There are a variety of ways to volunteer. There is even an option called virtual volunteering! If you are seriously considering volunteering, the Independent Sector, a non-profit information center provides the following tips:
- Research the causes of issues important to you.
- Consider the skills you have to offer
- Would you like to learn something new?
- Don’t over-commit your schedule.
- Non-profits may have questions about you too.
- Consider community groups (aside from hospitals, libraries, and churches): day care centers, Neighborhood Watch, public schools and colleges, halfway houses, community theaters, fraternal organizations, retirement centers and homes for the elderly, Meals on Wheels, church or community-inspired soup kitchens or food pantries, museums, art galleries and monuments, community choirs, bands and orchestras, prisons, neighborhood parks, youth organizations, sports teams and after-school programs, shelters for battered women and children, historical restorations, battlefields and national parks.
- Give voice to your heart through giving and volunteering.
- Virtual Volunteering is possible if you have computer access and the necessary skills as some organizations now offer opportunities to do volunteer work over the computer.
- Be a year-round volunteer!
Trivia:
• 22 million adults are involved in formal volunteering each year.
• Ten million people volunteer each week.
• Formal volunteers put in some 90 million hours of voluntary work a week.
• The economic value of formal volunteering has been estimated at over £40 billion per year.
• Six out of ten volunteers said volunteering gave them an opportunity to learn new skills.
All statistics taken from Davis Smith J (1998), The 1997 National Survey of Volunteering, published by the National Centre for Volunteering.
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