Posted 3/20/01
Submitted by Vanessa KleinHaar, Vice President of Student Issues,
Ontario, Canada
I understand what you're saying about the creation of separate age
groups having the potential to be detrimental to an overall goal of
segregation. As a 24 year old university student, I do think however,
that in situtations such as forums to get youth feedback, a separate
forum is okay. Since there still is, and maybe always will be, a large
amount of ageism in N. America and the world in general, there either
needs to be many small steps to integration or some type of forced
integration (which would probably be a lot more trouble than its worth).
The example of a pre-conference youth forum has been given...and is
a good one, as long as the same youth who participated in the forum
are given the chance to interact in the conference. The problem occurs,
when no interaction occurs or one person speaks on behalf of all youth.
Posted 2/17/01
Submitted by Gail Elberg, Director, Volunteer and Intern Programs,
New York City, New York
I share Susan Ellis' concern about the segregation of different segments
of our population -- in this case youth, and in that case -- the elderly,
blacks, hispanics, gays, etc. etc. This is not unique to volunteer
conferences. We have been conditioned to think, recruit, organize,
build etc. on behalf of "separate" constituencies because this is
how, for the last forty years, programs get funded. While very important
gains have been made by bringing attention to especially oppressed
groupings it has become a way of life that has over-determined how
we think and how our society is organized. At the All Stars Project,
which produces some of the largest and most successful inner city
youth programs in New York City, proudly without government funding,
we ask the question what is the best environment for development to
take place. Sometimes it's youth meeting together. Most often what's
most developmental for growth is a coming together of diverse peoples
who together, we feel, will create a better society for all.
Posted 2/16/01
Submitted by Ann Sprouse, Volunteer Roanoke Valley, Roanoke, Virginia
The Points of Light Foundation has wonderful information on working
with youth and a new initiative to encourage service learning as opposed
to "community service". Community based service learning programs
not only promote youth development but community development as well
and is grounded in youth/adult partnerships. Through this process
young people improve academic learning and develop personal skills
through structured service projects that meet community needs. By
giving young people the responsibility of designing, planning and
implementing their service projects, we allow them to offer us fresh/new
perspectives and even new funding sources! Most young people don't
see volunteer work as "feel good" work. They see it as a means to
an end - a way to create community change. By using the service learning
process when working with youth, we allow them to be involved in helping
others, with a particular emphasis placed on the learning that occurs
through service. I would encourage folks to use the guidance provided
by the Youth Outreach team at the Points of Light Foundation when
working with young people.
Posted 2/14/01
Submitted by tan chee koon (mrs), executive director, national
volunteer centre, singapore
You struck a chord with your observation that there were repeated
calls for youth involvement in leadership and planning, but were the
youth prepared to be trained in "followership" principles as well?
This was the feeling I came away with at the conference - that the
youth want to be heard, but are they prepared to listen too, especially
to the voices of wisdom that come with maturity? There was an uncomfortable
element of "we" vs. "them" in the conference proceedings; an outcome
I think of setting aside the youth at the pre-conference youth forum.
We are firm believers in our youth and if they can be trained in followership
as well as leadership, as you suggest, they will make strong leaders
for the volunteer movement.
Submitted by 2/13/01
Submitted by Tom Rinkoski, Director, Volunteer Services, Diocese
of Green Bay, Wisconsin
I work with youth 12 - 20 as a trainer for Assets Development (Search
Institute, Minneapolis, MN). I have discovered that youth are willing,
even excited to work on Assets teams if they experience being valued.
While I do not always have a handle on how best to offer that for
all youth, I do now constantly check it. Youth being asked to participate
in exisiting programs, even in leadership positions, is considerably
different than asking them to grow a program from the ground up and
take it in places they consider meaningful. From the numbers I work
with (small by any count) this is not an all encompassing model, but
I do know that the youth I have worked with here in Northeast Wisconsin
have been enthusiastic members of our leadership teams. In fact, when
we have had teams without a 50/50 composition of youth and adults
it has never been as enjoyable or effective.
