DISQUS

The (late) Breakfast Society: What is volunteering?!

  • ade · 2 years ago
    Totally agree with all you said! Paid volunteering and forced volunteering are definitely oxymorons unparalleled in the history of oxymoronia!!

    The other problem I have in the whole discussion about young people's volunteering is how there is so much emphasis on supporting older young people rather than spreading out investment to all ages.

    I am not entirely convinced of statements that say that young people are volunteering less now than they used to in the past but without research to support or disprove this - I am happy for money to be spent supporting the development of volunteering.

    Our experience of volunteering is that you need to:
    * provide a variety of opportunities so people can pick and choose
    * support the development of a culture where volunteering is promoted so that people are interested in looking for places to volunteer and also develop the habit of volunteering (NYA published a report about the culture part, I haven't read it yet at www.nya.org.uk/youthactionandengagement)
  • mas · 2 years ago
    definitely agree with the incorrect emphasis on older young people volunteering.

    I don't at all believe that there are less young people volunteering now - every report I've seen says that young people are still the age group most likely to and most active as volunteers.

    I think its insulting that young people under the age of 16 are somehow not classed as volunteers - if this is the case we wouldn't exist - we were initially established because of under 16 year olds volunteering on a principle that if we could get young people involved at an early age they would stay involved - well its nearly 8 years later and many of them still are!

    Just because they're called 'children' doesn't mean they can't work hard and give their own skills and efforts in their own free time.
  • mas · 2 years ago
    fresh in today......

    "Helping Out: a national survey of volunteering and charitable giving, has found that young people aged 16 to 24 are most likely to be regular formal volunteers, with 43% reporting regular involvement compared to 39% for people of all ages. However, the research suggests that they are less likely to be occasional volunteers (13% against an average of 20%) and slightly more likely than other age groups not to volunteer (43% against 41%). The survey, published by the Cabinet Office, built on the 2005 Citizenship survey to provide more information about people’s involvement in and experiences of formal volunteering"

    taken from: http://www.nya.org.uk/Templates/Internal.asp?No...

    I'd like to see what the definition of volunteering was for this - nearly half the population volunteer?! I remember an old study similar to this that included things like babysitting and mowing the lawn for your parents as volunteering! Not suggesting that this report does that of course!
  • Rizwan · 1 year ago
    If you're looking for volunteers, I've compiled a comprehensive list of all the different volunteering sites online where you might be able to highlight the help you need. http://urbansurvivalproject.googlepages.com/onl...
  • mas · 1 year ago
    great list Rizwan