Here's how to use this blog. Each article includes graphics. Click on them to get enlarged versions. Each article has many links (which are often broken on older articles). Open the links to dig deeper in the ideas and strategies I share. On the left side are tags which you can click to find articles that focus on the same topic. Below that are links to other web sites with relevant information. Learn more about me at http://www.tutormentorexchange.net/dan-bassill.
Thursday, October 28, 2021
Friday, October 22, 2021
#RacismandtheEconomy: Focus on the Wealth Divide
On October 20th I tuned into another of the #RacismandtheEconomy webinars hosted by the Federal Reserve banks. Click into the hashtag on Twitter and you can follow some of the conversation and find a link to the full archive and past presentations.
This webinar focused on the Wealth Divide in America and panel members represented the views of Native Americans, Asian and Pacific Islanders, African Americans, Hispanic Americans and other minority groups, as I highlighted in the Tweet shown below.April Youpee-Roll, @RDFoxworth, Phil English, and @Seema_NYC will respond to the policy pitches in a panel moderated by @reemakhrais. Send in your responses to the policy pitches using #RacismandtheEconomy or emailing RacismandtheEconomy@bos.frb.org. https://t.co/RjIKtO0ezK
— Minneapolis Fed (@MinneapolisFed) October 20, 2021
As I listened to the speakers I recognized that they were talking of different histories and lived experiences and their goals and paths to opportunity are often different.Today's discussion highlights different issues of the #WealthGap for Native Americans, Hispanic Americans, descendants of African slaves, Asian/Pacific Island immigrants, etc. Historical perspectives need to be understood. #RacismandtheEconomy https://t.co/oHbezUUzRw
— Daniel Bassill (@tutormentorteam) October 20, 2021
I scratched some notes as I listened and I'm sharing them below.
I've created concept maps, like the one shown here, to show categories of information in the library and to point to sub sections with specific types of information.
So what's next. If you've read this far, thank you. If you are hosting a web library with information specific to the histories and issues of one or more of the POC groups I've pointed to, please share the link. Let's connect on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Instagram to amplify our stories.I think the @federalreserve banks can do much more to draw people who can help, to their research, then to local organizations & activists working in different places to reduce #inequality & the #WealthGap. #RacismandtheEconomy series is a good start. pic.twitter.com/7qncbW1BVW
— Daniel Bassill (@tutormentorteam) October 20, 2021
Monday, October 18, 2021
My Memories of General Powell
. an ongoing relationship with a caring adult mentor
Having led a volunteer-based tutor/mentor program for many years, and collected news stories showing the need for such programs for many years, I recognized that Chicago had more than 240,000 kids who fit into the target category.
I started using maps in 1993 to show where these kids were most concentrated and where organized programs were needed. I added overlays to my maps showing where existing programs were located and published a Directory that businesses, foundations, parents, educators and others could use to find programs in different parts of Chicago.
I emphasized the 13-15 million kids that the Summit intended to help in the above paragraphs. Unfortunately, by 1999 this focus was gone and instead there was an "all kids need help" emphasis.
Saturday, October 16, 2021
Understanding participation in movement building
What's exciting about this is that it looks like NodeXL has added a spatial analysis feature to their tool. Thus, you can not only create the traditional network analysis map showing who's connected to who in a conversation, now you can create geographic maps showing where participants come from.Many thanks to @marc_smith for sharing this map of tweets and retweets using #RCGPAC hashtag (from NodeXL interaction map shared earlier today)
— Dr Graham Mackenzie🇪🇺 (@gmacscotland) October 16, 2021
Featuring the following & many others@shaunlintern@emahase_@zubhaque@rcgpac@cmo_england@devisridhar@martinrcgp@rcgp@drgandalf52 pic.twitter.com/1351UMyUiP
Here's another graphic I've used often. It shows that teams of people with a wide range of talents and networks are needed at the program level, neighborhood level and city, state and federal level, to build and sustain mentor rich programs in all the places where they are needed.
Wednesday, October 13, 2021
Using Chicago Community Data Portal
This is one of many data platforms I point people to as I encourage local groups to build a case for investment in many community supports, including non-school tutor/mentor programs, in areas where the data indicates a need.
