The Spring 2013 conference will be held at the Metcalfe Federal Building at 77 W. Jackson. This is the same site as November 2011 and Nov. 2012 conference. I'm beginning to send out a call for workshop presenters. This list is suggestions of the type of workshops the conference should offer. http://www.tutormentorconference.org/suggestedworkshops.asp
As with past conferences my aim is to encourage on-line networking and discussion of the same ideas that are discussed at the conference.
If you can help in spreading the word, recruiting speakers, and even finding some sponsors to help keep costs low, it would be appreciated.
Tags: action, building, collaboration, collective, communications, map, network, planning, strategy, technology, More…vision
Permalink Reply by Daniel Bassill on March 21, 2013 at 8:47am I've just about filled in all slots for the June 7 conference. The attached excell spread sheet is a working draft. Still need to find keynote or noon panel discussion. Also need sponsors and some incentive to motivate people to stay the full day.
Permalink Reply by Daniel Bassill on April 1, 2013 at 5:11pm I posted list of probable speakers for the June 7 Conference in Chicago at http://www.tutormentorconference.org/speakers.asp
I'm still filling a few slots and working to get confirmations and workshop descriptions from everyone on this list. However, it's time to begin to promote the conference and build participation.
Permalink Reply by Daniel Bassill on May 1, 2013 at 4:51pm This is the agenda for the June 7 Tutor/Mentor Conference at the Metcalfe Federal Building, 77 W. Jackson, Chicago, Il.
8:45am-9:30am
Welcome & Network Building Event:
Daniel F. Bassill, Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC and Jordan Hesterman, Founder/Executive Director, Becoming We The People
9:40am-10:45am Workshops
Non-profit Communicators Workshop: Websites and Newsletters that Work, presented by Terrence Harrington, Executive Director, Helping Others Provide Excellence
To be successful, your website and newsletter must motivate your audiences to learn more about your organization and, ultimately, donate and participate. In this session, you will see examples that show how both design and content are crucial to creating a website and newsletters that grab your users' attention. You'll learn what aspects of design engage readers, as well as how to create content that keeps them coming back for more. This session will provide you with simple tips you can apply right away, and ideas for how to begin a strategic reworking of your website and/or newsletter.
Stopping The Violence: The embodiment of core values and keys components that must be employed and embraced, hosted by Steve Braxton, Bishop, Light of Illinois Diocese and Minister Mitchell Sholar, Executive Director, City Harvest Headstart Outreach Ministry
This workshop will discuss core values and keys components that must be employed and embraced by the entire community. Seeking Solutions and Remedies. Starting with parents, the students, teachers, and neighbors in the larger community, done house by house and block by block. Instilling and heightening the importance of the community must be held in highest esteem as a "Safe Heaven" to work, live, and play for the safety and concerned of all humanity
Building Support for Tutor/Mentor Programs from Business and Professional Communities, presented by Daniel Cotter, Partner, Korey Cotter Heather & Richardson, LLC , Chairman Board, Lawyers Lend A Hand to Youth.
Building Strong Programs: How to Leverage Evaluation to Strengthen Program Practices, presented by Shaunna McLeod & Jillayne Benjamin, Working in the Schools (WITS)
WITS Program Managers will provide participants with the opportunity to explore how evaluation strategies can be used to inform program practices. This workshop will be interactive, involving opportunities to engage participants in activities that allow them to apply the ideas presented to their own programming contexts.
This session would best serve leaders of organized tutor/mentor programs. Participants will learn different approaches to evaluation Participants will think about ways to use evaluation to inform program practices
Building Networks of Support for At-Risk Youth, Brandon Bodor, Executive Director, ServeIllinois Commission on Volunteering and Community Service, Sheila Merry, Illinois Mentoring Partnership
TBD, presented by James Borishade, Chief Executive Officer, Planned Life Education Group
10:55am-12:00 noon Workshops
Impacting Academic Achievement by Building Scholastic Long-Term Learners, presented by Marie Beasley, Graduate Student, Morgan State University
This presentation provides an overview of volunteer school-based mentoring programs for at-risk adolescents. We will examine the mentee/mentor relationship and its impact on academic success; and explore activities designed to engender long-term learners to enhance scholastic achievement.
