STEP
DESIGN FROM THE INSIDE OUT
HOME   |   SUBSCRIBE  |   ABOUT  |   CONTACT US  |   NEWSLETTERS  |   CALL FOR ENTRIES  |   ADVERTISE  |   SUBSCRIBER SERVICES  |   JOBS
STEP ONLINE
2008
2007
2006
2005
FREE NEWSLETTER
STEP INSIDE
I do not envy the task of the judges for our annual Best of Web competition. Besides the usual parameters for judging a design competition—layout, typography, color, use of imagery—they also must consider factors exclusive to the digital realm: interface ease-of-use, continuity, scalability, content management, on and on.
» Continue
JUPITERIMAGES SEARCH
Jupiterimages offers millions of quality photos, fonts, clipart images and animations!

 
Jupiterimages.com
Clipart.com
Photos.com
Animation Factory
internet.commerce
Join Partner Program
EDUCATION
 
Escaping from the sugary mother-daughter relationship model into a more complex and more fun collaboration.  
Nov/Dec 2005
EDUCATION
Designing New Mentoring
by Maud Lavin

Last spring I had coffee in New York with my former graduate advisor, my mentor, who is now 74. We had a great time and I was able to talk with her about subjects I haven’t even been comfortable broaching with my own mother, age 77—topics like sex in one’s 70s. My former teacher was then off to meet a former teacher of hers for dinner, a woman now in her 90s with whom she’s had a long friendship.

Sweet, isn’t it? Not completely sweet, though. My mentor is brilliant, complex, and witty, and has odd and unpredictable fiashes of competitiveness and aggression. Sometimes when I see her, she’s in a contentious mood, and I leave feeling slightly bruised and frustrated. I have my moments of aggression, too, and desires to show her my professional muscles and to assert my differences from her—as well as to enjoy our warmth and closeness. We have a friendship, in other words. We’re way past teacher-student politeness (we’ve known each other for over 25 years) and into enjoying— and occasionally being wary of—each other’s complexities. In my experience, that evolution from a teacher-student relationship to true friendship has been a rare occurrence, until recently.

MENTORING VS. MOTHERING
I’m 50 now and I’m a mentor. I’ve been teaching for quite a while— currently I’m an associate professor in visual and critical studies and art history at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago— and my students are in Visual and Critical Studies (VCS), art history, and visual communications (design). I’ve been mentoring quite a while too, which to me is a more intensive form of teaching that includes guiding on the teacher’s part and modeling on the student’s part. I’ve had time to get a handle on the delicate balance between encouraging students but not playing their idealized mother. But my female design graduate students in recent years have taken me to a whole new stage of mentoring: friends and colleagues.

What I’d already learned was to avoid—at least as much as possible given the dual-generational structure of teaching—a rosy kind of mothering. Why? The idealized mother-teacher who is traditionally selfless gives and gives; she has no time for her own work and life. What’s the point of that? What’s the benefit to self or productivity? And what kind of model is that for female students hoping themselves to teach in the future?

Enter the selfish mother. Perhaps still modeling myself after my own mentor, I try to present myself as supportive of my students, but primarily involved in my own work. Demanding of them and myself. My students, particularly the graduate students in design, art history, and visual criticism—many of whom have been out in the work world and then returned for their master’s— understand my need to focus on my own practice. And I expect them to do the same. My goal is to balance that parallel productivity with the inevitable parenting role that’s raised by the transference and counter-transference of performing other-generational helpful authority.

But that balance was disturbed a few years ago by my graduate students in visual communications. Then-graduate student Alyson Priestap-Beaton was giving a report in a design issues seminar I was teaching, and she cited Bruce Mau’s (as it turns out, overstated) assertion that Coca-Cola had created the popular image of Santa Claus. That ignited a bonfire discussion about how much the ways we celebrate holidays have been influenced by corporate culture, even some of our most sacred traditions. We felt there’d been too much hand-wringing about the commercialization of the holidays and not enough exploration of the traditions created and values communicated by this process. We decided that day we should do a book about it.

