Posts Tagged ‘Get HandsOn’

Are You Good & Ready?

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

We’re excited to announce a new campaign that focuses on emergency preparedness efforts! Our Good & Ready campaign encourages Americans to create personal and family emergency plans, build emergency preparedness kits, and to get trained to be an emergency response volunteer.

We’re partnering with the American Red Cross, Ready.gov and FLASH, the Federal Alliance for Safe Homes, to help prepare communities for any type of emergency that they may face and to highlight the importance of being prepared for emergency situations and disasters in your home and in your community.

Individuals can get prepared by making a pledge to make an emergency plan, build disaster preparedness kits for their homes and neighbors, or get trained to be an emergency response volunteer. After they’ve made the pledge, they’ll receive more detailed information about how to get Good & Ready that focuses on the types of emergency that their region may face.

When you make your pledge to get Good & Ready, you will be entered for a chance to win a $250 Lowe’s gift card in a weekly drawing, and be entered for the chance to win a $1,000 American Express gift card in the grand prize drawing held at the end of the campaign!  It’s a great opportunity to help improve your emergency preparedness plan, or an easy way to make a donation to an emergency response organization in your community!

So what are you waiting for? Join us and get Good & Ready for an emergency!

 

 

 

If You Build It…

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

Today’s blog post comes from Charon Gaskins, an AmeriCorps member with HandsOn Network.

For  as long as I can remember, I’ve been doing community service.  In college, I joined a community service sorority, Gamma Sigma Sigma National Service Sorority.  As a member of this sorority I sought after a variety of service projects for my chapter to complete, I never thought about organizing our own projects.

It could have been because I was in college, taking a full load while still being active on campus, planning a project just didn’t seem like something that was easy to do.  Flash forward a few years later and here I am planning my own community service projects!  Through working with the GetHandsOn Campaign, I’ve been able to test out several of the project playbooks.

With the help of the resources I’ve found on the website, I’ve successfully organized several different projects in my community.  From a snack and learn with elementary students to tilling the land and potting seeds for a community garden, this has been an amazing experience.

I was invited to speak to a group of 3rd and 4th grade students about what community service is.  From that discussion, I had the students identify three areas where they were interested in doing community service.  The group of students stated they wanted to work with senior citizens, so from there I worked to find a local senior facility for them to service at.

The excitement these students had while working with these seniors was heartwarming, and the seniors were so excited to have a group of youth come to visit them.  I was told the students began bugging their teacher about their next service project on the way home from that project!

My most recent project was helping in a garden in the Atlanta area.  There was a lot of maintenance this garden needed, because over the years they lost a lot of their volunteers.  However, there is still a community of people that depend on this garden for fresh foods.

Using social media and making announcements in our different circles, we were able to get about 35 people out in the hot sun ready to work. We tilled about two acres of land and potted over 300 seeds   The volunteers for this project ranged from the ages of 13-60 years and everyone walked away from the project excited about coming back to actually plant the seeds in the garden in late April.

One of the volunteers at the garden was actually someone that receives food from the garden and though she is suffering from lupus, she wanted to help out in whatever way that she could.  It’s stories like this that keeps me motivated, doing everything in my power to leave a community changed by my presence.

I’ve had the opportunity to create several projects that focus on different areas and get my friends and family interesting in doing more service.  Several times a week I get a call about a group that is interesting in doing community service, or someone has an idea about a project that they want to do but need some help making it happen.

Working with the GetHandsOn campaign has been one of my greatest joys because it has given me the opportunity to really work with people in the community that want to make a change.  There are people that want to change things in their community but maybe sometimes it just seems so unattainable.

The truth is making a difference in your community doesn’t have to be some huge endeavor; it can be just one or two hrs.  If you are looking for ways to get involved in service check out Get HandsOn or HandsOn Network’s Action Centers for opportunities in your area!

Charon serves as an AmeriCorps National Direct member.  She is a member of Gamma Sigma Sigma National Service Sorority.  She is based in Atlanta, Ga. where she is active in the West End Community.

A Community’s Greatest Asset – YOU!

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

volunteer volunteering volunteerismToday’s post comes from Kenneth Tran, an AmeriCorps member serving with HandsOn Network

We cannot live only for ourselves.  A thousand fibers connect us with our fellow men.  ~Herman Melville

According to Webster’s Dictionary, Community is defined as “a body of persons or nations having a common history or common social, economic, and political interest.” On the Get HandsOn website, we are catering to the service minded community who are looking to make a lasting change in their environment. The shared social interest of service is the calling that’s bringing out the great activity out of our community.

With Follow the Leader, we have seen tremendous development and participation from our network of Service Leaders. From blog posts about leading a successful resume workshop, to recruiting local volunteers for upcoming projects, members are becoming more active, not only in their local physical community, but also on their online one of over 7000 members.

