User:Lum Pfohl

From Second Life Wiki
Revision as of 08:41, 28 November 2007 by Lum Pfohl (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Bio

* Rez Date November 29, 2006
* Accepted into SL Mentor November 07, 2007 (Apprentice) November 12, 2007 (Full)
* Avatar Shortie
* Home Location Lum's Outdoor Boutique🖈
* SL Skills Java & C Programming, LSL, SL Building
* Interests I am particularly gifted in determining how an application is put together. I observe the application behavior, particularly during outages and times of trouble. I am extremely curious about Relational and Object-Oriented databases and am having fun observing SL.
* Hobbies Music / Comedy
* Education BSEE, MSNE, MSCS. Now I want an MBA!
* Languages English and Japanese. I am not afraid to attempt French and Italian to help a newbie.

Mentoring Philosophies

What I am about to detail is not meant to discredit the Second Life Mentors or the Second Life Mentor Program. It is my own outlook.

Someone very nice, back in December 2006, invited me to "The Helpfuls" group. I have been wearing the tags, "Questions? Ask me!" and "So Many Questions!" for nearly a year now. They must have known that I really enjoyed this work. As a 2-week old resident, I have helped other newbies arriving daily. I have been shot, orbited, caged, insulted, praised, loved, hated, sought, rewarded, discredited.

I believe in two types of Volunteerism, with respect to this program. Helping and Mentoring. If I simply wished to be a helper, I would had been proud to continue wearing my "Questions? Ask me!" tag (and I still do, when I feel helpful). However, I wished to become a mentor.

I believe mentoring is not the simple act of answering questions (technical or not) - that's just helping. Mentoring is more about taking a single resident aside, and working with them to understand what the Second Life framework is all about. It's about helping them make their decisions, knowing when to ask questions and where to look to help themselves.

I have mentored other residents over the course of a year. My best friend (Jayme Dean) is my first mentor-ee. By showing her how to work her inventory, I learned how to work my own inventory. By showing her how to make jewelry and micro prims, I learned how better to build. By showing her how to buy land and open a store, I learned how to do so myself.

By showing others what to do and how to do it, I have continued to learn those things myself. Better, I have learned how to convey those concepts to others.

I particularly excel at handling griefers. I do not believe in submitting an AR right away. Some griefing acts are simply committed by curious residents. Treating them like outlaws right away only turns them into one. I have worked with many would-be griefers, and even given them weapons (loads of them), and took them to places where they would be welcome to test them out. I even agree to be targets, if they're curious about what the effects of their new toys are like. In every case, they have been civil, respectful and even come to my aid if I am ever in trouble. These people simply need to direct their energies in a constructive manner; I strive to enable them to do so. Still, there are those who are hell-bent on causing grief or spreading hate and discontent. I warn several times before submitting my AR (which I do sparingly).

I also recognize that not everyone learns in the same manner. Handing out notecards and saying, "Read This" in response to "How do I fit my hat on my head?" is not my style. There are people who:

  • Learn by quietly watching others, then doing it by themselves.
  • Learn by having others teach them, step-by-step.
  • Read on their own and know intuitively what to do.
  • Read first, then have others confirm the steps so they feel comfortable doing it.

It is very important to recognize those differences, and cater to their needs. One size, just doesn't fit all.

Also, I don't go helping or mentoring to be a primadonna. If I can help someone anonymously, it would be better. But when I type, there is always my name associated with my text; it's inescapable at the moment.

So, that being said - I struggle with the group tag "Second Life Mentor." When I am on Help Island answering questions, I am wearing my "Questions? Ask me!" tag. It elicits more requests for help than a mentor tag. But if I ask to be TP'd to their land to work with them on straightening out a building problem or land permissions type of problem, I switch to my SL Mentor tag, and I am prepared to work with that resident for hours, if I have to.

Lum's Quick Links
LumSelfPortrait.jpg
Click to Enlarge


Related topics

edit