Thursday, October 31, 2013

Three Resources You Should Know About Before Completing Your Term of Service


AmeriCorps Alums is the only national network convening the alumni of all AmeriCorps national service programs. Alums are encouraged to fully realize their potential by building connections and engaging with others to create transformational change in their communities. Since 1994, more than 800,000 Americans have served in AmeriCorps. We asked Greg Heinrich, who currently serves as the Alumni Mobilization Manager, to share some tips on how current AmeriCorps members can take advantage of the great resources AmeriCorps Alums provides. Here's what he told us:

So you’re getting ready to complete your AmeriCorps term of service, and now you’re wondering what’s next. It's important to consider this question before your term of service is complete. As with any endeavor, planning often plays an important role. AmeriCorps Alums is committed to helping make your transition from AmeriCorps to Life After AmeriCorps a little bit easier. At AmeriCorps Alums, we believe that AmeriCorps alumni represent the leadership pipeline for the 21st century. Here are a few top resources that can help make your transition out of AmeriCorps more productive and efficient.

Monthly Professional Development Webinars:
Each month AmeriCorps Alums conducts a professional development webinar that aims to enhance your knowledge of a topic that we believe will enhance your career and professional prospects. The webinars feature alumni with experience in the respective topics that we explore, and topics can range from “Careers in Philanthropy” to “Translating AmeriCorps Onto Your Resume.” All events are archived on our website for future playback. You can also register for upcoming webinars on the archive page. 

The AmeriCorps Alums Career Center: 
As your service term comes to an end, many of you will be looking to land a job that will launch your professional career. The AmeriCorps Alums Career Center was created for current members and alumni seeking to find a job post-AmeriCorps. If you’re willing to invest the time to look, our career center offers thousands of job opportunities that are uniquely suited to the skills of AmeriCorps alumni. With over 675 employers registered on our career center and specifically targeting AmeriCorps alumni, this is a resource you will want to explore. There is no cost to connect to the Career Center, but you do need to be a registered member of www.AmeriCorpsAlums.org

AmeriCorps Alums Chapters: 
We’ve found that AmeriCorps Alums love local, on-the-ground interaction with each other, and the engine of local activity takes place in our chapter network. Local chapters provide a platform for alumni to continue to serve, to network professionally, and to connect with like-minded individuals. You can view our list of active chapters here. If your city is without an active chapter, consider learning how you can start a chapter in your city. 

Of course, there are other resources that AmeriCorps Alums provides to members of the national service community, but these are three that we think are very relevant to members preparing to transition out of AmeriCorps. 

For questions related to this post, you can contact Greg Heinrich at greg@americorpsalums.org.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Unintended Consequences



This blog is a guest article by Barbara Ernsberger, a previous Michigan's AmeriCorps member who was honored in April 2013 as the Outstanding AmeriCorps Alum of the Year by the Michigan Community Service Commission. In recognition of her award and service, she has been asked to share part of her "Ameri-Journey" on the blog.

Greetings AmeriCorps world! My name is Barbara Ernsberger and I am the Executive Director at Blue Water Habitat for Humanity. We serve all of St. Clair and Sanilac Counties in the Thumb area of the state.  We are an affiliate of Habitat for Humanity International, an organization that works in over 90 countries worldwide helping families secure decent, simple, affordable housing solutions. 

Sometimes, I have those mornings when I wake up and say “How did I get here? What prepared me for this incredible work?”  I get to do mission work in my own backyard…amazing!

The opportunity to become an AmeriCorps member with the very first class of the Habitat for Humanity of Michigan's AmeriCorps team came to me in January of 2001. I was a mom trying to return to the workplace full time. After taking much time out of the workplace to care for two children with severe medical issues, it was time for me to do something new.

Spending time
with great volunteers.
The AmeriCorps position of Volunteer Coordinator at Blue Water Habitat for Humanity came to me in numerous ways, but I did not think I had the qualifications.  One day I decided to take the leap and apply. The interview was on my birthday, and the position was offered to me directly following my interview. I did not expect that…first unintended consequence. 