Volunteer leaders on the site are successfully modeling projects that have come before them. With the easy start up projects featured in the Project Playbooks, service-minded individuals are downloading projects that have been proven successful and sustainable from the HandsOn Network library.

They are replicating similar impacts in their local environment and making positive changes for those around them. They are impacting the even larger systems when they come back on to the site, and posting follow ups to their projects – letting the other GHO leaders know how it went and passing on their experiences.

Follow the Leader focuses on people fulfilling their commitments from Tag and doing the work. So far, I like what I’m seeing! Every day, I get emails updating me about the previous day’s activities on the site, and it is very encouraging to see new members not only registering on the site, but making unique commitments and telling the community about the causes they care about. Each of them are addressing needs specific to their location and are applying the Project Playbooks to meet those needs.

There are so many events going on that can get people discouraged and feeling hopeless. But with one act of service, thoughtful citizens who care enough to make a difference can affect positive change and make a difference to those around them. At the end of the day, we all want to belong to something. What better way to feel connected than leaving a mark on your community that matters to you.

Here’s my invitation for you to be a part of our community! Check out Get HandsOn and sign up to take part in Follow the Leader. Download a Playbook, recruit members of your community, and be ready to make a difference.  You never know who is looking up to your acts of service and will model your behavior. Caring about the community around us benefits everyone involved and the rewards from it will stretch far beyond your immediate surroundings.

Taking A Step Back to Follow

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

volunteer volunteering volunteerismToday’s post comes from Kenneth Tran, an AmeriCorps member serving with HandsOn Network

Have you ever run into a situation when you have too many leaders and not enough followers?

I know I have.

Being part of almost too many team building workshops and retreats, I realize that if everyone tries to step up at the same time and hears only their own voice, very rarely does anyone get anything accomplished. Most often, resulting in everyone leaving with a bad taste in their mouths, sprinkled in with some cursing under their breath.  A lack of clear direction can make any service project hard to complete.

Sometimes, the best way to be a leader is to take a step back and simply follow.

When you’re able to follow, you learn a lot from observing the action and directions of others. You see what works and what didn’t, and in turn you also learn what leadership style synchs best with you.

As part of the Get HandsOn Challenge team, we wanted to take what worked in the past for HandsOn Network and bring that to our online members, so that they could develop their leadership qualities in community service.

For the second stage of the Get HandsOn Challenge, we launched Follow the Leader the day after MLK Jr. Day. We want the initiative to encourage service leaders to extend their dedication to service on one day to a commitment that will extend through our lifetime, as Dr. King Jr. would have envisioned.

With the first leg of the campaign, we wanted leaders to Tag their friends and family into joining service commitments and share their passions that drive them. A lot of these commitments were great and could lead to promising community change, but there was not a starting guide from which people could refer to. Passion with no direction can be often troubling, and even disheartening.

Now with this second leg of the Get HandsOn Challenge, we compiled 15 successful community projects in easy-to-follow Project Playbooks that will help Service Leaders carry out their commitments. The guides give instructions from the planning/ brainstorming of the project to your final evaluation/ wrap up. All easy to organize and most importantly- easy to follow!

Another cool feature the Get HandsOn website has now is a Playbook Forum, where members can post about their projects – what worked, what didn’t, how it went, etc. The forum gives another opportunity to follow what others have done and take bits and pieces that can be added to our own community leadership repertoire. All of this helps us when it‘s time to lead our own project and carrying them out successfully.

So are the most successful leaders the best followers? I would say so. They learn to listen to those working for them, take charge when things need to be done, but also know when to take a step back when others want to lead. Following doesn’t have to be a passive action – actually I say far from it! By actively following the leader, you are learning skills and values that will only help you when its your time to shine.

Ken serves as an AmeriCorps National Direct member through the HandsOn Network with Points of Light Institute. He is based out of Atlanta, working with two other Americorps National Direct members on the Get HandsOn Challenge, a national campaign to help execute real-world value-directed projects by inspiring, equipping and connecting people to making positive change in their communities.

Follow the Leader

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

Today marks the first day of a brand new game for social good.  Remember Tag?  Now we’re playing Follow the Leader!

Yesterday’s Marin Luther King, Jr. Day brought thousands of people into their communities to serve.  Follow the Leader channels that energy and engagement into a more sustainable commitment to service.  Follow the Leader looks to take the one-day commitment to Martin Luther King, Jr.’s vision of community and drive a commitment to community service as a way to address some of the nation’s most pressing challenges.

