UC San Diego Extension has created first-of-its-kind, self-paced online courses to help travelers determine if foreign volunteering is right for them and prepare them to have a productive, safe experience. Information is available at the UC San Diego Extension's Center for Global Volunteer Service™ website.
One online course that provides an overview of key issues related to both international and domestic volunteer vacations is "What kind of volunteer service is best for you?" Taking this course can help a traveler determine what type of service is most appropriate. Topics covered include: self assessment, exploring volunteer opportunities, analyzing useful skills, understanding financial commitments and rules of volunteer organizations.
The top ten international desired destinations for volunteer opportunities are:
1. Africa, 17 percent
2. East Asia, 12 percent
3. South America, 9 percent
4. (Tie) Mexico, 8 percent
4. (Tie) Western Europe, 8 percent
6. Eastern Europe, 7 percent
7. Central America, 6 percent
8. Pacific islands, 5 percent
9. Australia, 4 percent
10.Middle East, 3 percent
How old you are also determines how much time people are interested in volunteer opportunities and volunteering on vacation. One week would be the right amount of time for 29 percent of Generation Xers and 23 percent of Baby Boomers. On the other hand, about 45 percent of Retiree Generation and Generation Y would like to help out for many weeks or an entire summer.
The research indicates that international volunteers want to connect with other people, not to organizations or governments in giving service. More than 84 percent stated that helping school children, families and people in poverty were their top interest.
To gain deeper insight into the initial survey of 1,000 adults, UC San Diego conducted an online survey of 433 adults ranging in age from teens to retirees.
About 45 percent of Americans have considered volunteer vacations for themselves and 72 percent said they know someone who has been a global volunteer.
Benson helped start the Center for Global Volunteer Service because UC San Diego Extension saw a need for more collaborative grass-root approaches that match U.S. citizens of all ages with volunteer opportunities. Benson has firsthand experience with global voluntourism. In the late 1990s, he spent two years in the Peace Corps building greenhouse gardens next to village schools in the Andes of Bolivia.
UC San Diego is one of the nation's most accomplished research universities, widely acknowledged for its local impact, national influence and global reach.
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