Slashdot Mirror


How Do You Volunteer Professional Services?

keefus_a writes "My wife and I usually take a week long vacation in the Spring and I tossed out the idea of volunteering abroad. Neither of us has a problem with doing manual labor, or whatever task is needed. However, I thought it might be of some value, and substantially more rewarding than our daily grind, if we could volunteer our professional services (I'm a network guy and my wife has a master's degree in counseling). The problem is that I haven't found any resources for doing so on a short-term basis. So I ask Slashdot. Has anyone ever done short-term volunteer work in your professional field? What organization did you contact? Or are we better off donating money to a particular cause and just working on a tan?"

13 of 366 comments (clear)

  1. Church by jep77 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Find the nearest church. The leaders there will be able to help you find a cause.

    1. Re:Church by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With the expected amount of bias, of course.

  2. Your timing is suspect.. by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Based on recent tragedies in Haiti. If your just offering to provide local general volunteer services, approach your local charitable organizations that provide those types of volunteer services and let them direct you.

    If you are considering volunteer work in disaster areas, please.. please, do not do it. There are professionals trained in those types of things, the last thing they need is for a group of volunteers who went to help out, suddenly requiring rescuing of their own. After the main disaster cleanup is done, and the areas are safe, then offer yourself up as a volunteer, but till then, stay out of dangerous areas.

    --
    I came, I conquered, I coredumped
  3. You don't tend to find it because it isn't useful by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most professional type stuff requires longer terms. The reason is that often you are dealing with complex situations and a week isn't even really enough time to learn the system, much less accomplish anything. I think about where I work and if you can in and said "Hey I'd like to help out for a week," I'd have to say "no thanks" because you couldn't do anything useful. While I could certainly use more sysadmin type help, it'd take longer than a week to get you trained up on what we've got.

    Short term volunteer work is almost always going to be grunt labour type stuff because there's almost always a need since it doesn't pay well and it takes little to no training. Your more advanced skills aren't likely to be used.

  4. Have a vacation AND do something for people by osgeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Take your vacation somewhere where your tourism dollars will really help the locals: Goa, India (or just travel in India); lots of places in South America; Phuket, Thailand; etc. Skip big tourist drawing areas like the Bahamas where your money goes into the pockets of wealthy hotel and tourist industry owners.

    Stay at more modest accommodations. Spend your money on small local service providers, food providers, crafts makers, and so forth. Tip them well.

    By doing these things you'll stretch your vacation dollars farther, be more in touch with the local culture, have a good time, and help disadvantage people just trying to make an honest living.

    1. Re:Have a vacation AND do something for people by pikester · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Detroit fits all of those requirements and you don't need a passport!

  5. Donate the money IMHO by Liquidrage · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My experience, which is mine and only mine and so can't speak for anyone else, was that volunteering tech time was overwhelming.

    I volunteered to do the web programming and graphics a few years back for a small organization. The thing it's just like work. There are deadlines, pressure, unrealistic requirements, the whole deal. And just like real tech work, it's not easy to hit the ground running on day one as there's a learning curve to how they work and operate. It's not something that's easily broken up in 4 hour casual chunks just when you want to do it.

    I'd say just do habitat for humanity or send money or something. But don't try and be a network admin for a week somewhere. It wouldn't be fun to have you totally screw up their firewall on your last day before heading back to your job. Send them money so they can contract local services where someone is doing it as their job.

  6. Shortsighted Thread is Shortsighted by Slipped_Disk · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Most of the rescue work to be done in Haiti is done - Finding people at this point is now recovery. At this point the range of "professionals" needed is much broader than you or the grandparent imply.
    • Medical personnel are needed for the ongoing care of the injured Many of those there now are volunteers, new volunteers will be needed when those currently in the field need to return home to earn a living.
    • Construction and Demolition specialists are needed to repair (or demolish and rebuild) structures.

    • Infrastructure specialists (power, plumbing, roads & telecom) are needed to rebuild what was destroyed.
    • Counselors are needed to help people deal with the shock, and in many cases tragic loss.

    For many of the people in those categories Haiti will be their first "real" disaster scene. Others may have previous experience and volunteer to help even though their "day job" isn't rebuilding nations after a catastrophic event.

    While I agree that people should only go into a disaster area like Haiti as part of an organized recovery effort I don't believe the "Don't go there because you don't work for [insert disaster group]" attitude this post and the grandparent take is at all productive - These organizations do not have the manpower or expertise to do it all themselves.

    Just my $3.50 as someone who has gone in after fires and floods to bring skeleton infrastructure up and support further recovery.

    --
    /~mikeg
  7. Did he mention a disaster? No. by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Did he mention a disaster? No. Did he mention Haiti? No.

    Your snide comments are not helpful.

    The poster wants to volunteer his technical skills abroad in an area with need. I'm sure there are plenty of places in the world who could use some professional expertise. You yourself suggest that he can help at home, but perhaps he'd like the experience to help abroad.

    Unless you have an expertise in food distribution/agriculture, medicine, or communication ... you will probably just be excess baggage.

    Really? The Peace Corp seems to be very active in building schools, hospitals and other infrastructure. They aren't excess baggage.

    --
    "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  8. Re:Why Volunteer? by mcgrew · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd rather be robbed by a poor man than robbed by a rich man. At least the poor man has an excuse, and a reason. The rich man has neither.

    If I'm going to be exploited, I'd rather not be exploited by a Ferengi.

  9. Re:just say no by Idarubicin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Take a vacation, relax, enjoy life.

    Some people climb mountains on vacation. They're out in the cold, possibly getting rained or snowed on, sleeping on hard ground, straining muscles and risking serious injury. Yet still they call it their 'vacation', and no one argues.

    This guy doesn't mind the type of work he does, and he likes the idea of helping other people in his free time. While he's doing it, he's going to visit novel places in other countries, discover new cuisines, learn about different cultures and lifestyles, and have a whole office full of new friends who are glad to see him and want to show him a good time. The locals will know the good places to eat, the fun things to do, the little hidden sights and pleasures that you can't find in your travel guide. He can pull CAT5 during the day, then walk outside and drink rum while the sun sets over the beach.

    What's so bad about that? Different people relax in different ways.

    --
    ~Idarubicin
  10. ...your life and the fruits of your labor... by jeko · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And why does wanting to enjoy your life and the fruits of your labor make someone evil?

    It doesn't, unless that's ALL you want to do. We have two words for people who care only for their own needs and no one elses; infants and sociopaths.

    Here, let me look these up for you:

    compassion
    empathy

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  11. Other names for collectivism... by jeko · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What you're referring to as collectivism, I usually call family, friendship and community.

    Have you ever noticed how lonely and miserable it gets in your Randian paradise?

    Take two worlds, one in which everyone looks out for each other, and the other in which everyone looks out for themselves. I don't know what their official designations would be, but the common nicknames for them would be "Heaven" and "Hell."

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."