UNUSUAL COLLABORATION
In fall 2004, three years, 29 contributors, and 300-some full-color pages later, our book, The Business of Holidays, was published by Monacelli Press. I edited the book and coauthored it with the students and a couple of colleagues; the graduate students wrote the bulk of it; a team of five of them plus me did all the production work; and the five designed it.

Lots to say about that wonderful, fun, intense, and sometimes anxiety-producing process, but here I want to comment on my relationships with Alyson and two other female designer/writers on the production team, Melanie Archer and Amy Fidler. (There were two great guys on the production team, too, but it was the women with whom I developed the strongest mentoring relationships. Perhaps the women drew closer to me as a possible model and I to them as younger female colleagues. They also became more involved in the book’s production than the men did.) Alyson served as photography editor, senior photographer, coauthor, and co-designer; Melanie as senior writer, associate editor, and co-designer; Amy as production manager, coauthor, and co-designer.

| 1 | 2 »|
Events & Courses


JupiterOnlineMedia

internet.comearthweb.comDevx.commediabistro.comGraphics.com

Search:

Jupitermedia Corporation has two divisions: Jupiterimages and JupiterOnlineMedia

Jupitermedia Corporate Info


Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, & Permissions, Privacy Policy.

Advertise | Newsletters | Tech Jobs | Shopping | E-mail Offers

Solutions
Whitepapers and eBooks
IBM Whitepaper: Innovative Collaboration to Advance Your Business
Internet.com eBook: Real Life Rails
Avaya Article: Call Control XML - Powerful, Standards-Based Call Control
Tripwire Whitepaper: Seven Practical Steps to Mitigate Virtualization Security Risks
Internet.com eBook: The Pros and Cons of Outsourcing
Go Parallel Article: Scalable Parallelism with Intel(R) Threading Building Blocks
Internet.com eBook: Best Practices for Developing a Web Site
IBM CXO Whitepaper: The 2008 Global CEO Study "The Enterprise of the Future"
Avaya Article: Call Control XML in Action - A CCXML Auto Attendant
Go Parallel Article: James Reinders on the Intel Parallel Studio Beta Program
IBM CXO Whitepaper: Unlocking the DNA of the Adaptable Workforce--The Global Human Capital Study 2008
Adobe Acrobat Connect Pro: Web Conferencing and eLearning Whitepapers
Go Parallel Article: Getting Started with TBB on Windows
HP eBook: Storage Networking , Part 1
MORE WHITEPAPERS, EBOOKS, AND ARTICLES
Webcasts
Go Parallel Video: Intel(R) Threading Building Blocks: A New Method for Threading in C++
HP Video: Is Your Data Center Ready for a Real World Disaster?
Microsoft Partner Portal Video: Microsoft Gold Certified Partners Build Successful Practices
HP On Demand Webcast: Virtualization in Action
Go Parallel Video: Performance and Threading Tools for Game Developers
Rackspace Hosting Center: Customer Videos
Intel vPro Developer Virtual Bootcamp
HP Disaster-Proof Solutions eSeminar
HP On Demand Webcast: Discover the Benefits of Virtualization
MORE WEBCASTS, PODCASTS, AND VIDEOS
Downloads and eKits
Microsoft Download: Silverlight 2 Software Development Kit Beta 2
30-Day Trial: SPAMfighter Exchange Module
Red Gate Download: SQL Toolbelt
Iron Speed Designer Application Generator
Microsoft Download: Silverlight 2 Beta 2 Runtime
MORE DOWNLOADS, EKITS, AND FREE TRIALS
Tutorials and Demos
IBM IT Innovation Article: Green Servers Provide a Competitive Advantage
Microsoft Article: Expression Web 2 for PHP Developers--Simplify Your PHP Applications
Featured Algorithm: Intel Threading Building Blocks - parallel_reduce
MORE TUTORIALS, DEMOS AND STEP-BY-STEP GUIDES