When I started serving, I realized so many things in life had prepared me for the position I had taken on. I had volunteered at numerous places in my community including my church, cooperative preschool, and I think most importantly for this position, Boy Scouts of America. I had done everything from actually getting the attention of 80 boys under the age of 12 at one time, to planning events for up to 1,400 for a weekend camp-out. All of that had prepared me to recruit volunteers far beyond my wildest dreams….second unintended consequence. 

Being awarded 2011Affiliate
of the Year at the Habitat
Michigan Banquet by Lt.
Governor Brian Calley.
Following my second AmeriCorps term, the affiliate offered me full time employment. Wow...they wanted to keep me! I stayed on as Volunteer Manager until 2006, when I had to leave due to family medical issues. In 2007, when the mountain of medical issues came under control, I applied for and was hired as the Executive Director. It felt like coming back home!

Since that time, lots of changes have taken place at our affiliate and I am so thrilled to have helped the affiliate grow and make those changes; reaching out to serve more and more families in our community each year.

In addition to our new home construction program, we now do partial and full gut rehabs of existing foreclosed homes in our community, selling them with a zero equivalent interest loan just like we do our newly constructed homes.  In addition we have added a Critical Home Repair Program, our Veterans Repair Corps Program, and the Brush With Kindness Program.  Each of these programs is to help homeowners stay in their homes while addressing health and safety.
Launch of our Scholarship
Program at the local
community foundation.
We also have a much more comprehensive program to prepare our home-buyer applicants for home-ownership. Preparing our applicants on the front end truly makes a difference down the road. Helping our home buyers with financial literacy has become a key part of homeowner preparation.  We launched a scholarship program for Habitat partner families this year as well, providing a small scholarship to applicants for higher education.

I get to actually participate in joy with families as they not only become homeowners, but they become much more confident in themselves and the direction they are headed. It is awesome to watch a family beat the odds and obtain the American dream of a place to call home… all their own!

Sharing an emotional moment
with a new home-buyer at
her house dedication.
There is so much more that Habitat accomplishes worldwide, but my world is right here in my community. And I came to all of this because of an AmeriCorps opportunity…how awesome is that!

Oh, one more thing I want to mention…and this is obviously in no particular order…each of my 3 children, ages 31, 29, and 25, are involved locally in the community they live. A few of the things they have done in their communities are chair the YMCA Fund Development Committee, Chair the Redistricting Committee for a city, organize Art Hops, and sit on the board of the local conservation club. It seems service may be in their genes... unintended consequences!

Receiving the 2013 Outstanding
AmeriCorps Alum Award
And to my great surprise, earlier this year I was honored as the 2013 AmeriCorps Alum of the Year, which why I'm here writing in the blog…unintended consequences of course!

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Reflections on 20 Years of AmeriCorps

This blog is a guest article by Diana Algra, executive director of the Volunteer Centers of Michigan (VCM), as she reflects on the 20th anniversary of AmeriCorps. Over the course of her career, Algra's commitment to service and volunteerism in Michigan has been longstanding and expansive, including roles such as the first Director of AmeriCorps State/ National programs at the Corporation for National and Community Service and the first executive director of the Michigan Community Service Commission. 

Service…what can one say? For me, national service has been part of my life for the past 25 years. I have been honored with the opportunity to serve at the beginning of many great service organizations…Michigan Campus Compact, the Michigan Community Service Commission and the Corporation for National Service. In each of these instances, I have had the pleasure to serve along very dedicated, smart staff and to meet and interact with great service members in the field.

The most important aspect of all this work has been the dedication and impact that our national service members have brought to communities all over this country. The dedication and hard work that you have undertaken has allowed individuals to recover from disasters, learn to read, increase their education, tend to environmental needs in our communities, increase health education, help individuals keep their homes, improve access to services, and provide basic needs like food and shelter. These assignments and projects have been so important to growing a sense of hope and improving lives in our local communities.

As we come to the 20th anniversary of AmeriCorps, we must not lose sight of what has been accomplished and we must realize that there is still much to be done. We must continue to strive to educate our neighbors and family members of the needs that exist and understand that only through the dedicated and committed work of every individual will we be able to make our cities safer, our schools better, and our nation stronger. Many great leaders have spoken about the power of service…but only you can make it happen…only you can take the next step…only you can change the world.

Thank you all for your “servant leadership” today and in the years ahead.