Mentoring

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What is Mentoring in DisCO?

In DisCOSpeak, when we refer to "Mentoring" we are describing a pedagogical process among peers. This is the way people learn how to DisCO: by doing with others[1].

Taking its cue from the Zapatista practice of learning by listening, Mentoring doesn't assume that more experienced DisCO_Glossary#DisCONauts DisCONauts have more or better knowledge than new members. Instead they have more specific knowledge and experience about DisCOs in general (as well as the mentor's own DisCO in particular) to share.

The ultimate goal mentoring is to learn and grow together by including the mentee's observations and feedback. This method of peer learning serves to make each DisCO's culture more varied and robust, as well as truly inclusive of new members ideas and reflections.

Coming and co-learning together the DisCO Way

Mentoring is not limited to the DisCO Dating Phase, but a continual, iterative process. Much like the concept of Perpetual Beta often used software development, each DisCO's culture is expected to morph and adapt to its members needs as well as those of their environments and social climates. Mentoring is how this emergent process becomes concrete and creates new patterns.

The DisCO approach to mentoring has, among many others, very much been influenced by our colleagues at Zemos98. Their approach to learning is based on the four following tenets:

  • trusting peer to peer knowledge,
  • accepting diversity as an intellectual basis for our work together,
  • connecting practices and experiences for the common good, and
  • using not just oral but also visual languages.


In DisCO we follow suit. Wikis such as this are only a first step in what we consider to be a non-directive mutual space for learning. Texts can become meaningless without real human support to bring the ideas described here to life and in situated contexts. Videos, infographics and other media will help us learn and refine the message, but the most important work acquires meaning through our relationships.

If knowledge is power, then we want to share that power we've accumulated with new members so they feel a similar sense of ownership and familiarity as soon as it's feasible. We consider the learning to be mutual, bidirectional and based on personal relations and needs. When we speak about creating a knowledge commons in DisCO, we're not just talking about the articles and materials we publish on our website, but also the culture, practices and structures of the collective itself. As part of the community we first want you:

a) understand where we're coming from and why we've made these choices

b) add your voice to the choir and enrich our commons

Practically speaking, those with more experience in DisCO, such as members from the Guerrilla Media Collective DisCO Lab, mentor new members in the productive activities of the collective. Beyond this, all members mentor each other in cooperative culture, specifically the tools and practices of the DisCO in question.

How Mentoring Helps: all around

Mentoring is always bi-directional (both ways), peer to peer, and available to any committed member. The outputs of the mentoring process are recorded as part of any DisCO's knowledge commons and openly shared through resources such as wikis or handbooks. While mentoring is an ongoing process, special attention is paid to those members going through the Dating Phase.

During the Dating Phase, mentoring is handled by your DisCO_Glossary#DisCO_Buddy DisCO Buddy. DisCO Buddies take dating members through all aspects of working on the collective, its governance model and tools, etc. They ensure that new members get all they need to meet a series of criteria on the way to becoming full, committed DisCONAUTS. After the Dating Phase is over you will no longer have an exclusively DisCO Buddy assigned, instead you will become a new Dating Member's Buddy.

Full members will still receive assistance, of course, but it's now seen as a collective responsibility, rather than an individual one. Anyone needing mentoring support after the Dating Phase is encouraged to use Mattermost and Loomio to reach out for guidance.

We don't expect everyone to know everything all the time, but DisCONAUTS are expected to be able to mentor new members and each other in several areas and new members are expected to be open and available for this process.

  1. Also known as DIWO