Katy Dickinson

http://blogs.sun.com/katysblog/date/20090615 Monday June 15, 2009

Mentoring Reminders

We are two and a half weeks into the mentor matching cycle for the SEED and PreSEED mentoring terms. Both terms formally started today and will run for the next six months. 58% of the 80 participants (mentees and mentees-to-be) are already matched with their new mentors. This is the time of each cycle when the mentees start to get frustrated waiting for their new mentors.

For me, there is a balance between nudging potential mentors (emails with subjects like "Last Chance" and "Any news?" and "Please Reply!") or deciding to give up and go to the next lower priority name on the participant's Mentor Wish List. I have to be careful about going on: twice already in the last two weeks a mentor contacted me long after their deadline and asked to work with the mentee.

I just sent out nine more emails either reminding potential mentors to get back to me or asking a new potential mentor to review the resume and other information of a participant who has expressed interest in learning from them. In a normal term, 80% of the participants will be matched with one of their top four mentor choices. However, that does mean that 20% will not. Nobody wants to be in that second category.

This term, 387 unique mentors were requested on Wish Lists. There were ten mentors who had more than one participant who asked for them at #1 priority. There were 39 mentors who had five or more participants ask for them. The most potential mentors I have contacted for one participant so far this term is six. However, that potential mentor seems to be seriously interested in the match. Another participant about whom I have only contacted three potential mentors is nonetheless on #10 out of his ten name Mentor Wish List. If #10 is not a good fit, I will go back to the participant for more names.

The participant (potential mentee) is not kept informed of each step in the match process. They do not know which potential mentor from the Wish List is contacted. Potential mentors need to have space and time to consider the possibilities of a mentoring partnership without risk of offending the potential mentee or interfering with future communications with them or their manager.

Everyone does gets matched eventually...

57th Wedding Anniversary

Last Friday was my parents' 57th wedding anniversary. They were married in June 1952 in Knoxville, Tennesee. My father grew up in Hickory Township, Pennsylvania. He met my mother at a Knoxville dance while he was working at the nuclear center at Oak Ridge.

My younger brother Pete Dickinson was in the Bay Area this week to visit clients, so we had a family celebration. Yesterday's highlight was a walk through the amazing Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University where we visited the world-class Rodin Collection. Cantor has a huge collection of art by Auguste Rodin:

      "This exhibition presents the Center's entire Rodin collection, 200 works in all. The Cantor Arts Center's collection of Rodin bronzes is the largest in the world outside Paris, second only to the Musee Rodin. The majority of the collection remains on the ground floor, occupying three galleries. Approximately 170 works by Rodin are on view inside the Center, mostly cast bronze, but also works in wax, plaster, and terra cotta. Twenty bronzes, including The Gates of Hell, on which Rodin worked for two decades to complete, are outside in the Sculpture Garden. The Burghers of Calais are nearby on campus. The Rodin Sculpture Garden is open all hours, with lighting for nighttime viewing. Admission is free."

We also got to see a Deborah Butterfield bronze cast driftwood horse in Cantor's front hall. You may have seen another member of sculptor Butterfield's herd at SFO, the San Francisco airport. Another favorite sculpture at Cantor is "Stone River" by Andy Goldsworthy.

Wade and Eleanor in 1952
Deborah Butterfield's bronze cast driftwood horse, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Deborah Butterfield's horse
Deborah Butterfield's bronze cast driftwood horse, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Katy, Pete, Eleanor, Wade
Katy Dickinson, Pete Dickinson, Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, Wade Dickinson
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Iris by Rodin
Iris by Rodin, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
three Rodin busts
three Rodin busts, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Caryatid by Rodin
Caryatid by Rodin, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Goldsworthy's "Stone River"
Stone River by Andy Goldsworthy, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson