline to our outreach that we apply to our liturgy:

* Bearing Witness (Data): We must map where the light is shining and where the darkness remains. We must identify the neighborhoods where organized programs don't exist and ask ourselves: Why not here?

* Prophetic Voice (Public Awareness): We must use our pulpits. I am challenging you to record a video "reading" this strategy map to your congregants. We must signal that mentoring is a core tenet of our faith, not a side project.

* Stewardship of People (Resource Distribution):
We don’t just give tithes; we give ourselves. We must drive our most valuable asset—our people—into the zip codes that have been forsaken.

* Cultivating the Vineyard (Continuous Improvement):
We must share our collective expertise in administration and stability to help small, neighborhood missions move from "surviving" to "thriving."

The "Village" Cluster: Our Sacred Role
Look at the "Village Clusters" on the map. Whether you lead a mosque, a synagogue, a cathedral, or a storefront church, you are a pillar of this village. I am calling for "Moral Signaling." When a faith community adopts this map, they are committing to a 20-year covenant of support—a "long obedience" in the same direction.

 "Enough is enough. We cannot simply pray for a better Chicago while standing still. We must adopt a strategy that matches the scale of the giants we are facing.

The Closing Challenge: Anoint the Strategy
At the top of this map is a blue box. It is currently empty. It is waiting for the seal of your faith community.

By placing your identity alongside this strategy, you are telling the people of Chicago that your house of worship is a bridge to the future. You are vowing that a child born today in a high-poverty neighborhood will have a spiritual family and a physical "site" of support walking beside them until they reach their full, God-given potential twenty years from now.

My Next Step: I have already integrated this strategy map into our community’s mission portal and opened our doors for these sessions. I would like to show you how to do the same.

Would you like me to send you the "Leader’s Script" we use to explain this map and the use of our buildings to our members during service?

---- end Gemini ----

I was inspired to use Google Gemini by Gene Bellinger, who has demonstrate its value through articles he's posted on his Substack - click here to find his articles.  

Thanks for reading this.  I think one of the best ways to honor the memory of the Rev. Jesse Jackson would be to adopt the strategies I've shared in this post, and share your commitment at least four times a year with a sermon based on what I shared here, or that you create by using Gemini yourself. 

You can become the YOU in the graphic shown above.

Let's connect on LinkedIn, Facebook, BlueSky, Twitter, Mastodon, etc.  Find links here.

If you value what I'm sharing, please visit this page and make a contribution to help me keep doing it.

Monday, February 16, 2026

Mapping Complex Systems - The Epstein Network

I've posted many articles with examples of mapping networks.  Here's another example.  This should be of interest to many.

I'm reading an article titled, "The "Epstein Files" and the anatomy of hidden social networks: How secrecy reshapes structure and why its analysis is conditional on data."   It includes this graphic, which is a map of 25,232 documents downloaded from the Epstein Files.


I won't even try to summarize what this interactive map is showing and how it's featured in this "Complexity Thoughts" article.  I strongly encourage you to read it for yourself,  then open the map and explore it.  

What this demonstrates is the wide range of data that can be organized and communicated via tools like Kumu, Gephi, NodeXL and others.

What's more, without "sense making", as demonstrated by this article, the size of the database will actually work against creating shared understanding or commitment to agreed-upon paths to solutions.

I'll look forward to learning more.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Leverage Billionaire Funding - Tipping Point

Today I saw an article showing How Melinda French Gates Plans to Fund "Chronically," "Unconscionably" Underfunded Programs for Women and Girls.  

In addition, I've seen many articles showing how MacKenzie Scott donated more than $740 million to HBCUs in 2025 and already more in 2026.  This is just part of her 2019 pledge to "donate the majority of  here billions in wealth to charity."

And, this week I saw posts on social media suggesting that these two women team up to create a new media ecosystem.  That would be fantastic.

But, I think there's another opportunity. What if MacKenzie Scott and Melinda French Gates teamed up to fund the idea shown below, at several universities?  Let's dig into the graphic:



In the middle of the graphic is the birth-to-work arrow that I've  used since the mid 90's to visualize age-level supports that volunteers and businesses could provide to youth, via well-organized tutor/mentor programs as well as schools. 

At the top of this graphic is the question. What can universities do differently, that might be a tipping point in terms of making well organized programs available in more places, for more years, reaching more youth, and helping them through school?


I answer by saying "build a pipeline of leaders, who work in these programs, and who work to provide the talent and resources needed by each program on an on-going basis".

So I added an overlay to the Birth to Work arrow to suggest this idea.


If you strip away the arrow, this is what's left.