The objective of the presentation is to equip volunteers with activities that will help advance at-risk adolescents (mentees) scholarly achievement. The workshop highlights the mentor’s role in the development of scholastic long term-learners. Participants should expect to learn about the effects of individual academic plans; the benefits of expending quality time with mentee (s); and the importance of impacting the students’ “Quality worldâ€. All discussions will be guided by previous empirical research.
How Many, How Often, How Well, THEN How Much. Tips for Fund Raising, presented by Kevin Hogan, Manager of Development Communications for the Saint Anthony Hospital Foundation
Fundraising, grant writing, evaluation, program development, and English composition rolled into 65 minutes as a grant writer/English teacher/Returned Peace Corps Volunteer explains how he helped a community-based program move from helping families ‘achieve an improved quality of life’ to increasing 3 of 18 first-time moms’ knowledge of infant care and development.
Intended audience: The lucky staff persons who have to sit down and put it in writing when donors and funders or potential donors and funders tell your organization to “send me something in writingâ€. Lessons learned: Charting the three-year evolution of a community-based program through its grant applications that were revised and submitted every year, How Many How Often How Well, THEN How Much revisits the components of a strong grant application that reflect your organization’s mission and passion, details the good work of your program staff, and complements the responsibilities of your foundation program officer.
Peace Summit Panel Discussion, hosted by Rev. Terry Weston, TW’s Ministry, and Derrick Grace, President, GRACE Media Group, Film Producers of Award Winning {www.onthefrontlinemovie.com} On The Front Line
Panelist will engage, equip, empower and encourage participants on resources, publications, grants and practical useful information to Address the following:
Youth Violence, Youth Substance Abuse, Youth Gang Violence, Youth Summer Jobs, Youth Career Readiness {GED and Moving Forward}, Youth Responsible Parenthood {Many Youth are Parents, Youth Raised by Grand Parents
Volunteer Recruitment and Screening, presented by Sue Sowle, Director, Youth Enrichment and Initiatives, McGaw YMCA, Evanston, IL
In this workshop we will discuss steps and best practices in recruiting, screening and interviewing mentors. We will talk about realistic time tables, effective recruitment, and screening and interviewing options.
This workshop is designed for both those who are just starting a mentoring program and those are struggling with issues around finding and screening appropriate volunteer.
Participants should leave with one or two new ideas about recruiting as well as a good command of best practices in screening and interviewing volunteers
Strengthening The "Linked In" Your Change: Using Social Media to Improve Organizational Capacity, presented by Jacquita Smith, Founder/Director, Seeds of Success Youth Development Project
This workshop is an introductory overview designed for the social media novice wishing to expand his or her knowledge and use of social media in youth development organizations. The objective is for participants to understand social media channels, best practices and channel selection that can aid in building programming collaborations, increasing organizational capacity, and creating new funding opportunities. The session is intended to be interactive, so attendees are encouraged to bring their laptops and tablets. (It is helpful--yet not required--if participants have some experience using social media such as a profile on a social networking site.) Workshop participants can expect to receive tips and strategies for improving their social media presence and for strengthening the links of "change" in their communities.
Creating Caring and Safe Youth Centered Communities, presented by Gary Goldman, Author, Empowering Students to Transform Schools
During this workshop participants will learn about a youth empowerment process that can be adapted to fit their school/organization/community and a strategy for building effective relationships with key youth/adult stakeholders.
Gary will describe an adaptable model which demonstrates how all the neighborhood’s stakeholders: parents, school representatives, churches, social service agencies, the police, health care providers and the business community can be a part of an on-going process that not only centers around youth, but actually makes them the central part of a process aimed at coordinating the efforts and resources within the community to address their needs!
12:00pm -12:45pm
Box Lunch & Networking
12:50am -1:40pm
Building Collective Effort. Information Sharing, On-line Communities - TBD
1:55pm-3:00pm Workshops
Mentoring Urban Youth, presented by Guillermo Guitierrez, Urban Involvement Coordinator, BUILD, INC
The workshop will consist of interactive learning styles, sharing successes and understanding challenges. Participants of the workshop will hear first hand from participants who have been mentored at BUILD and now are engaged in the development of their community.
Intended audience include those who are involved in working with youth who are marginalized and would like to mentor them back into a positive path.
