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Club Community Service

Club Community Service. Planning Engaging and Meaningful Service Projects. Office of Student Life Montgomery College Rockville Campus. Index. Defining Community Service Benefits of Service for Clubs, Individuals, and Communities 5 Steps for Planning a Project

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Club Community Service

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  1. Club Community Service Planning Engaging and Meaningful Service Projects Office of Student Life Montgomery College Rockville Campus

  2. Index • Defining Community Service • Benefits of Service for Clubs, Individuals, and Communities • 5 Steps for Planning a Project • Other Office Policies and Procedures • Campus Service Opportunities & Resources

  3. Defining Community Service • Unpaid activities that make a real difference in a community • Can be mandated (think court-ordered or in a classroom) • Club Activity: • Research unique or interesting examples of community service • Have members share these at a club meeting

  4. Benefits of Service“Make a career of humanity and you will make a greater person of yourself, a greater nation of your country, and a finer world to live in.” Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. • For Clubs & Individuals • Get experience planning events and collaborating with the community • Work together as a club • Have fun recruiting new members and promoting your club’s mission • Boost your mood, make new friends, and learn new skills • Impress future employers • expertise, passion, and commitment to making a difference • Score with college admissions by • Achieving your goals, applying learning, and positively impacting those around you

  5. MC*LEAD received Montgomery County’s Golden Shovel award for their service project after Snowmageddon 2010. The Bollywood Club’s Holi 4 Haiti fundraiser brought in $200—and celebrated the festival of color at Montgomery College.

  6. Benefits of Service • For Community Organizations • Non-profits desperately need volunteers to meet their clients’ needs • Student groups bring energy, new ideas, and support to people who work on sometimes difficult and draining social issues. • Students with specialized skills can greatly improve the effectiveness of non-profit and community organizations. • web developers, landscapers, interior designers, builders, etc… • For Clients/Community Members • The clients served by a community organization—the disabled, low-income youth, endangered species—are being impacted by various social issues and injustices. Your club’s service can make a real difference in their lives and futures.

  7. 5 Steps for Planning a Project • Select the Service Site/Social Issue • Prepare for the Project • Serve the Community • Reflect and Report • Celebrate, Educate, and Promote

  8. Selecting the Service Site/Social Issue • Your Club’s Goals for Service • Does your group have an obvious connection to a certain social issue? • Would a specific kind of service enhance your club’s skills and abilities? • Would your group benefit from a fun or empowering service? • Are there specific kinds of professionals you’d like to meet/work with? • Are there any community events coming up that your club would like to be a part of? • Club Activity: • Brainstorm a list of club members’ skills, experiences, and interests. • Research community organizations seeking volunteers that match this list • Google “Montgomery County Volunteer Center” • Check out onebrick.org or burgundycrescent.org • Look at online community calendars on The Gazette, City Paper, etc…

  9. Volunteer at a local festival, fair, or day of service in Montgomery County.

  10. Prepare for the Project • Discuss your plans with a Faculty Advisor • Invite other clubs to collaborate at an ICC meeting • Meet with a Student Life Specialist or Service Program staff member • Discuss your club’s goals and interests • Prepare any request forms for funding, space, materials, etc… • Pick up required forms • Club Community Service Form* • Service Learning Activities Waiver* (sign & return waivers immediately) *All forms are available in the OSL and online

  11. Prepare for the Project • If working with a Community Organization • Contact the volunteer coordinator • Discuss your club’s availability and service goals • Inquire about the organization needs • Ask about dress code, parking, and training needed • If planning your own project or service event • Follow the instructions for Event Planning • Meet with a Service Program staff member

  12. Prepare for the Project • Club Activity • Research social issue(s) creating the community need you are addressing • Share news articles and other materials about the issue at a club meeting • Discuss how your service project will impact this social issue

  13. Serve the Community • Put your plans and preparation into action. • Arrive on time at the service site. • Have the club contact inform the community contact of your arrival • Follow instructions, ask questions, and serve! • Remember: • This is a team effort • Communicate responsibilities clearly to all club members • Push your comfort level, have fun, and remember the difference you are making

  14. Serve the Community • Be a motivator • Stay positive • Remind everyone of the big picture • Focus on the needs of the community that you are serving • Trust the community organization that is asking you to the service • Watch for club members who need to be reassigned to a different or new task • If you finish a task, inform the supervisor and ask to do more • Have fun • Play games • Bring a radio • Have snacks to share • Take a break whenever is needed

  15. Reflect and Report • Reflect • Discuss the service project immediately afterwards • Go out to eat/get coffee or desert • Plan a ½ hour to talk when the service ends • Make sure everyone participates in some way • Discuss observations, difficulties, questions at a club meeting • Ask members to think about what they learned, what they’d do differently, what they enjoyed • Discuss your initial goals and how well you met them • Report • Record observations, questions, and lessons learned to share with other clubs, members who couldn’t attend & OSL staff • Complete the Club Community Service Form (return immediately to the OSL)

  16. Celebrate, Educate, & Promote • Celebrate • Host a party or presentation at a club meeting to celebrate the difference you made • Educate • Host a panel, movie & discussion, or other event to share what you learned about the social issue and your service with the Montgomery College community • Share your experiences at an ICC meeting • Promote • Use photographs from the service project to promote future club meetings/service/events • Invite students to help plan your next project

  17. Campus Opportunities & Resources • On-campus Programs • Red Cross Blood Drives • Help advertise, recruit & register donors, and give blood at a drive • FYE Days of Service • Help coordinate a day of service for first-year students • Manna Food Smart Sacks • Every Thursday @ 2, help pack food for local elementary school children • Other On-campus Opportunities • Food Drives for the Women’s Studies Food Pantry • Educational and Recreational Activities at the Early Learning Center • International Day of Peace in the Fall • Rockville Science Fair in the Spring

  18. Campus Opportunities & Resources • Service Programs Bulletin Board • Outside the Office of Student Life • New opportunities posted weekly • Informational resources about local organizations • Volunteer Updates E-newsletters • Biweekly emails about service opportunities on campus and in the community • Montgomery County Volunteer Center • Search the database for 1,000s of local needs

  19. Campus Opportunities & Resources Meet with a student life specialists or service learning program staff 5 days a week: M-F 8:30am-5:00pm Lower Level Campus Center 005 240-567-5092. stlifer@montgomerycollege.edu www.montgomerycollege.edu/ Departments/stdactrv

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