Imagine a four to six year masters or PhD level college program, starting the freshman year of college.  Then visualize on-going practical learning, in which college students serve in existing programs, reaching youth as young as elementary school, with their service tied to course work being studied on campus at different points over their college career.

Imagine part of what college students are teaching youth in middle school and high school, is drawn from the same "how to" lessons that college kids are studying. If students begin thinking of what it takes to make the programs available to them, which they are part of, they will have momentum if they choose to pursue this course of study in college, and as a career.

If colleges just did the first part of this suggestion, they would  be reaching youth in neighborhoods surrounding the college and enlisting their students and alumni in various roles that help PULL kids through k-12 school, and into college, then on into jobs and careers.  If this were a continuous program, lasting for decades, it might dramatically close the opportunity gap.

This certainly would support Gate's goal of supporting programs for underserved women and girls.  And HBCUs receiving funds from Scott could dedicate some of those funds to building this type of curriculum. 

However, that's not enough. Youth and volunteers need a safe, well-organized place where they can connect, build relationships, and stay connected for many years.  Such places are constantly seeking dollars, volunteers and other resources, but are not equal in their abilities to attract those resources. Thus, too few programs are available.

Here's the TIPPING POINT:  The curriculum I am suggesting is not limited to just those going into direct service. It's a college wide humanities type course that engages students studying in different fields, most of whom will go into the business world.



Imagine that each year's class of graduates from a university include a few with degrees showing them to have a full knowledge of how to build and lead a mentor rich youth serving organization.  And then imagine another group of graduates, leaving college with an understanding of what it takes for such programs to succeed, and the role they can take in PROACTIVELY providing dollars, talent, technology, volunteers and other resources needed, including jobs, internships and learning opportunities for youth in organized tutor/mentor programs and public schools.

Then, imagine that people from both groups spend time daily, or weekly,  in on-line affinity groups, supported in part by universities, and students who are working toward their degrees, where they keep learning, from the college, and from each other, so they are constantly seeking to do more and do better, at helping kids move out of poverty, or helping solve other complex problems facing the world.

No matter how many billions Gates and Scott donate, it's too little. They need to leverage their giving so others join in.

I've attempted to communicate this idea in the past using this graphic, which you can find in this series of articles.

The problem, as I see it, is that most adults don't have time to dig through my articles and learn what has taken me 50 years to learn.  Most are not motivated to do this, nor guided through this mountain of information, they way faith leaders and college professors guide students through other information resources.

So what types of curriculum would students study?  I started building a list which I show in the graphic below. I suspect that others could add more, if they just spent time thinking about it.


As you look at the list of skills needed, compare them to courses required by colleges preparing teachers, social workers and/or business leaders.  I doubt that many are required to learn spatial thinking tools like GIS mapping, or concept mapping. Or that they are asked to learn basic coding, so they can oversee a web site or blog, to communicate ideas. I doubt that many are learning ways to support digital learning in on-line communities, or the creation of digital content that can be used to share ideas and promising practices.

Visit this section of the Tutor/Mentor library and find lists of websites that share skills which should be part of this curriculum. 

To me, this graphic also represents how students, alumni and community members, including youth, would be connecting in on-going learning to better understand complex problems, and learn about actions being taken in some parts of the world, that might be applied in other places, if resources were readily available.  If alumni who are working or have been blessed with wealth are in these conversations they would be ready and able to offer support where needed.


I've been reaching out to universities in Chicago and beyond since the 1990s to find one that would adopt the Tutor/Mentor Connection/Institute, LLC as a strategic partner.  Here's one of many articles showing this invitation.

It just takes one college to pilot this, and one wealthy benefactor to provide the financial incentive for a college or university to take this role.

Look at the graphic below. Imagine each of those red school icons being a place where an alumni with a Tutor/Mentor Institute degree from your university were on the staff and that others were volunteers, board members and/or donors.  Can you visualize having such an impact?  

This is not intended to help one, or even a few, great youth programs grow. It's intended to fill a growing number of high poverty areas across the US and the world with great, constantly improving, well-supported youth tutor/mentor programs that are recognized as world class, by the degrees of their leaders and by the work they are doing.


No matter how many billions of dollars wealthy donors give, it won't be enough.  However, if some of these dollars are intended to support effective, constantly improving organizations, and others are intended to educate donors, so they learn to search for organizations to support based on where they are located, who they serve, and what they show on their websites.  No Letter of Inquiry or Grant Proposal needed!

If you've read any articles on this blog, or followed my @tutormentorteam posts on LinkedIn, Facebook, BlueSky, Twitter or Facebook, you've seen graphics like the one below.