Follow the Leader is easy, just like when you played it when you were younger.  When you register on the Follow the Leader site, you’ll be able to choose a Project Playbook – a step by step project guide for project implementation and management that helps to guide you from the idea of implementing a service project in your community to a successful day of service.

The Project Play books are available in four issue areas:

  • Economy
  • Education
  • Emergency Preparedness and Recovery
  • Environment

By playing Follow the Leader, you’re a game change in your community.  Every act of service and each commitment to create change, no matter how large or small, creates an impact in your community.  When you get involved with Follow the Leader, you can find a tested an successful service project, download the project toolkit, invite friends and family to help in your project, and be the leader for positive change in your community.

When you play Follow the Leader, you don’t only get the sense of satisfaction of helping to improve your community – you’re eligible for prizes, too!  Each month has a different prize, and at the end of Follow the Leader, one person will win a week-long volunteer vacation for two to HandsOn Manilla!

Take today to continue your work from Martin Luther King, Jr. Day and Follow the Leader!

Learning from Playing Tag

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

David RayToday’s post comes from David Ray, Chief Strategy and Public Policy Officer for Points of Light Institute.

About a week and a half ago ago we launched the updated Get HandsOn Campaign website and the Tag Service Challenge–our first social media outreach campaign.  We approached this effort in the spirit of “launching and learning.”  We’d done our homework and gotten some good advice from folks who had staged similar efforts.  We’d set goals and established metrics against which we’d measure our progress but we knew going in that we didn’t have all the answers.  So in that spirit over this and the coming social media challenges we’ll launch I’ll periodically share what we’re learning and the questions we’re trying to answer.  I hope we can learn together.

As of this morning (Tuesday, November 9) we’ve topped 2,100 people who’ve signed up for the campaign.  To be honest, we’d hoped to be growing at a more rapid pace but then again, we’ve never done this before.  We’re not the Pepsi Refresh Project.  Similar in some ways, yes, but we’re not asking people to give their own money or vote for how to allocate someone else’s.  We’re asking people to commit their time and talents, join an online community, and then Tag others to do the same.  So, is 2,100 members roughly 12 days into Tag good, bad or just about right? Are there other efforts we should be benchmarking ourselves against?

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Get HandsOn Tag Challenge Update!

Yesterday’s Get HandsOn Tag Master was Lindsey Weissman!  Lindsey has won a pair of round trip tickets on JetBlue, $25 for themself, and $100 for their favorite charity!

Today’s Celebrity Tag is !  Tag Dave for swag!

Are YOU up to the challenge?

Tag — A Game To Restore Idealism

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

Michelle NunnToday’s post comes from Michelle Nunn, CEO of Points of Light Institute and Co-founder of HandsOn Network.  It originally appeared in the Huffington Post on October 28, 2010.

As we approach the election, a barrage of political advertisements and commentary showcase the current and future electoral leaders of our nation.  Unfortunately, the reaction from the majority of the public seems to be one of profound disappointment and a collective shudder.  Politics increasingly feels like a game, but one that is played outside the bounds of civility and with only short-term winners.  And it feels like a game in which the real victory — building a stronger nation — has been lost.  A polarizing media, the lowest common denominator appeal of negative advertising, a trivializing and superficial coverage of the issues, and a failure of political courage all contribute to a disillusioning electoral landscape.

And yet, at a grassroots level, our civic landscape has great vibrancy and there are reasons for both optimism and idealism.  Across the nation, there are individuals, “super-empowered citizens”, who are leading others and creating innovative change.  Each day, Points of Light recognizes some of these outstanding grassroots leaders.  Individuals such as Christopher Fought, who after leading a team of volunteers from Ligonier, IN, to the Gulf Coast to help rebuild in the wake of Katrina, was inspired to mobilize his own community.  He founded Operation Foundation, a week-long clean and revitalization effort to restore Ligonier’s downtown.  With a budget of just under $8,000, Operation Foundation completed $250,000 worth of work in 2009.  More than 600 volunteers, or 12 percent of the town’s total population, showed up to help.

Individuals such as Renee Van Heel, who did not bow to despair when wildfires devastated her community in San Diego.  Instead, she started “Fired Up Sisters,” a group that has grown to include 600 women actively working to get fire victims back into their homes and help fire victims to become fire survivors.

These leaders are emblematic of the best spirit of America.  We need to do more to highlight and lift them up and to follow their lead.  So at a time of political bad sportsmanship and increasing cynicism, I want to encourage people to jump into a “game” that celebrates grassroots leaders and idealism and encourages positive action.  Points of Light Institute is launching the Get HandsOn Tag Challenge, an innovative digital and social media initiative to inspire and engage an extraordinary number of Americans to bring positive change to their communities.  Tag is, more simply put, the game you remember as a youth, but we’ve updated it for the 21st century and added a healthy dose of social consciousness.