Understanding your funders: Are they grant-makers or investors? presented by Debra Natenshon, CEO, The Center for What Works at The Rensselaerville Institute
Debra will describe the funding environment as a continuum from funders (defined as any type of investor in social programs including community/corporate/private/ public/family foundations) to smart investors and help nonprofits understand the landscape of foundation decision-making. The presentation will conclude with a discussion of which Chicago-based funders are acting as "investors" and how we need to shift our cultures, not only to meet their growing set of demands, but to re-focus our efforts on participant results and data.
Building Collaborative Support from Business and Professional Associations, panel discussion led by Kelly Fair, Founder/Executive Director, Polished Pebbles Girls Mentoring Program and Bernard Key, Technologist, Key Link Technologies
The Two Year Wait: Today’s Crisis in Male Mentoring, presented by Dr. Tony Kline, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Elementary Education, Ball State University
The lack of male mentors is a systematic challenge throughout our country. Discover how Ball State University pre-service teachers have dedicated themselves to identify the issues and possible solutions regarding male mentoring recruitment and retention.
This presentation will provide participants with three takeaways including: an overview of what current research shows us about male mentor recruitment and retention, the research that we conducted detailing demographic and motivating factors of males currently mentoring, and practical steps organizations can take to enhance male recruitment and retention.
Strengthen Youth Through Leadership, presented by Nicole Raja Baptiste, RNB Consulting Services/ReachOne-ReachAll
Receive an outline of programs, activities that can help youth's learn who they are as leaders!! The workshop is intended for youth Specialist, Educator, Education leaders, Nonprofit Professionals and more.
Alternative Schools Network Connecting with K-12 Tutoring, Mentoring, TBD
3:10pm-4:15pm Workshops
Mentoring Programs in High Crime Areas: An Observation of Mentoring Programs in Chicago's Englewood Neighborhood, presented by Rafael Yannis, School Visitation Team, Special Activities Section, Chicago Police Department
Mentoring programs have long been overlooked as an avenue of helping to reduce violence in high crime areas. The purpose of this study is to examine mentoring programs and its impact on existing crime data. In 2008, several mentoring programs were developed and initiated as a comprehensive anti-violence and prevention program for youth under risk. Secondary data was gathered and compared crime rates from 2007 to 2011 in Chicago Englewood neighborhood. The results indicate that the areas where the mentoring programs were available and actively in use, crime data results were lower than that of the surrounding police beat district. It is important to increase the awareness on the impact of mentoring programs can have in reducing crime. It is recommended that further research be conducted in the specific effectiveness of the different mentoring programs.
Building Muscle on your Board: Recruiting, Retention and Evaluation, presented by Rena Henderson Mason, President, Bold Agenda, www.boldagenda.net
Building a board that can do the heavy lifting of fundraising and managing change is hard work. We will discuss the ongoing recruiting and assessment process necessary to build a strong board that focuses on the mission. This workshop provides tools that any organization can use to build their board.
This workshop is for Executive Directors/CEOs, senior staff and board leaders who are responsible for building their board. A 7-step process will be outlined and numerous resources and tools will be provided. Participants will walk away with a system to strengthen their boards immediately.
Expanding Social Capital - Network Building at Neighborhood Level, presented by Minister Mitchell Sholar, Executive Director, City Harvest Headstart Outreach Ministry
In 2013 City Harvest is working to create a grid of support between churches, other non profit agencies and residents by providing the Expanded Social Capital Program Workshop. The workshop is mapping strategies for creating an analyst tool to establish the range of congregation involvement. Every church in the neighborhood has enough resources to manage a support system in the community by way of information, volunteers, and developed partnerships with tutor/mentoring agencies that are a part of the community. Tools used to better our lives, mentally, physically, and emotionally and reestablishing the thinking past negative emotion that effect us and and come up with a plan to improve our lives and our children by learning to stop doing the same thing over and over again. Empowering residents as Social Capital to shape the perception of the community or others will shape it for you. Learn to do what we plan for ourselves or someone's else plans it for you.
Moving from Conference to Actions in Coming Months, presented by Founder/Executive Director, Becoming We The People
Before, During and After the Conference: Connect with peers in on-line space
The T/MC invites participants to think of the conference as a meeting place where they can bring a group who is interested in creating more tutor/mentor programs in a specific region or in a specific focus area (such as health careers, technology, arts, etc.). We encourage you to join on-line forums and help planning the conference and other T/MC actions. If you would like to organize a single workshop, or a conference within the conference, please contact us online or connect with Dan Bassill on Skype at "dbassill"
© 2013 Created by Daniel Bassill.