Meet Lee — Your Scoop Master
Lee has spent decades at the crossroads of healthcare and technology — and an even longer time figuring out how to make hard things easy to understand. He leads classes on Zoom and in person, helping people of every age stay connected, confident, and curious in a world that never stops changing.
Career & Calling
Lee helped build the third wireless market in the United States — a career milestone that shaped his deep understanding of how technology transforms everyday life. His fascination with how things work started at age five, when he took apart a broken television, figured out what was wrong, and got it running again.
Lee has spent years working at the cutting edge of healthcare technology, gaining firsthand insight into the systems, language, and decisions that families face — often at the most vulnerable moments of their lives. That knowledge now flows directly into every class he teaches.
Teaching has always been Lee's clearest path to growth — his own and others'. Whether the subject is Medicare, personal affairs, or the latest smartphone, he brings patience, humor, and a gift for making the complicated feel manageable. His students don't just learn; they leave with confidence.
The Work
Lee's signature class, "Getting Your Personal Affairs in Order," is now in its 26th version and has been taught over a thousand times. It helps people organize the critical details of their lives — medical records, financial information, legal documents, and guidance for caring for an aging or ill loved one.
"It's always a little different — because every family is."
The class has become a trusted resource that Lee freely shares with anyone who needs it. Families walk away with clarity, direction, and a plan — often for the first time.
When Medicare came up as a topic his students needed, Lee tackled it head-on — calling it "the most difficult subject I've ever encountered." He did it anyway, because the need was real. That willingness to stretch has only deepened his belief that the best way to truly understand something is to teach it.
"Wisdom looks like being more patient and tolerant — with others, and with yourself."
Life Beyond the Classroom