AmeriCorps*NCCC Members Earn Certification through American Humanics

AmeriCorps’s conservation corps partners with American Humanics to offer corps members certification in nonprofit competency.

Also note that AmeriCorps*NCCC has new deadlines: April 1 (summer class) and July 1 (winter class).

Recognizing that a term of service is a valuable education, American Humanics (AH) offers ncccAmeriCorps*NCCC corps members the opportunity to count service hours towards AH nonprofit certification.

A national organization that offers educational opportunities on nonprofit management topics to undergraduates throughout the United States, AH has been “preparing tomorrow’s nonprofit leaders” since 1948. Around 3,000 students across the country are engaged in AH programs at 70 colleges and universities. Many of these students are working towards AH certification.

(Note that neither AH nor any other nonprofit management certification is required to get a program-management job in the nonprofit sector. Some public service roles do require certification. Read more about professional certification — and how to assess the value employers place on it — on Idealist.org’s Public Service Graduate Education Resource Center.)

The requirements of typical AH certification include 300 hours of approved internship service, general engagement in nonprofit leadership activities, academic coursework, a Bachelor’s degree, and completion of one AH Management Institute (the organization’s annual conference). What this means for NCCC corps members and alumni:

  • AmeriCorps*NCCC members serve for 1700 hours which more than achieves the internship and nonprofit leadership objectives of certification.
  • NCCC’s extensive training throughout the 10-month term of service counts for most of the academic course work requirements.
  • NCCC alumni must attend one AH Management Institute to complete some of the course requirements.
  • For the remaining course requirements, NCCC alumni can take courses at AH partner schools. Louisiana State University’s Shreveport campus allows NCCC members and recent alumni to take the needed courses  online—paying in-state tuition. (The Eli Segal AmeriCorps Education Award can apply to the costs of these courses.) LSU Shreveport also waives the GRE requirement for NCCC alumni taking these courses.
  • If NCCC corps members haven’t finished their Bachelor’s degree yet, AH gives them seven years to complete it in order to be eligible for certification.

AmeriCorps*NCCC is the branch of AmeriCorps that is a conservation corps, modeled after the New Deal-era Civilian Conservation Corps. NCCC stands for National Civilian Conservation Corps and is pronounced “N-triple-C.” The program is team-based and residential, for people aged 18-24. Teams travel to a variety of work sites throughout the 10-month term of service, exposing the young people to a variety of new service experiences. NCCC has been instrumental in rebuilding New Orleans and Mississippi in the wake of Hurrican Katrina in 2005. Each team is based out of one of the following campuses: Denver, CO; Sacramento, CA; Perry Point, MD; and Vinton, IA

AmeriCorps*NCCC is accepting applications through April 1, 2009, for its summer-start class, and July 1, 2009, for its winter-start class.

Learn more by listening to the Idealist.org podcast with Katrina Mathis on AmeriCorps*NCCC.

AH also has its own AmeriCorps program called AmeriCorps*ProCorps. ProCorps members serve from 450-1700 hours and earn the Eli Segal AmeriCorps Education Award (up To $4,725 for the full 1700-hour term).

New Service Nation Website Launched

Today Service Nation relaunches its website.

Change/Wire blogger Kate Doyle explains the updates:

The biggest change you’ll notice – in both design and content – is our Action Bar, which has the four biggest steps you can take to advance service. What are they?
First: Declare your support for changing our country for the better by signing the Declaration of Service.

Second: Get others involved! Tell your family and friends.

Third: Learn more about how to volunteer in your community by exploring service opportunities.

Fourth: Share your service story and inspire others, and get inspired by reading others!

The homepage’s revolving images and updates will keep you in-the-know with announcements and links to more information about the initiative’s progress in Congress.

Changes at change.gov

The America Serves section of the presidential transition Change.gov website contains some new information.

There are short descriptions of Classroom Corps, Health Corps, and Clean Energy Corps. These programs are pretty much as you would expect. My big question had to do with Veterans Corps, as I wasn’t sure if this program would be made up of veterans or provide services to veterans. From the website, it appears to be the latter.

Another big development: According to the website, “…college students who engage in 100 hours of community service [are] to receive a fully-refundable tax credit of $4,000 for their education.” That’s pretty cool. One-hundred hours is easy enough for most students to be able to accomplish that goal, and $4,000 is enough to buy a good chunk of school (more than half of a full year’s tuition at most state schools).

I’m looking forward to hearing more!

Update 12/10: Change.gov is now Open for Questions! Vote on issues most pressing for you and your family; submit questions of your own.

Help a Reporter Out – Questions for Corps Member or Alum

Peter Shankman’s Help a Reporter Out service put out this notice from NYU Livewire student writer Kimberly Anglin at New York University:

To whom it may concern:

Are you a Gen Xer or Yer? Have you ever joined/taken part in any sort of post-graduate volunteer program (Teach for America, Peace Corps, etc)? If so, please share your experiences? Which program? For how long? What were your reasons for joining? If you are a recent graduate, has the troubled economy/job market given you incentive to spend your time volunteering?

FOR ALL: Has your time spent volunteering prompted you to change/rethink your career? If so, how? If you’re a member of another generation, I’d appreciate your input as well.

Also: Please disclose the following information:
Full Name:
Age:
Occupation:
City/State:

Please get in touch with her via email: kpa209 [at] nyu.edu

Do volunteers make a difference in kids’ lives?

The impact of service on the person who serves may be immediate, but a volunteer might never see the impact he had on the community. I found a story in the NY Daily News about a VISTA from the late 60s named Michael Gaines who has returned to the site where he served to see if he can learn anything about the lives of the children he served. The story has no closure yet, but I will keep my eyes peeled for developments.