Posted 2/9/00
Submitted by Diane Leipper, Leipper Management Group, Nevada, USA
It seemed only a small number of participants in the youth forum stayed
for, or got involved in the entire conference. Fully integrated participation
adds richness and broadens perspectives. The format that AVA has followed,
scheduling meetings for specific groups within the overall conference,
allows like minded people to meet but it is just another option within
the overall plan. There were two themes expressed by the youth forum
that concerned me and some other adults (those over 30). One, that
adults needed to "let us", "give us" opportunities and options. The
other seemed to indicate that adults are not creative, don't have
new ideas, and are stuck in old ways. Both of these themes seem counterproductive
to vital and viable volunteer involvement. I think of the many great
youth programs such as Girl Scouts, Junior Achievement, and 4H. They
all enable youth to create their own opportunities, learn leadership,
gain skills, develop resources, and to explore all kinds of creative
options. What kind of lessons are youth learning if the message is
that someone has to provide opportunities? Is this the kind of volunteer
leadership we want? Youth do have a lot to offer. Many young people,
on their own initiative or as part of an organization or group have
made their own opportunities and done great things. They are a vital
part of our volunteer community. The combined resources, experiences,
and ideas of all of us working together can accomplish great things.
Posted 2/9/00
Submitted by Steven Lewis, LEO Advisor - Kansas Lions Clubs,
Kansas, USA
As a member of a Lions club and a LEO (youth group sponsored by local
Lions Clubs consisting of young people ages 12 to 28) advisor I have
found that the youth I am involved with want what we all seek. Recognition,
friendship, confidence and the knowledge that they are important.
While the age of a person is a legal consideration, their abilities
and energy are usually only limited by the access we as adults give
them. I have seen few groups in our community who interact with young
people in any kind of equal partnership. Most only allow limited and
often very directed tasks to be accomplished while at the same time
complaining that young people are not service minded. The youth in
our LEO club (ages 15-18)see this club as an opportunity to break
down barriers between the older and younger generations. As an advisor,
My role is to enable them, and support them as they work towards helping
their community. Developing personal confidence and leadership abilities
that will follow them through the balance of their lives benefits
us all even though we may not enjoy the shade of the seeds we planted
today
Posted 2/9/00
Submitted by Marie Fox, Volunteering NSW, NSW Australia
Like you, the Youth Strand of the IAVE Conference was for we "oldies"
a call to action. In NSW, we have followed up by calling a meeting
of our youth delegates who will take responsibility for conducting
a youth stream at our state conference in May and follow through hopefully
to the Volunteering Australia Conference in December. We will focus
on youth at the launch of National Volunteer Week and have a number
of school based activities planned. There were two requests from youth
that triggered my thoughts: 1) Don't ask how old we are but rather
who we are, and 2) We're not just the future, we are the present.
Posted 2/8/00
Submitted by Suzanne Bennett, Volunteer Resources Coordinator,
Allegheny County Area Agency on Aging, Pennsylvania, USA
I believe that age is not a boundary to be crossed into another age,
but legal constraints in various settings, do vary the ages of appropriate
participants. Good ideas can come from anyone, regardless of age,
but like someone has already stated--from those who are new to the
"field" or who have newly found a reason to become active volunteers.
It is critical that legal matters not rule the intellectual landscape,
but their concerns must be met in some appropriate way to free the
volunteer organization from legal liability.
Posted 2/8/00
Submitted by Helen Rusich, Volunteer Services, Terra Association Responding
to the Needs of Pregnant and Parenting Youth, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Thanks for your article. On whether we should segregate youth, I tend
to agree that often when a group is not seen or heard from or is at
a disadvantage, then a big thing is made of trying to include them.
Often this has its advantage because I believe we want to be inclusive.