Since the demographics are shown as percent levels you'd need to multiply a percent by the number of people in the community area to determine the number of people in a specific group.
Using the data provided by the Heartland Alliance and others community leaders in every neighborhood should be leading an effort that determines the need for non-school tutor/mentor programs, identifies existing programs and what age group they serve, what number of kids are served and what type of tutoring, mentoring and learning is offered, and how many more programs are needed.
Saturday, October 09, 2021
Who have I helped?
A friend asked recently, "Has anyone adopted the Tutor/Mentor Connection strategy?" I responded, "Not that I know of." That's because I don't have documentation to show how people who attended conferences or who I've talked with, or who have visited my websites, have used the ideas.
Here's an example. In October 2006 I posted this article titled Nobel Prize, Giraffes and Tutor/Mentor. What's the Link?
In the comments section one person posted:
Thank you for what you do for the poor.
Do you have any idea where to go or who to contact, to get some funds for a starting project: by means of grants or small loans? As you know most sponsors required a track record of success. This is yet entrepreneurial I left my job to commit 100% to this project and cause. Time is crucial for those that must wait in the cold.
I was once a homeless. I then worked for the homeless and now that I am closer to getting a PhD in Human Services- Health Services Administration I want to put my passion, talents and experience at the service of those brothers and sisters; specially the most vulnerable ones. Homeless in need of respite care.
I have an entrepreneurial idea that will work and will make a respite homeless shelter financially sustained in the long run. I am starting a project, a respite care facility for vulnerable homeless discharged from hospitals here in my city; Miami, Fl. where they have no place to go, but public shelters where they have minimum chances of getting an acceptable recovery if at all. I am well known among the underprivileged housing and healthcare providers in the community.
My ambition is to house every discharged homeless patient in Miami for at least 60 days while experienced case managers work on transitional housing for them.
Here's what I posted in response:
I have a ppt in the Tutor/Mentor Institute that is titled "steps to start a tutor/mentor program".
It would also apply to you and others. Doing your research and building a team are the first two steps. You're doing research by contacting me. In the LINKS section of the T/MC site are numerous links to fund raising research and sites. The links on my blog to Gift Hub and Non Profit Blog exchange, provide even more links to people who have more expertise in fund raising than I ever will have.
When I started Cabrini Connections-Tutor/Mentor Connection in 1993 I had several assets that I could draw on
a) 25 years previous experience leading a Chicago tutor/mentor program, and a large network of volunteers who supported me
b) 17 years history working for the Montgomery Ward corporation in their Chicago headquarters, where I built a relationship with key leaders because of my leadership of the volunteer tutor/mentor program hosted in that facility. Wards provided free space and a $40,000 per year grant from my first year (1993) to 2000 when they went out of business.
c) a marketing/advertising background and mentality, which has enabled me to constantly expand my network of people who might be interested in what I'm doing and who might volunteer time or make a donation
d) momentum and ignorance - my transition from a full time job at Wards to a full time job leading the tutoring/mentor program as its first paid director was forced by people at Wards who decided they no longer wanted me working for them. This gave me the push to leave the company and make leading the tutor/mentor program my full time job, which is what my previous 17 years of involvement had been leading me to want to do. The ignorance part is that I had no idea how difficult it would be and how many sacrifices my family would have to make for me to lead a non profit, on the salary they could pay, and on the constant uncertainty that comes with building an organization from scratch
Thus, my advise to you is to build a team of people who share your passion, and who are willing, or able, to raise money, or provide money, to pay for the operations of your organization. Recruiting the right mix of volunteers for your board is essential to your success in raising money.
As a start up, finding someone to donate space for your operations is critically important if you don't have access to immediate funding for space and operations.
It's not enough to have a good idea. You need to be good at marketing the idea to donors, volunteers and others who must share your vision enough to provide the time and talent it takes to succeed.
Good luck to you.
--------
I never heard back so don't know if this information was used, or was useful.
Below is a map showing participants of the Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conferences that I hosted from May 1994 to May 2015. You can find it here.
I've been told by people from Long Beach, California, Detroit, Michigan and Indianapolis, Indiana that they started initiatives similar to the Tutor/Mentor Connection after attending these conferences.