With a powerful community-driven website, Tag invites you to create, or commit to, a service project, then “tag” your friends, family members and co-workers to come online and do the same.  The site also lets you connect with other service-minded individuals, share stories of impact and see the ripple effect of positive change.  And although service is a prize in and of itself, we have included some other great prizes to raise the stakes.  But have no doubt, the underlying stakes of this game are high.  Tag is a fun game with serious intent — we are lifting up individuals who are changing the world, recognizing them by “tagging them” and encouraging those that are on the sidelines of change to join in the game.

Beyond the charged rhetoric and the inflammatory electoral accusations, millions of leaders in our communities are quietly tackling tough problems through direct service and creative civic action.  They are gathering neighbors together to re-imagine parks, rallying around local schools to ensure better futures for our students, and helping equip families for financial self-sufficiency through financial counseling.  They are joining hands across differences, political and otherwise, and acting to create practical and pragmatic solutions.

So… Tag, You’re it!  This is a game that will remind you about what really matters.  And perhaps it will encourage you to remember that at its base, the game of elections is about creating positive change and ultimately uniting behind leaders.  Leaders, who like all of us, are flawed, but have stepped into the arena with the hopes of creating a stronger nation.  Join us at www.gethandson.com and let’s unite around something we all can believe in — the power of the individual to create change by serving, advocating, organizing, and voting.

Are you up for the Challenge? Get HandsOn!

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

What if more people raised their hands to help young people succeed?

To protect our environment?

To ensure the economic well-being of our friends and neighbors?

To help our communities prepare for and recover from disasters?

Surely we could collectively achieve incredible impact on some of our most pressing challenges.

If you’re here, reading this, chances are you already recognize your own capacity to organize projects that create change.

Are you willing to challenge your friends to step up their service game and become the leaders they’ve been waiting for?

Let’s Get HandsOn…

Let’s start with something fun…

"volunteer"Let’s play Service Tag, the biggest game of virtual tag ever played.

Different than the game we played as kids, this game of Tag has a much higher purpose – community impact.

How does it work?

Sign up to play by making a pledge to volunteer in your community. It can be something you are already doing or something you have always wanted to do. And if you don’t know where to get started we can help.

Tag two (or more) friends that you know could be active volunteer leaders because they have shown a commitment to giving back.

Get serving by starting (or continuing) your volunteer activity and share your story with the online service leaders community.

You can also see what others are doing and join other people’s projects!

So… TAG!

You’re it!

"volunteer"

How to Manage Volunteers at a Community Project

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010


You want to make your community volunteer project such a great experience that volunteers return again and again.

To make your project one that volunteers will love, think about your project from their perspective.

  • What made your volunteers want to sign up for this project?
  • What information did they receive in advance? Was it accurate? Did they understand what they would be doing? What they should wear?  What they should bring?
  • Did they know ahead of time if refreshments would be provided or if they should bring them for themselves?
  • If they had questions was it easy to get accurate and complete answers?
  • Did they feel like their participation was enthusiastically received?
  • When they arrived, what did they see?
  • Did they know where to go when they arrived? Were they greeted?
  • After arriving at the project site, did they receive clear directions on what to do?
  • Did they understand why this work was important to the agency/school?
  • Is what’s being asked of them reasonable? Is it safe and do they have the capability to do it?
  • Was the project well organized?
  • Did the volunteers feel like they accomplished something? Contributed in a meaningful way?
  • Was it fun?
  • Did someone check on them after they started working? Was there someone readily available to answer questions?
  • Was there enough work to do and adequate materials and supplies to complete the work?
  • Was there a place the volunteers could go to take a break, get something to drink, warm up, or cool down?
  • If the volunteers didn’t enjoy what they were doing or felt ineffective, were there opportunities for them to be reassigned to a new task?
  • After the work was finished, did someone thank the volunteers and let them know that what they did was important and effective?
  • Were they thanked for their time and contributions?
  • If they had ideas or complaints, was there an avenue for them to provide input or to make a suggestion?
  • Do they know how to get involved again?  Did you ask them to come back?

What to Tell Volunteers Before the Project

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

When a volunteer agrees to join you for a community project, confirm the project details with them by providing a phone call or e-mail that:

  • Introduces you as the Project Coordinator;
  • Thanks them for volunteering;
  • Provides the date and time of the project, project site address and directions for getting there;
  • Describes what will occur at the project;
  • Lets volunteers know what to wear/ not to wear;
  • Encourages volunteers to bring supplies they may have (i.e. tools, rakes, etc.);
  • Provides contingency plan information (for example in case of rain);
  • Tells volunteers who to contact if they have a change in plans; and
  • Provides parking information.