Mentoring with Shawn
Personalized guidance for professionals who want to deepen their mediation practice.
The Path to Mastery Isn’t Walked Alone
Why Mentoring Matters
Even the best mediators need someone to walk beside them. Mentoring provides a confidential space to reflect on tough cases, develop your professional identity, and refine your skills. Whether you’re new to the field or looking to take your practice to the next level, mentoring helps you grow with confidence, purpose, and authenticity.
How It Works
One-on-one mentoring sessions (Zoom or in person)
Mentoring is where skill turns into mastery. Let’s work together to bring more calm, clarity, and creativity into your practice.
Shawn Weber, JD, CLS-F* is a mediator, attorney, and educator in the field of family conflict resolution. He has spent more than two decades helping families and professionals work through conflict with calm, clarity, and respect. Shawn blends deep legal experience with emotional intelligence and creative problem-solving to promote mastery in peacemaking.
Shawn is a Nationally Recognized Trainer who teaches lawyers and other professionals how to mediate effectively. He bridges the gap between private judges who focus solely on the law and litigators who take cases to court. His work centers on understanding the humanity behind every dispute, including the emotions, interests, and needs that drive conflict, and on helping people find their way to resolution.
As a Certified Specialist in Family Law (CLS-F*), Shawn combines extensive courtroom experience with his skill as a neutral facilitator. This background allows him to inform and, when appropriate, evaluate a case with a depth of insight that sets him apart from mediators who have never practiced before a judge.
In 2015, Shawn chose to focus his practice exclusively on out-of-court dispute resolution after realizing that litigation, while sometimes necessary, often causes lasting harm. He saw that people rarely leave the courthouse feeling whole. In mediation, he helps them solve their own problems and reach durable agreements that lead to real peace.