We're nearing the end of this school year and are at the end of the annual April Volunteer Recognition Month. Volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs all over the country have been making an effort to recognize the people who have given time and talent over the past year, while are also (I hope) looking for ways to motivate many of those volunteers to return for another year when the 2024-25 school year begins in late August.
I've been digitizing newsletters and yearbooks from the two tutor/mentor programs I led between 1975 and 2011 and thought I'd do some volunteer recognition today.
Below is a page from the 1991-92 yearbook of the tutor/mentor program I led in Chicago from 1975 to the fall of 1992.
This program was started in 1965. I joined as a volunteer in 1973 and became a member of the leadership committee in 1974. In the summer of 1975 I was chosen to be the leader when the incumbent announced during a summer planning meeting that he was "going to Europe and would not return for a couple of years". When I took the lead the program was already recruiting 100 pairs of kids and volunteers at the start of the year. In my last year, 1991-92, that had grown to 440 2nd to 6th grade youth and 550 volunteers. You can see the yearbook PDF
at this link.
I left that program in October 1992 and with six other volunteers formed a new program, intended to help kids who aged out of the first program after 6th grade have similar support to help them through high school. At the same time we formed the Tutor/Mentor Connection, to help similar programs grow in all high poverty areas of Chicago.
Below is a page from the 1999 Annual Report for that program.
Starting with only seven volunteers the program grew quickly, reaching nearly 100 volunteers by the end of the 1998-99 school year. If you look at the list of veteran volunteers on this page and on the one from 1991-92 you'll see many of the same people. That's because many volunteers from the first program came to the new program with their students, as those kids joined Cabrini Connections. You can see this Annual Report
in this PDF.
Note that by 1999 I was using the Total Quality Mentoring graphic to describe how we were recruiting volunteers from many different backgrounds. That was true in the first program, too.
In
this PDF I describe the concept of Total Quality Mentoring.
By sharing my annual reports and newsletters I hope that I'm providing some inspiration for how others might build activities in their programs that help them recruit and retain students and volunteers for multiple years. It's these long-term relationships that have the greatest benefit and it's the experience of veteran volunteers that helps newer volunteers become part of the program and stay involved longer.
You can view 1975 to 1992 yearbooks for the Montgomery Ward/Cabrini-Green Tutoring Program
at this link.
You can view 1994 to 2009 annual reports for Cabrini Connections, Tutor/Mentor Connection
at this link.
As you look at these annual reports you'll see several thousand volunteers who participated for one or many years. I am tremendously thankful for the time each person contributed to helping create a brighter future for the kids we were working with.
Now I want to share a President's Message from a January 2005 e-Mail newsletter. You can open the PDF and read the full newsletter
at this link.
The heading of my message was "Competing for Attention" and it was written after a year of "unbelievable acts of violence caused by nature and caused by humans."
I wrote, "In the aftermath of these have come equally magnanimous acts of kindness and generosity. While this leads me to be thankful at the same time as I fear what the next tragedy will be, I feel that we need to look at charity in new ways if we're to maximize the benefits of the generosity that is in this world."
I went on to write
----- begin Jan 2005 ------
"This is why I participate in a variety of Internet forums that connect people from around the world with each other.
I feel that out of the Tsunami tragedy will come some innovations that those of us working with kids might benefit from. Right now donations are coming from all over the world to a variety of charities serving the Tsunami because of the high public visibility the tragedy has generated.
I feel that if we can create a portal that tells why it's important to help kids, with doors leading to each continent, each nation, each city, and each neighborhood where kids need help, this portal can serve as a funnel for dollars, volunteers and similar resources to go to individual programs in each neighborhood. While there are some on-line charity portals, like http://www.networkforgood.org, these promote all forms of charity, and thus don't have the passion and appeal that could be generated by having portals that focus on specific channels of service, like tutoring/mentoring.
Rather than reinvent the wheel, my dream is that we could find people who share our passion for helping kids and will share their talent to build such a portal, or to make existing products available to other streams of service. I'm sure such people and organizations exist. We just have not connected yet. In the Discussion section of www.tutormentorexchange.net there is a database and a GIS discussion group where I'm gathering volunteers who might help with such a project.
Once we have the portal every organization that offers any form of tutoring, mentoring, career development, etc. can share in building visibility and traffic, knowing that this helps each of us increase the revenue pie that we end up splitting.
In six months much of the attention to the Tsunami will be turned to some other tragedy and the people in these countries will be just like us, struggling to draw attention and consistent revenue to the work of rebuilding lives. The type of portal I'm trying to build could be a benefit to these countries just as much as it will be a benefit to you, me and thousands of others like us.
This email goes to more than 3,000 people. A print newsletter goes to almost 14,000 people (when we can find the money to print it-the last print newsletter was sent in 2003). Some of you have been connected to me and the Tutor/Mentor Connection for more than a dozen years. Some are getting this email for the first time.
While my intention is to share information that I hope you can use, this is also an invitation to everyone who reads this far on this email to contact me to explore ways we might work together. As Margaret Mead once said, "it only takes a few people to change the world". It only takes a few of you to join us in 2005 to make this a better year for thousands of organizations serving kids living in poverty.
While it is almost impossible to have two or three thousand one-on-one conversations each week, it is very possible to meet in on-line forums where thousands of people can share ideas and unite in joint action. In the Discussion Section of http://www.tutormentorexchange.net a few such forums are listed. I hope you'll join some and that we can meet on-line.
---- end Jan 2005 ----
I've never been able to find a group willing to work together (of provide funding) to build the type of portal that I described in that 2005 newsletter. I was able to build an interactive tutor/mentor program locator in 2008 and keep it available until 2018, but not able to update it after 2010.
On
this planning page you can see the vision for the Chicago Tutor/Mentor Program Locator and find a link to a "next step" of adding a fund raising capacity to the platform, that would enable donors to directly donate to programs listed in the database.
I've continued to use social media daily to share ideas and connect with others. I'm still looking for program leaders who "share in building visibility and traffic, knowing that this helps each of us increase the revenue pie that we end up splitting."
In the Tutor/Mentor library I've three lists that point to organizations doing part of what I envisioned in 2005. Find those
here,
here and
here. If you know of others doing what I described, please share the link in the comments.
As you read my newsletters I hope you'll share them in your own networks.
Thank you for reading today's post.At t
his page you can find links to where I'm active. Please connect with me and encourage your friends to do the same.
Finally, there's a cost for me to keep these archives available and to keep updating the Tutor/Mentor library. If you can help fund the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC,
visit this page and use the PayPal feature to contribute.
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