The message in both graphics is the same. We need to reach kids as they enter school and support them with a wide range of mentors and learning experiences as they move through school and into adult lives. While all kids need this support, for most kids, it's naturally available through family, neighbors, faith groups and community.

For each child this is at least a 20-25 year journey, starting in preschool. 

To make that happen we need to create a pipeline of new leaders.  Wealthy donors can fuel that.

Thanks for reading. Please share it. Maybe someone in wealthy circles of influence will take time to read it.  And pass it on, up the chain of wealth!

If you appreciate what I'm sharing, visit this page and send a contribution. 

Saturday, February 07, 2026

Changes in Demographics of Chicago Suburbs

This week I saw an article in the Chicago SunTimes showing how dozens of Chicago suburbs have shifted to majority nonwhite over the past 36 years. That article is now on the WBEZ site, too.  It includes three interactive maps that show changes since 1990.


Read the article and view the maps at this link.

I've followed this shift for many years.  In 2007 we held our Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conference in the South Suburbs and created this map and blog article.


Since then I've updated these articles and these articles on the MappingforJustice blog, as I've found new research showing demographic changes in the Chicago suburbs and in other cities around the USA.  

When we held the 2007 conference in Olympia Fields one of our goals was to find partners who would help us learn about any volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs already operating in the suburbs, and who would use the ideas shared at the conferences and on our website to build new programs were needed.

I still have not found anyone collecting and sharing this information. 

The map below shows locations of volunteer-based tutor, mentor programs in my database.  Visit this site and find a link to the interactive map and to my lists of Chicago area programs, which is organized by sections of the city and suburbs.


While the WBEZ map shows the demographic mix in the suburbs it does not show the economic diversity.  I've seen that on other maps, but can't find one right now.  Without an overlay that shows where poverty is most concentrated, by zip code, it's difficult to know where long-term volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs are needed.

If you've a map that shows this please share the link in the comments. 

Thanks for reading.  Please share my articles and connect with me on LinkedIn, Facebook, BlueSky, Mastodon, Instagram and/or Twitter (see links here).

If you want to help fund my work, visit this page


Monday, February 02, 2026

It's Super Bowl Week. What's the Game Plan?

It's Super Bowl Week. While a large part of world attention will focus on the game, the commercials and the halftime show, I've posted articles here almost every year since 2007 that show a role athletes can take beyond the charity causes they already support.

In 2024 I used this image from the NFL Awards show in this article, with a headline of "Multiplying Good - Map the Network".  The goal of the article was to encourage one or more data researchers to create a library of EVERY pro sports athlete, and the causes they support.  Make it searchable by city, by sport, by cause, by team, etc.  Use visualizations like Kumu.io and Gephi to help people use this information.

 

In March 2025 I included the graphic below in this article, showing an example of how networks can be mapped.


In this section and this section you can find many more articles about mapping networks using tools like Kumu.io and NodeXL. Find more ideas in this section.

In January 2026 I wrote an article titled "Making Philanthropy Work Better" and introduced Project 990, which is mining data of all nonprofit 990s reports and mapping the information. 

Since the 1990s I've been trying to influence what visible people do to support youth and youth serving programs in all high poverty areas of the cities where they play sports, or where they grew up.  

In the mid 1990s the Tutor/Mentor Connection created the map below, showing high poverty areas of Chicago and locations of non-school, volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs.  It was signed by 11 pro athletes during a weekend golf event, to indicate their support of the idea of athletes "adopting neighborhoods", not just single programs.  I've share this often, such as in this 2024 article


If you search "Super Bowl" on this blog you'll find many articles where I've shared ideas similar to these.  In 2007 I wrote "Go Bears! The Super Bowl of Life". In that I wrote:

While many athletes have foundations and do great things to help their communities, there's no strategy that I know of that enlists athletes and coaches in an effort to use their celebrity visibility to draw attention to a social cause, and to draw volunteers and donors to specific neighborhoods throughout a city.

For instance, on the Super Bowl broadcast Terry Bradshaw, a former star quarterback, and current TV broadcaster, made an appeal for viewers to stay involved in helping survivors of Hurricane Katrina. The TV footage focused at New Orleans and the Lower 9th Ward, but I heard him end a phrase with "and the other areas".

If someone created a map of the area that had been destroyed by the Hurricane, it would be possible to enlist athletes from many sports to adopt different communities, or zip codes, in the entire area. Then, whenever that athlete were to have a TV opportunity, he/she could draw attention to his zip code, as part of an effort to keep attention on the entire area of destruction. As the season moves from Basketball to baseball to football and back to hockey and basketball, different stars, in different cities, would have many opportunities to focus attention, and draw resources to the various parts of the entire geographic area where volunteers, donors, and all sorts of help will be needed for many years.

