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| Responses to: Is Volunteer Management Really a Profession? Posted on 25 November 2007 by Steve Moreton,
Attend,
Education & Development, Manager,
London England Here are some other common functions of professional bodies:
Submitted anonymously on 29Jan2004 from New York Submitted by Diane Lieper, Leipper Management Group at TechComm Labs
These premises are based on the data I have and personal knowledge over the last 20 years. Here are some of the data I have that illustrates the above points. ASDVS has done a survey recently that is a new version of one they did in 1993 that I believe, also provides some great insights into this issue. The education level of volunteer managers includes everything from
high Submitted by Bruce Glasrud, The Volunteer Center, St. Paul, Minnesota All the education and certification in the world will not buy you a cup of cold coffee unless considerable effort is made to educate agency executives and boards as to the value of what you do. I know, I see very well educated volunteer directors come and go on a much more regular basis than most. The only person in the field who regularly stands up and sticks her neck out IN PUBLIC to tell agencies they are real bad actors in their lack of understanding and support of volunteer management is Susan Ellis! I will not hold my breath for AVA or the state and local associations to truly stand up and stand out to join her. Too confrontive . . . and we don't want to appear pushy do we. "I know, maybe if I go to that conference - then I'll get some clout, from somebody, somehow. . . ." Response from Sue Ritz, Director of Volunteer Services, Boone
County Senior Services, Inc. Often times money is a critical issue for individuals as well as agencies. Most volunteer management people are not compensated to the same degree financially as members of other professions - doctors, lawyers, teachers, etc. I would like to attend more conferences, trainings, etc., but money is very tight with any non profit. Would I leave my job for a promotion? NO WAY! I love what I do and with whom I am working. Isn't that what having a JOB/PROFESSION is all about anyway? Response from Diane Leipper, Leipper
Management Group, USA To me the whole "profession" issue is a chicken and egg situation. Like you say "clout is won, not bestowed." On the one hand, volunteer management is not seen as a profession deserving of equitable salary and respect which attracts and keeps people with specific education and experience. On the other "we" haven't really done anything to develop a profession which advocates for defined standards, adheres to the principals you outlined, or which holds it's practitioners accountable for meeting those standards. There have been some good moves in the direction of professionalizing volunteer management. Efforts such as the AVA Journal, Code of Ethics, and Certification, and a variety of college level programs (many, as you say, that have not been able to continue), but unless these types of efforts can be developed, advocated for, and validated by not only volunteer managers but also by those outside the profession where does that leave us? How many people outside volunteer mangers know what CVA stands for? How many volunteer managers outside AVA know what it means? How many people who have applied for a job as a volunteer manager have been asked if they have earned CVA certification? How often are people asked if they had specific education in volunteer management and not just related fields? Does having certification or specific education make any difference in salary or other job related issues? What do the associations for volunteer managers do to advocate for the professionalism of the field to the world at large? What do they do to enhance "collective action" of ALL volunteer managers? What have we done to encourage and support volunteer management associations efforts at professionalizing the field? Response from Sarah H. Elliston, Professional Development
Associate, United Way Volunteer Resource Center, USA You suggest that there are few academic credit classes in Vol Mgmt and I know that in Ohio there are at least three: one in Akron, taught by Maureen Watkins, another with Ohio State taught by Mary Merrill and then we teach a series of classes here in Cincinnati through The Union Institute (often known as the University without Walls) which can be taken for academic or CEU credit . I will agree that many organizations don't value the position of coordinator and that many folks do move on but I am an example of someone who started as a coordinator of volunteers (13 years) and a trainer in the field and I am now coordinating two programs that are staffed by volunteers (Paradigm Consulting and BoardWALK training) as well as continuing the training we do for coordinators of volunteers locally. I am in the process of mailing my application for CVA and I must admit that the process of introspection that it requires definitely made me wonder if I am a member of a profession or not and do I want it to be or not. My conclusion is that I am and I do. While the CVA process is tiring and difficult (we had 12 people start the process and only 2 of us are still here a year later), it has forced me to examine what I value about volunteering and what I believe about volunteer administration. This is certainly the criteria of a professional. Response from Terry Dunn, Volunteer
Training Coordinator, statewide Fla. HIV/AIDS Hotline, USA I think the field will continue to grow and evolve. I have noticed that we have new organizations joining our local Association at a rapid pace as both the public and private sector discover what non-profits have known for quite a while: the value of volunteers. Response from Keith Seel, M4i Information Industries
Inc., Alberta, Canada In Calgary, as a now past-president of our professional association for managers of volunteers, ADVR, I have advocated for a close alliance and partnership between the Human Resources professionals and Volunteer Resources professionals. In effect, we both work with the "human" resources of a nonprofit organization. Curiously, but not surprisingly, both the sets of professionals face the same problem - effectively recruiting, placing, supervising, evaluating people is too general a skill set to be appreciated by the outside world as "a body of knowledge." For example, if we were to take lawyers, doctors, accountants and ask each what their body of knowledge was, we would probably get back binders of legislation that governs their actions. What would a volunteer manager give us? As the author of the AVA Statement of Professional Ethics, I find Susan's question at the core of everything people in the field of volunteer administration do. If we do not see ourselves as professionals, and know WHY and WHAT makes us professionals, we are NOT professionals.
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