This past weekend was Spirit of Service Scholars’ opening
seminar, and it introduced us to the complex world of mentorship. As a core
component of the program this year, SOSS is teaming up with a couple valley
high schools to educate on the importance of civic engagement and raise
attention to voter registration within high school seniors. But the point isn’t for us to perform the
project, instead the focus is to engage and collaborate with a group of Junior
Scholars that will be representing the high school throughout the year.
Naturally, working with teenager’s triggers subconscious phobias in all of us,
so we got some pointer’s from some experts in the field.
First up were Gary and Melissa Trujillo; founders of the
incredible Be A Leader Foundation that helps traditionally underserved students
in AZ create a structured four-year track into college through leadership
training, mentorship, and scholarship development. Gary and Melissa’s most impactful piece of
advice was to instill in our mentees three things: Require leadership;
understand the only thing holding you back is you; and recognize there is a
lifecycle of giving, and the standard rule is to always give back more than you
take.
Next, came Tony from Inspire Arizona. Inspire AZ creates a
year round immersion into civic engagement for middle and high school students
in an “Inspired Year.” My biggest take away was that mentorship is 1/3
check-in; 1/3 support; 1/3 feedback.
With CEO of New Pathways for Youth, I learned the importance
in learning to help break the incredibly difficult habit of using the word BUT instead of AND when giving feedback. Example, “I like UofA but ASU is 100 times better.” Instead, “I like your you choice, UofA
is a great school for you and ASU offers a competitive scholarship package, ultimately
the choice is up to you.” The point is to build a connection with them, let
them know that you care and respect their opinion while still attempting to steer
them in the right direction. I hope
you get the picture anyway.
I've mentored high school students from my hometown for a couple of years. Although it can become difficult at times, it is a very rewarding experience. Just be yourself and stay positive... Good luck!
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