In the same way, I want to enlist athletes to focus attention on the high poverty neighborhoods of big cities. Instead of just talking about the Boys and Girls Clubs, or Big Brothers, Big Sisters, or other highly visible charities, we need to focus attention regularly on every neighborhood where kids need help, and the organizations in those neighborhoods who are providing help. 

This is a strategy I hope athletes will adopt. If you read this, and you know a Bear, or a Bull, or a college coach, or even a high school coach, who might want to be a champion of this idea, please pass this on.

While I've shared these ideas for many years I still have not found any photos of a pro football or basketball player standing in front of a map like I do in this 1990s photo, urging people to support youth programs in EVERY high poverty neighborhood, not just the few high profile programs in a few places.

I still have found no athlete or team supporting the "Adopt a Neighborhood" strategy that I outlined.

So as you watch this year's game, I hope you'll share this idea with high school and college coaches, and with any athlete you know.  Think of these articles as a "playbook" that coaches and players can study to see how they can do better next year than they did this year.

That's a habit that could make a quantum difference in the lives of millions of people.

The best time to have started this was 30 years ago. The next best is now, in 2026 when the technology available to build big databases and visualize the information is now available.

Thanks for reading.  Enjoy the game!

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

And, if you value what I'm sharing, please visit this page and help fund the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC. 

Sunday, February 01, 2026

Expanding "Who you Know" Networks

National Mentoring Month has just ended and Black History Month starts today.  Last week I watched a panel discussion, hosted by MENTOR Georgia (it's 90 minutes long, so watch it later).  In one segment the speaker talked about mentoring as a strategy to expand networks, or social capital. 

That takes time.  

Below is a graphic that I created several years ago.  I find very few mentoring discussions that use graphics to emphasize the long-term support kids in high poverty, highly segregated, areas need to move from first grade through high school and post high school and into jobs and careers.

If you work your way through it I hope you'll have a better idea, and commitment, to the work that needs to be done in many places.


At the top of the graphic I show an arrow that represents support all kids need, for the first 20-25 years of their lives, to help them through school and then, into and through their adult lives. Some kids, like Bill Gates, or Jeff Bezos, or Elon Musk, had much greater support propelling them to career success. Those are extreme examples, but most kids have a large natural network of support than kids in high poverty areas. 

That arrow comes from this "mentoring kids to careers" graphic, which I created in the late 1990s.  It shows first grade through 12th grade, then college or vocational training, as a series of steps. At each step kids need a variety of different supports and/or are influenced by people who work in occupations that youth might aspire to in their own futures.  If you open this concept map, you'll see a different version of this timeline.

As I said above, all kids need some of these supports and influences.  However, if you read many of the articles in this section of my library, you'll see plenty of evidence showing that kids living in high poverty areas don't have as many naturally occurring supports or career models as do kids in more affluent areas. That means someone, or many people, need to help make these supports available and keep them in place for 12 or more years.

This leads to the next element on the graphic, which are the maps.  


I've been using maps since 1993 to visually show areas of Chicago with high concentrations of poverty and many indicators showing kids and families need more help.  Without a map you could have a long list of places you're helping, but still be missing a large number of other places that need the same help.

You can find the maps shown above in this 2016 article. You can find hundreds of articles on this blog, and the MappingforJustice blog, showing similar maps and encouraging leaders to use them to guide resources into all of these areas for many years. 

The map graphic I've used is a mashup of maps from three sources.  In this concept map you can find many data platforms that could be used to create similar map stories. 

Why don't we see leaders using maps to show the growth of youth and family support programs in every high poverty area of the  USA?

Since starting the Tutor/Mentor Connection in 1993, and the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC in 2011, my focus has been on helping long-term, volunteer-based tutor and/or mentor programs grow in all high poverty areas as a way of expanding the networks of support available to kids, helping them through school and beyond. 

Thus, the arrow, or timeline, indicates multiple years of support. The map illustrates that many places need the same type of support for many years.

The graphic below visualizes the need for every industry to have strategies that distribute volunteers, technology, dollars and more into every neighborhood...and for school and non-school programs to be places where kids connect with a wider range of learning and career opportunities than might be normally available in their own family and neighborhood. 


While I led a tutor/mentor program from 1975 through 2011, which collected inner city kids to a wide range of workplace adults, I did not start to understand this as a form of bridging social capital until the early 2000s.  

