Posts Tagged ‘Volunteer Training’

Volunteer Training 101

Thursday, July 26th, 2012

volunteer, volunteering, volunteerism, trainingAn important part of volunteer engagement is equipping volunteers for their tasks. You want to ensure they have the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to serve successfully. Additionally, many volunteers view service as a way to develop or improve skills, so training is a way to further their personal and professional development.

Without proper training, individuals may:

  • Perform their duties poorly or step outside of their boundaries
  • Not take all proper safety precautions
  • “Feel lost” while doing their task and not return
  • Have a negative experience and tell others about it, thus undermining the image of the organization

These four steps can guide you in training your volunteers.

Step 1: Identify Training Needs

Think about the knowledge, skills, and attitudes that volunteers need to perform their duties well and happily. It may include an in-depth orientation to your organization’s policies and procedures, specific skills needed to complete a project (anything from how to use a hammer to how to set up an Excel spreadsheet), or “soft skills” such as problem solving or communication.

Step 2: Design Training

Training must:

  • Be relevant
  • Build on participants’ experience
  • Be interactive
  • Communicate key lessons through visual, auditory and experiential modes
  • Allow for participant to apply learning
  • Help to solve problems
  • Demonstrate immediate value

Step 3: Deliver Training

Use a method that works for your population.

  • May want the training to be person-to-person, online or use videos, manuals, or a website
  • May want the training to be interactive
  • The training should be convenient for your population
  • Use social networking tools

Step 4: Assess and Refine Training

  • Written participant evaluations
  • A reflection exercise at the end of the training
  • “Check-in” sessions

For more training resource, check out the HandsOn Trainer’s Toolbox.

 

Your Professional Development Is Up to You!

Monday, July 12th, 2010

by Jeannie Blocton Bell, Director, E-Learning Initiatives, HandsOn Network

The HandsOn University Online Learning Center is now live and we want your feedback.

We’d like to invite you to try our first course offering for  free!

The Skills-based Volunteering course is an interactive, online training course introducing participants to the principles of skills-based volunteering.

The course opens by covering the benefits and challenges associated with skills-based volunteering.

Participants then choose an area of focus – skills-based volunteering in the individual, business, or nonprofit context and then create a plan for the implementation and management of a skills-based volunteer program.

The course offers participants real examples, tips, and easy-to-follow steps for community and volunteer engagement.

Access this course by using the following this link hhttp://post.ly/mAbEttp://www.handsonnetwork.org/tools/handsonuniversityonline and selecting the “try our first course FREE” button.

If you could please take a few moments to provide feedback by completing a short survey after you’ve taken the course, we’d be most grateful. We need your help in determining relevant topics for future courses because we really believe that the courses should truly meet the needs of the sector.

Your feedback is valuable.

If you have comments or questions, please email me at .

A Professional Development Journey

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

by Sharon Tewksbury-Bloom
Volunteer Program Specialist, Volunteer Arlington

How fast does three years go by?

Three years ago I was joining AmeriCorps in hopes of getting training in the career of volunteer management.

In 2007, I was serving as an AmeriCorps member in northern Arizona and it was my responsibility to launch a volunteer program to help homebound seniors and disabled adults.

Just out of college with a history degree I found myself in charge of recruiting people, matching them with opportunities to serve, orienting and training them, as well as supervising and recognizing them.

I had jumped right into the volunteer management profession, without a single course in management.

Typical, I know.

It was my great fortune that Rick Lynch and Steve McCurley, co-authors of and legendary for their training in the field, came to Arizona that year and presented a two-day training on volunteer management.

Over those two days we went through theory and practice on the soup to nuts of volunteer management.

Their insights about how people relate to one another, why people volunteer, and what the role of the volunteer manager is, were critical to my personal and professional development.

The binder I got that day has become my volunteer management bible which I carried with me through the next three years.

Jumping ahead in time to today; I am still in the field and now have the unique opportunity of bringing Rick Lynch to my new network of volunteer managers in the DC area.

I now work at Volunteer Arlington, a HandsOn Network Affiliate and we provide support to volunteer managers.

Having been in their shoes, I know how valuable it is to get the chance to participate in a well-designed and well-researched training with peers who are experiencing the same sort of challenges that are unique to this profession.

I am very excited about this training event and hope that it will serve as a key part of my peers’ professional development in the way that it did for me.

Volunteer Arlington, along with Volunteer Fairfax, Volunteer Alexandria, and the Northern Virginia Association of Volunteer Administrators are pleased to present Management 2011: Advanced Volunteer Management Training with Rick Lynch on Thursday July, 22, 2010 in Arlington, VA. Visit the website for more details.