Once this minority group has a voice, however this is represented,
then members from this group need to be included into the general
population so that youth, women, seniors, etc. can dialogue and begin
to understand each others concerns. In short, I don't always agree
that we need to segregate groups, just having a few is sometimes enough
to understanding their perspective.
Posted 2/8/00
Submitted by Sarah Oliver, Manager of Program Development, WICS Youth
Programs, Washington, USA
This topic brought to mind my experience as a student-teacher (age
24) in a high school with a very diverse population. I quickly realized
that 1) most of my students had more life experience than I did, and
2) I didn't have the life, or teaching experience, to make a good
teacher! Now, I'm a trainer in youth development practices and principles,
and the biggest problems I see are:
- putting young people in leadership/participatory positions without
sufficient support and training for them to find success, or opportunities
to learn both leadership and "followership" skills.
- assuming that youth can't/shouldn't do something because they
don't know how, or can't take on a high level of responsibility.
- assuming that institutions (for example, board meetings, volunteer
program structures) should not be changed, since they've "always
been that way."
My favorite reminder for adults is, "Youth are bored at these meetings
because these meetings are boring! If we work to make the meetings more
engaging and alive, not only will youth want to participate...I think
WE'LL want to participate more fully, too!" It's a bit trite, but the
best results seem to come from a healthy mix...adults working with youth,
youth working on their own, adults "leading" youth, youth "leading"
adults... and being aware of, and responsive to, the individual needs,
assets, and interests of each person. I'd echo the sentiment that it's
dangerous and damaging to lump all youth together, and ignore the amazing
diversity of experience
Posted 2/8/00
Submitted by Faride Ladak (age 36), HRD Chair for the Ismaili Council
for Quebec and the Maritimes, Quebec, Canada
Great topic. From my experience as a volunteer in different capacities,
the term YOUTH has been and still is very ambiguous and has a tendency
to categorize and limit possibilities for many potential volunteers.
In my mandate as an appointed chairperson for Human Resource Development
and Management within our Religious Community, we face many challenges.
A common one is working with other leaders who believe that age is
directly related with the ability to be responsible and contribute
positively. Within the last 10 years we are faces with a consistently
decreasing number of new recruits. Part of it is due to this issue.
While on the other hand we are also losing past volunteers in the
age group of 50+ because they feel that young volunteers are introducing
new and unknown ways to address issues, instead of just doing what
we tell them to. (This is due mostly to our cultural belief of respecting
adults). I am of the thinking that maybe we need to integrate all
age groups, except for the inexperienced which must be evaluated and
trained regardless of age when starting out. The concept of Meritocracy
must be exercised. And in order for it to be successful the appropriate
procedures for recruiting, evaluating and recognition are the key
ingredients. The debate of what age group it should be is a great
topic for professional debates (and that's about all). In our global,
diverse and converging societies we must learn to work based on concepts
such as MERIT which ultimately provide the best results for all concerned
within the context of good ethics, values, etc..
Posted 2/8/00
Submitted by Dale Leidheiser, Extension Specialist, 4-H Youth Development;
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO
Cooperative Extension Programs from land grant universities in each
state have been involving youth in decision-making and community service
roles over the 100 year history of the 4-H program. While there are
many challenges that adults face as they work to develop life skills
in children, (as iterated in many of the above comments) youth face
their own set of challenges in working with adults. Youth find adults
to be controlling, rigid, narrow-minded, closed to viewpoints differing
from their own, etc. Youth also find that adults have experience and
wisdom that can help them make quality decisions. Adults need to acknowledge
the pro's and con's of working with youth and place them in situations
that are cognitively, socially, and physically appropriate for the
age and sex of the child. One of the most powerful curricula we have
to train youth and adults to work together is one on "Youth-Adult
Partnerships" developed through the National 4-H Council. The goal
for many of us is to achieve a balance between the benefit to the
youth volunteer and the benefit to the program to the program within
which they are working.
