I created the presentation shown below about 10 years ago to explain the role of this library in stimulating innovation and constant improvement across the entire ecosystem of organizations working with youth.
showing the entire web library. Visit
and find links to each sub section. While some of what I share comes from my own experiences of leading a youth tutor/mentor program for 36 years, most points to the ideas and experiences of others.
Click on any of the featured nodes and you'll open another map, focusing on that area. Open nodes on those maps and you'll go to a section of the web library with relevant links.
This
part of the library includes the list of Chicago area non-school volunteer-based tutor, mentor and learning programs that has been the central focus of the library. It also contains links to other resources that anyone can use to learn what others are doing and find ways to improve their own programs.
I plotted this information on a map based program locator between 2004 and 2010, but that is now only an archive.
Since 2016 I've been sharing my list on this map, which you can zoom into for more neighborhood level detail. See it in
this article.
There are numerous challenges to what I've been trying to do. Obviously, the first is to find the money each year to collect the program information and web site library links, then to maintain a website and interactive map to share the information. While I succeeded for nearly 20 years I've not been able to do as much since 2011. I'm trying to find an institution who will take ownership and rebuild the web platform to be of equal quality to those like the "Education Reimagined" site.
However, that's not the only challenge. On the STRATEGY page that I pointed to above I showed a concept map visualizing four concurrent strategies that I've followed since 1993. Below is the same map, but with each of the four categories I show some of the
challenges that need to be addressed.
One of the major challenges, not shown on this map, is generating a flow of talent and dollars to EVERY youth program within a geographic area like Chicago, so each can do more to tell what they do, how they do it, and how others can help them, on their own web sites. Along with this would be money for staff, and motivation for them to be constantly looking at other web sites to compare what they do, with what others do.
A further challenge is to motivate donors to be looking at the same information, in the same conversations, so that when a program says "we should be doing this" a donor says "I'll provide the money." Wouldn't t hat be great!
The library has little value if too few people are using it.
My
last blog post, on April 1, was focused on information collection and sharing and I highlighted a few groups who were collecting education information, seeking to 'reimagine learning'. I think there would be a value for someone to be aggregating links to all of these groups, so they could be learning from each other, attracting more attention, and building the public will needed to make solutions available in every place needed, especially the high poverty areas of the USA and the world.
The
concept map below shows an example of what's possible. These are Chicago based intermediary organizations that focus on the well-being of youth. They share the same geography, but few share links to each other on their websites, or host a concept map similar to this.
I find the same in some of the education innovation groups I follow. More should follow the advice of
Education Reimagined:
“Hey, they look like our community. Maybe we can do this, too.”
However, someone needs to be aggregating and sharing this information. Who is doing this?
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