Get to know your community

 

Get to know your community through volunteering

Whether you're a long-term resident in your area or newly arrived, volunteering is a great way to meet new people, while giving to the community. Across Queensland, not-for-profit organisations desperately need your skills - helping at events, working at head office, co-ordinating evacuees during an emergency, caring for the homeless, teaching children to read, or helping visitors get around town.

In Queensland, many opportunities exist to help others during and after natural disasters. However, to contribute fully you must be properly trained, so that you have the necessary skills to contribute fully as soon as needed. So don't delay - the need for volunteers to help after extreme weather events remains high, even though summer has passed. You'll enjoy a sense of accomplishment and feel fulfilled and proud that you made a difference to someone in difficulty.

Volunteering - either through individual or group action - is a way in which: human values of community, caring, and serving can be sustained and strengthened; individuals can exercise their rights and responsibilities as members of communities, while learning and growing throughout their lives, realising their full human potential so that we can live together in healthy, sustainable communities, working together to provide innovative solutions to our shared challenges.

Volunteering is a great way to get involved within your community, whether it's throughout the State, in your town, or at your local school. Before you get started, you might want to investigate the different types of volunteering that might interest you. To help you, Volunteering Queensland has identified five categories that define how volunteers get involved with their communities.

  • Formal volunteering means that you have an ongoing and defined role
  • Project volunteering means helping a non-profit organisation achieve a specific outcome for a project within a clear time-frame or until desired results are achieved
  • Governance volunteering means having a role on a board or management committee, which usually require strategic thinking and business skills
  • Non-formal volunteering means coming together around a shared interest such as self-help groups or craft groups
  • Social action volunteering means coming together around a shared interest with a desire to bring about defined changes, such as environmental group, political lobby group, or community action group

People's reasons for volunteering vary, but most people volunteer because they want to contribute their skills and experience, or meet new people, or help out a friend who needs more people where he or she volunteers.