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activity
ideas for
online mentors and protegés
This information was last updated on July 30, 2001
The National Mentoring Partnership
has 52 ideas for activities mentors can do with youth mentees/protegés
in face-to-face situations (one for every week of a year). Using those
suggestions as a guide, and with additional input from the NMP staff and
many
online volunteers, the Virtual Volunteering Project has identified
these 63 online activities for online mentors and protegés to
do together via e-mail and the web.
This list was compiled with the understanding that the focus of
a mentoring program is being a supportive, caring friend, not necessarily
tutoring, training or helping with homework (although these activities
may occur as part of mentoring). A primary focus of an online mentoring
program is creating a meaningful, trusting relationship between the mentor
and the protegé. Given this, we stayed away as much as possible
from classroom/curriculum-specific activities in this list (classroom or
tutoring resources are plentiful online, and can be found easily via your
favorite search engine or online directory).
These suggestions were also compiled with a focus on adult mentors
working with youth, primarily fourth to twelth grade, but the activities
could certainly be adapted to adult age groups, and to programs where youth
mentor youth and adults mentor adults online.
Note that not all of these activities are appropriate for every
youth age group. Quality mentoring programs, on or offline, provide information
about the age group the mentors are working with and suggestions for appropriate
topics to explore. Also, not all of these activities would be appropriate
for every online mentoring program; consider what your organization hopes
participants will achieve when deciding which online activities are best.
These suggestions are to help keep conversations flowing, but
should be used as guidelines, not as the only things to talk about online.
Also, DON'T try to do lots of activities at once, or ask several questions
in just one e-mail. Many of these activities may each take several e-mails
back and forth to fully explore.
Finally, mentors should remember to share as much information
as they are asking for, to do the same online activities listed below that
protegés are doing, and to use these suggestions to sometimes switch
roles -- let the protegé guide the mentor!
Suggested E-mail and Web Browsing
Activities
-
Talk about why you got involved in this online mentoring
program, what you are looking forward to, what makes you nervous about
it, what you hope to get out of it, and what you hope to give as part of
it.
- Refer to what you know about each other already, per what
the supervising program has told you about each other (most programs have
a profile that you each fill out, answering various questions, and these
profiles are then shared between mentors and protegés before they
meet online). Note what you have in common, and what you would like to
hear more about the other.
- Talk about your favorite movies/celebrities/performers/historical
figures/heroes/sports figures or teams, etc., why you like them and what
you learn from them.
- Talk about a book you are reading and why you like it, or
don't like it.
- Talk about your favorite foods to eat, and your favorite
foods to cook (and how to cook them!). Try out each others' recipes and
discuss how they worked out.
- Share information and details of things that might be unique
to your particular culture or geographic area (clothing, ceremonies, music,
traditions, food, etc.).
- Share your favorite uses of the Internet, and the Web sites
and online discussion groups you find most helpful or entertaining. Visit
each other's favorite web sites and offer your own opinion about them.
- Visit the United
Nations Cyberschoolbus. This interactive web site promotes education
about international issues for both students at all grade levels and for
teachers. The site provides lots of ideas for online collaborative
activities.
- Talk about your favorite uses of computers and software (including
games) you find the most helpful or entertaining. If you discover that
you both play the same computer games, talk about which "levels" you've
attained, tips/hints you've found helpful, etc.
- Seek out and share Web sites you think your mentor or protegé
would enjoy, based on what you know about him or her.
- Talk about your pets. Talk about animals that particularly
intrigue you and why.
- Share positive stories about your family.
- Share stories about family conflicts/difficulties and how
they were resolved -- or how you wish they had been resolved.
- Both of you take a fun online personality "test" together,
such as What Breed of Dog are You,
and talk about your results, if you were surprised by what your "test"
results were, how they compare to each other, etc.
- Discuss your favorite and least favorite classes, teachers,
etc. and why (protegés -- current classes and teachers; mentors
-- past classes and teachers)
- Talk about when you have volunteered to help another person
or an organization (a church, a school, a cause you believe in, etc.).
Why did you do it? How did the person or organization benefit from your
service? How did YOU benefit from your service? What kinds of volunteering
would you like to do?
- Mentors: talk about your job, how you trained for it, what
you do at your job, if it is different than what you planned on doing when
you were in grade school, other jobs you've had, including jobs you had
as a teenager, and what you learned from them, etc.
- Discuss career options. You can both take "Career
Pathways" Evaluation and the Survey
by Online Psych, and talk about your results.
- Protegés: talk about homework you have recently been
assigned or a school activity in which you are involved; mentors, help
protegés find online resources that might help them with their homework
or this activity.
- Discuss your favorite music and performers.
- Describe your dream home and the qualities it will have.
- Describe your dream car and the qualities it will have.
- Share geneology information, and explore family trees together.