Posted 2/6/01
Submitted by Sarah Brown, Director of Membership and Marketing Girl
Scouts of Swift Water Council, New Hampshire and southeastern Vermont
As a professional in the Girl Scouts, I am a big advocate for youth
leadership (youth in our definitions are ages 5 to 17 or grades K-12).
We teach leadership and decision-making. If we are doing our job,
then girls are ready for leadership roles with adults by the time
they are in high school and sometimes earlier. And yes, we walk the
walk, girls on council boards, committees, and task groups.
Posted 2/6/01
Submitted by Lee Dae Kun, Director/Korea Volunteer Academy/Federation
of Volunteer Effort Korea, Pusan, Korea(south)
In Korea, children are under 18 by the law, and youth from 9 up to
24. Whenever I give a talk to middle and high schoolers I ask them
to raise their hands if they think they are children. Nobody. Then
I ask them to raise their hands if they think they are youth. All
of them raise hands. Both answers are wrong and at the same time both
are right, according to existing law. It is really confusing. My assertion
is that youth should be from middle schooler up to 19, because older
than 20 is no longer minority. I think it is not wise to have age
segregation. Why not let them decide themselves if they want or like
to attend?. However, for the purpose of service-learning for children,
it is another story. Thank you.
Posted 2/5/01
Submitted by Rob Jackson, Volunteer Development Officer (Fundraising),
Royal National Institute for the Blind, London, England
First off, I love the idea of those under 30 being young people. At
the age of 26 this is an attractive concept given I ceased to be a
young person by the UK's definition two years ago! I've worked (volunteer
and paid) in the field since I was twenty and I have rarely come across
any discrimination because of my age. When I have come across it,
it is invariably due to people who equate age with experience and
responsibility, a maxim that does not always hold true. We recently
recruited a fourteen year old virtual volunteer to do some research
on young people's attitudes to volunteering with RNIB. She backed
up this age equals experience and responsibility issue by saying many
organisations had turned down her offer of voluntary work because
she was 'too young'. All I can say to those people is that they missed
out on a brilliant volunteer because of prejudicial blindness. Finally,
my favourite crusade on this issue is challenging the way people can
tend to consider young people as one homogenous group rather than
accepting their inherent diversity.
Posted 2/1/01
Submitted by Melissa Watkins (age 23), Student, University of Guelph,
Guelph, Ontario, Canada
I see youth as being any person who is either a young person, or those
who are new to a given area or topic. Those people with fresh ideas
and perspectives on existing infrastructure or fields. This may encompass
any age group. For example, I recently took part in a youth forum
on coastal stewardship, and although the majority of the delegates
were under 25 years of age, several participants were 40 or 50+ but
were new participants to the "field" of coastal stewardship. I think
it is unfortunate when programs and events exclude potential contributors
strictly on the basis of age.
Posted 2/1/01
Submitted by Cindy Petty, Community & Public Relations Coordinator,
Princeton, Indiana, USA
This is a most interesting topic both in terms of my job - i.e. recruiting
health care volunteers and in terms of my service club-Kiwanis. In
researching the generation X (those born 1961 to 1981, it has been
said that they:
- Grew up as latchkey kids
- Want it all and want it right away
- Are techno-literate
- Are quick to move to results with minimal instruction
- Are able to think with a fresh creativity, but with a perceived
aloofness that tends to rub the older crowd the wrong way
- Like increased schedule flexibility
- Little expectation of spending their entire careers with one organization
or industry
- Desire to expand skills a capabilities
- Want to prepare for their next steps in their careers
- The notion of a balanced life is key for Generation X'ers Have
different ideas of what a family consists of (not traditional mom-pop-2.5
children)
- Less altruism and more "what's in it for me"
To get more youth, you need to make sure that you provide basic instructions,
but allow freedom for them to do the job THEIR way; keep an open mind;
and encourage the fact that volunteering will help with future career
plans. Anyone else want to add something?