Here's a link to one of the earliest articles that have influenced my thinking about social capital. One introductory paragraph says:

“Social networks that can bridge across geography, race and class are key to success in the new economy”, says Professor Manuel Pastor, Jr., University of California, Santa Cruz, who has studied social networks in Los Angeles among Latinos. ‘Hard’ skills are essential, but it’s the connections and mentoring that provide information about what skills are necessary and a vision of how acquiring them can lead to new opportunities for all our residents”.

This was written by Bob Pearlman.  The research he points to can be found at this link.  His current website is at this link

Since then I've aggregated links to many articles about social capital, which you can find here, and have posted 30+ articles on this blog that focus on social capital.

In this article I point to an earlier influence. It was a book that I read in the mid 1990s, titled American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass, by Douglas Massey. This book emphasized how disconnected people living in highly segregated, high poverty, neighborhoods were from the resources that might make lives in those communities better for residents.

MENTOR, the national intermediary, focuses on all types of mentoring, recognizing that every person could benefit from having a mentor at some points in their lives.  But that dilutes the focus needed to reach kids in every high poverty area with organized, on-going programs.

I've used maps showing high poverty areas to help people understand where long-term, organized, volunteer based tutor,  mentor and learning programs are most needed. I encourage MENTOR and others to do the same.

Why non-school programs?

Find the graphic below in this visual essay.  It shows how organized, on-going programs are needed in high poverty areas of big cities, because of how difficult it is for kids and schools in these areas to make such connections and sustain them for many years.  We operated after 5pm because that was when workplace volunteers were more likely to make long-term commitments.

I've used a variety of graphics to visualize how organized programs can create extra learning opportunities by the involvement of volunteers who work in different industries and career fields.  This Total Quality Mentoring visual essay illustrates how such programs could be more available if they were strategically supported by leaders from different sectors.


I created this presentation more than 20 years ago to show why organized tutor/mentor programs are needed in high poverty areas and actions the Tutor/Mentor Connection had piloted since 1993 to help such programs get the attention and resources each needs to constantly improve.   The graphic I've included below visualizes some of the different types of learning, mentoring and tutoring that might take places in a site-based program.


These strategies have been based on the premise that areas of concentrated, high poverty, have too few people working in the wide range of careers that are modeled daily by parents, family and neighbors in more affluent places.  Thus, such programs need to be built in order to expand the social capital for kids in poverty areas.

However....  that does not mean there are "no people" living in high poverty areas who have jobs and careers.   That's the final element included in the graphic above.  Kids and adults need to learn "who you already know" who might be someone who can mentor them and help open doors to opportunity.


The need for social capital literacy is not really a new concept. Bob Pearlman's early 2000s article said, "Networking, or acquiring a social network, is a key skill of the 21st Century. It’s how you learn, and how you connect."  

I show another version of the "hub and spoke" graphics in a presentation titled "virtual corporate office" and in these blog articles.  


This shows how different industries could "distribute" learning and mentoring opportunities to kids in all high poverty areas, via school and non-school programs.  Social capital literacy could be a separate box, or could be a part of the mentoring coming from each industry.

The map reinforces the need for these forms of learning and mentoring in EVERY high poverty neighborhood. The timeline emphasizes the need for such learning to be consistently available for many years.  The other graphics emphasize that businesses in every sector could be supporting organized, volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs in multiple locations, not just one or two favored programs. 

Let's look at the timeline arrow once more.  If you click and enlarge it you'll see different types of learning activities that are appropriate for different age levels.

Here's another quote from Bob Pearlman's article:

"But the most significant finding in the study was that a student's social network can have a significant impact on his/her career choice. Students whose parents are both in high-tech careers are more likely to be interested in technology careers themselves. In addition, 83 percent of students rely on personal connections for career-related information and guidance."


I believe that the earlier a young person becomes involved in a well-organized, mentor-rich non-school program, the more benefit that program will have. Stronger bonds will be built with mentors, and with the program itself.  That's important because while a volunteer might leave after a year or longer, the program's ability to provide continuity, and a replacement mentor, helps keep the youth involved.  As a youth moves from middle school to high school the support offered can lead to part time jobs, internships, college access, scholarships and ultimately job and career opportunities. 

Kids in primary school where fundamental learning habits can be reinforced, and career aspirations nurtured, don't yet have the level of maturity needed to actively seek out mentors.  However, by middle school, and early high school, I think most kids would be ready to take more control over their own futures, if there were people helping them.  

We need to make that happen. 

This  has been a long post. Thanks for reading. I hope we connect on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and/or LinkedIn.

If you want to support my work, please visit this page and use PayPal to send a contribution. 

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