Two good resources for this are:
-
Participate in one or two of the many online interactive,
educational areas provided by nonprofit groups, and talk about your experiences
in using them, what you learned, what you liked, what you didn't like,
etc. An example:
World
Wildlife Fund
A variety of online activities allowing users to learn
about biodiversity and global environmental health, such as the "What's
Your Biodiversity IQ" Quiz, the U.S. Ecoregional Map: "What's in your backyard?",
and "Biodiversity Performs." These plug-ins for these games can take a
while to download to your computer.
-
Both of you take a tour of the artwork reproduced online
from the National Gallery of Art. You
can pick a specific genre/exhibit area, and discuss what you see, what
you like, what you don't like, what you don't understand (mentors, you
talk about this too!), etc.
An example: NGAKids
features child-focused stories, activities, & information on the National
Gallery's collections. Visitors can explore the nuances of Jacques-Louis
David's famous "Napoleon in His Study," identify colors & shapes in
a Kandinsky abstract painting, or follow Lizzy & Gordon through the
Sculpture Garden via an animated musical tale. The site also links to family-oriented
resources, events, and publications for children of all ages.
-
Participate in one or two of the many online interactive
areas provided by various federal agencies, and talk about your experiences
in using them, what you learned, what you liked, what you didn't like,
etc. Some federally-sponsored sites with online interactive activities
include:
-
Mentors: talk about difficulties you might have experienced
as a teen and how you overcame them.
- Protegés: talk about difficulties you are facing and
how you are dealing with them.
- Discuss fashion -- clothing and hair styles you like, that
you don't like, what's in style now, what used to be in style, etc.
- Talk about college -- which college and universities you've
heard of or are familiar with, why a young person should go to college,
how to chose a college, how guidance counselors can be helpful in pursuing
scholarships, and so forth. Mentors, if you attended a college or university,
talk about how you chose which classes to take, if you ended up working
in the profession you planned on in college, which classes you found particularly
helpful, and so forth.
- Work on the protegé's resume.
- Discuss questions that get asked on college applications
or in job interviews. Mentors, talk about what it was like for you when
you were trying to get into college or to land your first job.
- Refer back to previous discussions, or events that the protegé
mentioned. "How did that test go?" or "How was dinner at your aunt's house?"
or "How is your baby sister?"
-
Discuss how to be involved in the U.S. political process.
Where would either of you go to register to vote in your area? What kind
of local government does your area have? Have either of you ever met your
mayor? A state elected official? A national official? What was that meeting
or event like? If you could say anything to the President, what would you
say?
You can even help your protegé write a letter
to a local representative about an issue he or she is concerned with.
Some sites to help you both explore government and
politics and find out who your elected officials are:
And don't forget to explore your state and local government
web sites as well!
- Both of you take a fun test on Online
Psych, such as the Personality
Colors Test, and discuss your results.
- Talk about what you do outside of work/school (hobbies, things
you collect, how you spent your weekend, etc.)
- Talk about the song, book character or movie character that
you most identify with. For instance, what song sums up what your life
is like right now, or how you feel right now? Have you read a book recently
that hit close to home, that featured people and situations that were similar
to those in your own life? Is there a movie that portrays circumstances
you are very familiar with?
- Share your own original short stories, poetry, song lyrics,
artwork or other original materials that are easy to send and receive via
e-mail (within the body of an e-mail or as an attachment).
- Take a virtual tour of a particular city, outer space --
even a roller coaster! -- and talk about your experiences via e-mail. We've
compiled a list of recommended virtual tours for
online mentors and youth to explore.
- Describe your dream job, however far-fetched it might be,
and the qualities it would have. Are there ways to pursue real jobs that
would have some of those qualities, or activities outside of the work place
that would have those qualities?
-
Read a book at the same time, or watch the same TV program,
and discuss what you saw, what you learned, what you enjoyed, and what
you didn't.
- Share what you have faith in, what you believe in, and why.
- Talk about online ethics. How do young people feel about
online filtering software? Hacking? Pretending to be someone else online?
Web sites that don't allow people with disabilities to access them? What's
appropriate and what's not appropriate behavior online? Some resources
that can help:
-
Celebrate a National holiday together online -- Veteran's
Day, Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday, President's Day, Memorial Day,
etc. Research together how this holiday came into being, how or if your
family or you, personally, observe this holiday, why you both think this
holiday is important or meaningful, etc.
- Talk about why a healthy environment and wildlife are important
no matter where one lives. Share information about your geographic area
and environmental problems it might be facing (trash, air pollution, water
pollution, deer over population, etc.), how it affects you and your family,
and ways you might be able to help improve the environment in your area.
Some web sites that can help you both explore environmental issues:
-
Talk about how to balance work and life.
- Talk about an adult who has (or had) a positive influence
on you, and why.
- Talk about peer pressure (mentors, remember that adults experience
peer pressure too!!).
- Both of you take the Kiersey
Temperament Test and discuss what the results were for you each.
- Talk about the future. What are you most hopeful about for
the future? What are you most scared of? What can you do to make a better
future for yourself?
- Come up with new activities for this list! Review the list
together and talk about other suggestions, based on your experiences together.
Then submit them to us!
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