Coyote Teaching takes from the ideas of Tribal Cultures and focuses on the essential elements needed to make long lasting memories and connections to real skills transfer. In this presentations Harrison Lovell and Michael Larsen discuss the steps and approaches used in their mentoring relationship, and what they learned along the way.
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Coyote Teaching: A New (Old) Take on the Art of Mentorship
1. Coyote Teaching: A New
(Old?) Take on the Art of
Mentorship
Harrison Lovell - @lovellingit
Michael Larsen - @mkltesthead
2. Michael Larsen
Senior Quality Assurance Engineer, Socialtext
Michael Larsen is Senior Tester located in San Francisco, California. Over the past seventeen
years, he has been involved in software testing for products ranging from network routers and
switches, virtual machines, capacitance touch devices, video games and distributed database
applications that service the legal and entertainment industries. Michael writes the TESTHEAD blog
and can be found on Twitter at @mkltesthead.
Harrison C. Lovell
Associate Engineer, QA, Virtusa
Harrison C. Lovell is an Associate Engineer at Virtusa’s Albany office. He is a proud alumnus from
Per Scholas’ ‘IT-Ready Training’ and STeP (Software Testing education Program) courses. For the
past year, he has thrown himself into various environments dealing with testing, networking and
business practices with a passion for obtaining information and experience.
3. Intro
• Skills Transfer/ Simplifying the process
• Fastest way to proficiency
• Their way, their experiences
• Different contexts. Metaphors and Analogies
• Lost in translation
5. What is Coyote Teaching?
• Tom Brown, Jr and Jon Young
• No direct answers, ans. w/ questions, dig
deeper, embed and connect lessons
• Inspires to independency
• Adapt to teaching style
6. Coyote Teaching: Extended
• Limited habitat. Man shapes their
environment. Adapting is key
• World of extremes, unlike other creatures, can
settle anywhere
• Go beyond “learn and you’ll be okay”
7. Becoming a Coyote
• State the obvious
• Trickster myths. Pair hunting. Small size
• Observed behavior = Core teaching approach
– Unique skills
– Engagement
• Passing on traditions
8. Environmental Saturation
• Allow people to utilize the environment they
are in
• Start where you are, use what you have, build
what you need
• Authentic problems
9. Creating a Need
• Snowboarding
• Balance point
• Analogy that I would understand
• Five gallon water bottle
10. Art of Questioning
• Focus on giving the answer to a question
• Comprehending what we are presenting
• Answer to make us happy
• Socratic Method
– answering questions with more questions
13. Edge Experiences
• What makes a story more exciting?
• Different type of experiences
• Strong emphasis on stretching rather than
freaking someone out
• Edge case examples
14. Edge Case
• Stepping out of comfort zone
• Line between growing and freaking out
• Push effectively without pushing you off the
edge
15. Constraints and Taboos
• Idea of Taboo
• Strong word
• Learning with constraints
• Children, Tech, and Boarders
• Interchangeable
16. Summary
• This stuff is HARD
• Principles can be applied on a continuum
• Level of relationship and commitment informs
the level of mentoring
• Limitless potential, if both are willing to invest
• When one is raised by a Coyote, one becomes
a Coyote.