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Culture of Volunteerism and Civic Engagement in the United States
A presentation for theYSEALI Civil Society Development Program
July 17, 2015UM Mansfield Center
By Andrea Vernon
Overview
i. Define Civic Engagement and Volunteerism
ii. Historical context for Civic Engagement and Volunteerism in American culture
iii. Infrastructure for Civic Engagement and Volunteerism – Nonprofit Sector
iv. Challenges and Benefits
v. Project Planning – Case in Point
Civic Engagement
Set of values and actions to achieve the “greater good”
Process of working toward a common goal
Bringing people together around issues, ideas, problems
Case Study: Building a Park in the Sky https://www.ted.com/talks/robert_hammond_building_a_park_in_the_sky
Volunteerism
Donating one’s time and talents for charitable purposes to make a positive difference
There are many ways that people volunteer their time for the betterment of other people, animals, or the environment
Benefits of volunteering https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aS-mAz34NA0
Connecting to volunteer opportunities: http://www.volunteermissoula.org/
http://www.volunteermatch.org/
Civic Engagement & Volunteerism Data
In 2014, 62.6 million Americans volunteered 7.7 billion hours equating to $173 billion economic impact
Montana ranks 7th in the nation for the average number of volunteer hours served per capita
Nearly 60% of Americans reported reaching out to help their neighbors at least once a month
More highly educated people engage in their community more
58.2% of voters voted in 2012 Presidential Election
Findings
Citizens who are involved in volunteering or belong to one or more groups are more likely to be involved in political action and stay in contact with friends. The best strategy for our nation’s civic health is to ensure that all children graduate from high school and complete college, enhancing the likelihood that they will become active volunteers, joiners, givers, and participants in the lives of their communities, state and nation.
Historical Context
Voluntary Associations in early settlement period
Democracy in America (1830) “Habits of the Heart”
Repeatedly, throughout American history citizens have recognized a need, such as a public library, and then built constituencies of support through voluntary associations that were committed to addressing, solving, or eliminating it.
Infrastructure
Nonprofit Sector: “Third Sector”, “Independent Sector”, “Philanthropic Sector”, “Civil Sector”
The nonprofit sector in the US fills gaps that are left by government agencies and businesses
Diverse collection of 1.5 million charitable organizations
10.6 million employees, $1.65 trillion in total revenues
In 2012, individuals reported $228 billion in donations
Challenges
Not enough people are engaged in volunteerism and community activities
Volunteers can be inconsistent
Apathy grows
Nonprofit sector lacks visibility and voice
Need to “move the needle” farther
Benefits
Personal rewards from engagement are very fulfilling
The people who are engaged and volunteering are doing AMAZING things…
Steps to Plan & Implement Successful Service Projects
Identify community need
Find collaborators to work with
Specify roles and expectations
Find resources
Create a realistic timeline
Be prepared from the start
Recognize volunteers
Evaluate your impact
Document your work
Case in point…
Community Need: Our community needs a low or no-cost preschool
program to help prepare children to be ready and successful when they enter kindergarten.
Groups work on different aspects of project plan: Collaborators and roles: Who should be involved? Who will
do what?
Finding resources: What is needed? Funding? Personnel? Parents? Where will you get resources to do this?
Timeline and preparations: When will the work happen? What needs to be ready and when?
Evaluate and document work: What worked? What didn’t? What was result? How will it be sustained?
“There is much we can learn from a concept of community the South Africans call ubuntu. It is best expressed by the Xhosi proverb, ‘People are people through other people’. It is this powerful sense of the shared interdependence of people…It is not ‘I think, therefore I am.’ It is ‘I am human because I belong. I participate. I share because I am made for community’.
If you are to involve your students and faculty meaningfully in your communities, they must understand that how they are engaged is as important as in what they are engaged. The moral imperative of civic engagement is to help transform the laissez-faire notion of live and let live into the principle of live and help live." – Ambassador James A Joseph
Concluding Discussion
Thank you!Consultations
Andrea Vernon, Ed.D.
Office for Civic Engagement
University of Montana
[email protected] (406) 243-5159