The Lawyers Lend A Hand Program at the Chicago Bar Association grew from 1994 to 2007 with my support.
Leaders of current Chicago programs like Kids Off the Block, Polished Pebbles and ProjectSyncere all met with me, or attended the conferences, early in their start-up stages.
Here's a blog by a gentleman from Africa who contacted me in the early 2000s saying he wanted to duplicate the Tutor/Mentor Connection in Africa. We stayed connected until he passed away last year, but I don't think he ever was able to fully duplicate the T/MC.
Thus, I'm certain that I've helped influence many, but at the same time, I don't see any who fully duplicate the strategies share on the www.tutormentorexchange.net website.
How would one know if this was happening?
Look at my site then look at leadership initiatives in your area. Do they use maps with layers of information showing where poverty is concentrated? Do they use concept maps and other visualizations to show a long-term commitment needed to helping kids from first grade, through high school, into the workforce? Do they share strategies via visual essays? Do they host a list of programs, and a library of information showing where they are most needed, why they are needed and how people can build and sustain such programs?
Finally, this is most important. Do they work daily to create public awareness that draws volunteers and donors directly to the programs they list in their library?
Tuesday, October 05, 2021
Building a Segmented Understanding of Youth-Serving Programs
I'm going to share some graphics. Let's look at this graphic first:
Through the Tutor/Mentor Connection, started in 1993, and through the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC, started in 2011, I focus on youth living in high poverty areas of big cities like Chicago, where a wide range of mentoring, tutoring and learning supports are needed, in the lives of thousands of young people. At http://www.tutormentorexchange.net you can find a library of information and ideas that anyone can use to help create programs that reach youth early and stay connected for many years, if the end result is a life out of poverty with a network of people to help achieve that goal.
In 2013 I created the graphic below. I wrote about it here, with an invitation for technologists to help build a graphic that programs might be willing to put on their web sites. Imagine a common graphic showing what age you serve, what time of day, what part of the birth to work pipeline, etc.
Thank you to those who read and share my posts and to those who also send contributions!
Friday, October 01, 2021
Keeping the Web Library Available
The site was rebuilt in 2011 and I've used that format for the past 10 years. Last spring we had to move the web library to a new form of hosting since the site was attracting web viruses. This week as I was trying to update links in the library we found that this function was no longer working. In addition, the person who has been hosting the site at no cost no longer will have time to fix this. The site will close by January 2021.
Fortunately the site archive is available on the Wayback Machine site. This link takes you to a version from early in 2021.
I have no money to invest in web developers, so I'm not certain what I will do. For the past 10 years I've used the www.tutormentorexchange.net site as my main website and the primary value of the T/MC site was that it hosed my list of Chicago tutor/mentor programs and it hosted a web library with more than 2000 links.
Below you can see how that was formatted.
A second benefit was that a Google search for the words "tutor mentor" still resulted in the www.tutormentorconnection.org site coming up first among the non-ad supported listings. I feel that's a value.
My first priority is saving the information in the library. My friend in Indiana has a back-up of the site that can be provided to me as a data-base, but I'm not confident that I can draw information from that.
So I'm going through the library, category-by-category and copying the information to a MS Word doc. I did the Chicago Programs Links section a couple of days ago. I started on the main library yesterday. I think that I can complete this by mid November if I work on it every day.
Once that is done I have less fear of losing the information even if the website goes off-line. However, that's only step one. I need to find a new way to share the information, and to point the www.tutormentorconnection.org site to where I host the new library.
One option is to put this on the www.tutormentorexchange.net site. Below is a visualization showing my thinking. From the home page I could link to a page that looks like this, showing the four sections of the library, and listing the sub categories in each section. Those would open to a new page where I'd list programs alphabetically.
Each sub section would have it's on page of listings. For instance in the Chicago Programs section is a sub category for Chicago Central area. Below is an example of how that might look (with improved formatting). I might create a version with only the name of the program and the website and not include the description paragraph. That would save space.https://tutormentorexchange.net/other-youth-programs
Update: 1/9/2022 - the Tutor/Mentor library is now fully available at http://www.tutormentorexchange.net
I've had to upgrade the hosting for tutormentorexchange.net so if you want to help cover the monthly cost, a $50 contribution at this link will cover one month.