Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Year-End Donations Help *You* in the Long Run

As the year closes, just wanted to take one last minute and remind you that...

Your continued support of tutoring and mentoring benefits you, your families, and your community.

How?

By donating whatever you can to not-for-profits such as Cabrini Connections and Tutor/Mentor Connection -- programs that host and support tutor/mentor programs -- you help students (that might otherwise give up hope and choose unproductive life paths) achieve greater success in academics, and the tools to participate in constructive career and life paths.

Many kids here leave the Cabrini Green neighborhood and go onto college, become community advocates and leaders, and/or (bare minimum) get a fairer shake in the job market as consumers.

The result for YOU is less crime, a stronger local economy, motivated participants in our democracy, a diversified labor/leader/advocate pool, better neighbors, new friends, and awesome karma in 2009.

Thanks to all of you who attended the Schubas benefit concert, and who have already spent what you can on tutoring and mentoring this year.

I enjoyed making maps and playing a bit of guitar for the cause in 2008, and look forward to working with you in 2009 to help support/improve these programs for our students.


PS..... If you would still like to contribute to an improved society through tutoring and mentoring, please make a year end donation.

And feel free to subscribe to any of the following blogs to learn about the students, and their success stories through the programs:



Peace and Happiness in 2009!

Donations: http://www.cabriniconnections.net/donate/donate_online.asp
(or contact Cassina Sanders directly at cassinaz.cabrini@gmail.com or 312-492-9614 )

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Your Holiday Donations Help Us Make Maps into Obama's Administration

Thanks for everyone who made it to my favorite venue in Chicago - Schubas - this past Friday to listen to some music in support of tutoring and mentoring. And of course, thanks to Schubas for donating 100% of the door to Cabrini Connections as well! (A great example of community leaders creatively using their resources - their niche - to make a difference in the lives of Chicago's students during the holiday season.)

I was really very excited to perform at the event with my band, "Trakan"... alongside Chris Warren's band "Howling Poppies" (Chris in a coordinator for Cabrini Connections, and occasionally plays drums with us, as seen in the picture above - taken at the Schubas benefit).

From the stage, we had an opportunity to briefly remind the audience why tutoring and mentoring is such a vital cause, and to thank them for doing what they could (by attending if nothing else) to contribute. (Then, of course, we rocked their asses :)

To everyone who could not attend the performance, I would like to personally thank you for any help you have provided for the cause this past year, and for any time or funds donated to Cabrini Connections and/or Tutor/Mentor Connection.

Which reminds me - please don't forget that your contributions as volunteers, donors, messengers, hosts, etc... to these sister organizations don't just help the Cabrini students. They help us continue to make the maps featured here on this blog...


...Maps which have been used by community, business, spiritual, and political leaders to develop strategies that have led to the creation of new programs in areas of need (areas which are easily exposed by creating maps and other visual representations of existing data).

As we move into 2009, on the day President Elect Obama has introduced Chicago Public Schools boss Arne Duncan as Secretary of Education, I can't help but hope our city's tutoring and mentoring programs can serve as exemplary models for the nation moving forward. And I dream of continuing to create maps that can be used as strategic tools by the President and his Secretary of Education to make this hope reality.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Holiday Concert For Tutoring and Mentoring THIS FRIDAY!

We talk about issues related to "poor student performance" and povery all the time... whether in blogs or face to face... and while many of us have decided to volunteer or donate or make contributions toward the tutoring/mentoring cause in different (sometimes creative) ways, here is a no-commitment, laid-back, fun way to help tutoring and mentoring programs this weekend!!

Come out to Schubas this Friday, and hear four bands and have a few drinks... all to support tutoring and mentoring!

What can be easier or more fun?

In fact, the event is only from 6 till 9, so you can use this as a stepping stone into even more Friday fun late into the evening!


Your $30 ticket buys you one complimentary drink and four bands at the legendary venue.(100% of the ticket sales - and Trakan CD sales that night - will be donated to Tutor/Mentor Connection and Cabrini Connections.)

Can't wait to see you!

And hey, if you can't make it to the north side of Chicago, of course there are other ways you can make a charitable donation to the cause this holiday season.

Donations can be made at the following links:

Tutor/Mentor Connection
Cabrini Connections

Happy holidays!

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Maps at the November Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conferences

A couple times each year, Cabrini Connections and Tutor/Mentor Connection organize a local conference of folks who are involved with, or interested in tutoring and mentoring. With the goal of sharing resources and information, people come from all over the region and throughout the country to attend workshops and speak on panels.

