This is an archived version of the Virtual Volunteering Project web site from January 2001. The materials on the web site were written or compiled by Jayne Cravens. The Virtual Volunteering Project has been discontinued. The Virtual Volunteering Project web site IS NO LONGER UPDATED. Email addresses associated with the Virtual Volunteering Project are no longer valid. For any URL that no longer works, type the URL into archive.org. For new materials regarding online volunteering, see Jayne Cravens' web site (the section on volunteerism-related resources). |
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FAQs About the Virtual Volunteering Project
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activity ideas for online mentors and protegés This information was last updated on December 11, 2000
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!
World Wildlife Fund
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.
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Kids' Pages, by the Department of Health and Human Services
FBI Kids and Youth Educational Page
Federal Emergency Management Agency for Kids
PeaceCorps Kids
NASA for KIDS and
For Kids Only: Earth Science Enterprises
United States Environment Protection Agency Explorer's Club
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's Kids Pages, by
the Department of Commerce
Kids Next Door, by the Department of Housing and Urban Development
U.S. Department of Transportation Kids Corner
U.S. Fire Administration Kids Place, by the Federal Emergency Management Agency
The Further Adventures of Kid Safety, by the Consumer Product Safety Commission
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:
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These are activities to try after you've gotten to know each other a little better, using the aforementioned, more simple activities. These are also great learning experiences for both mentor and protegé, for one to teach the other, or to learn together.
CAUTION: some of these suggestions require mentors and protegés to have the same kind of software, specialized software or hardware that requires a great deal of memory, or for users to register personal information on a web site (real name, real e-mail address, postal mailing address, birthday, etc.). Some require mentors and protegés to communicated via a third party web site. Not all mentoring programs will find these practices acceptable. Mentors should ALWAYS check with the coordinator of the program before engaging in these activities with a protegé, and program coordinators should make sure that engaging in any of these activities won't violate or compromise a program's security and safety measures:
For an example of how Flash and Shockwave technology can be used, visit Poems that Go. The site offers new sets of poems each quarter, all of which use Flash or Shockwave in their presentation. This site also provides links to essays about the aesthetics of new media and poetry and to related projects.
If you have suggestions for additional activities, please contact us.
Return to the index of Online Mentoring and other Online Direct Service Resources
If you find this or any other Virtual Volunteering Project information helpful, or would like to add information based on your own experience, please contact us.
If you do use Virtual Volunteering Project materials in your own workshop or trainings, or republish materials in your own publications, please let us know, so that we can track how this information is disseminated.
This is an archived version of the Virtual Volunteering Project web site from January 2001. The materials on the web site were written or compiled by Jayne Cravens. The Virtual Volunteering Project has been discontinued. The Virtual Volunteering Project web site IS NO LONGER UPDATED. Email addresses associated with the Virtual Volunteering Project are no longer valid. For any URL that no longer works, type the URL into archive.org. |
If you are interested in more up-to-date information about virtual volunteering, view the Virtual Volunteering Wiki.
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