The most recent of these "Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conferences" occured at the end of last month, on Friday November 21 at the Field Museum. The event was attended by 95 people, all of whom were greated by blown-up poster-sized versions of some of the maps featured throughout this blog! (Thanks David!)

I was also honored to have a chance to present with Dan Bassill in a workshop called "Mapping Collaborative Strategies," where I had another chance to give a tour of our maps to a new audience, and explain how they are used. A lot like I did in this blog.

It was great actually meeting other tutor/mentor professionals, and having a chance to talk with a handful who approached me afterward to discuss possible collaborations in creating mapping solutions for their unique strategic tutoring/mentoring purposes. Of course, I am willing to assist others and share information, and look forward to any partnerships this project might generate in our combined struggle against poverty.

And of course, the conference gives me a new opportunity to make more maps!

As I did back for the May conference, I took attendee data, and created a few maps that show where attendees are working in relationship to eachother - a visual directory of attendees.

As always, clicking on these maps will bring up a larger, more detailed version in your browser.

This first map shows organizations and participants that travelled from outlying areas and from across state lines:


The second map zooms to the entire Chicagoland region and plots organizations and individuals who attended, against poverty data collected by the Census Bureau in 2000. This of course helps to show where, in relation to poverty, these local participants are working with kids:


Lastly, I zoomed to the downtown locations. (Unfortunately the near west side was not represented too strongly in attendance this fall.)


But in all, attendance was really strong for a one-day conference, and spending time hearing participants discuss important strategies pertaining to networking, volunteer recruitment, and fundraising was time well-spent for everyone.

For more information on the conference, please take a look at Dan's blog or Nicole's blog.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Banks and Tutoring/Mentoring: Benefits for All

Note: This article was written in 2008. Ideas still relevant in 2016.

Dan Bassill writes in his latest blog about one of the biggest challenges faced by non-school tutoring and mentoring programs: A lack of funding for general operations. In fact, Tutor/Mentor Connection (where I work) is in the same building as Dan's T/M program, Cabrini Connections (which works with kids from the Cabrini Green neighborhood)... so I've had the unique opportunity to witness these funding struggles from the front-row.

But funding isn't the only challenge faced by a not-for-profit like a T/M program. Work is also ongoing to recruit talented, dedicated staff and volunteers who will make long-term commitments to being part of such programs.

And while, on occasion, small successes in recruiting and fundraising are celebrated (allowing operations to continue quarter-by-quarter), ideally, programs need to be sustained for years so that relationships can form, and volunteers and business partners can influence student aspirations and career choices.

If only more businesses would invest in tutor/mentor programs, long-term, as part of their own human capital development. Dan explains, "If we can help more kids from poor neighborhoods move to jobs and careers, we diversify the workforce, and help find new workers to replace retirees who will be leaving the workforce over the next 15 years." Furthermore, it stands to reason that kids who gain skills through tutoring and mentoring move onto higher education and careers... escaping poverty... and ultimately having more cash in hand, as consumers, to ensure the growth of local markets for a business' goods and services.

In past blogs, I've looked at how companies like CVS actually do have a strong philanthropic presence in the community. Today, I've created maps that help show how some of the major banks in Chicago might support the growth of tutor/mentor programs in neighborhoods where they have branch banks, and help recruit volunteers who travel to and from work via the major expressways, as volunteers, leaders and donors.

Banks whose locations I have mapped include:
Please click on individual links to see how these maps can be used as tools to help banks and tutor/mentor programs work together for the benefit of everybody.

Banks and Tutoring/Mentoring: Park National

One of a series of maps, created in 2008, that show how area banks can help themselves by helping tutor/mentor programs, Park National:


(click on the map above to see "full-sized" version)

Branches in the West and South parts of the city could be meeting places for community and business partners working together to help create new tutor/mentor programs in under-served areas. Park National has also been a sponsor of the annual Cabrini Connections Golf Benefit.
Its branch in Roseland is near Salem Baptist Church which is led by State Senator James Meeks. That branch of Park National Bank could be a catalyst in the Roseland/Pullman area, for the growth of tutor/mentor programs.

To learn more about the benefits of volunteer involvement for businesses, and how tutoring and mentoring can assist workforce development, please take a look at the following Tutor/Mentor Institute document.

And for more information on why tutoring and mentoring makes sense in general, please read this document.