Growing Your Astronomy Club |
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Main Cultivating Volunteers Tips | < previous page | next page > |
1. Consider Term Limits to prevent burnout and ossification
People are the heart of your club, and without a variety of volunteers -- and new blood -- to help run the club, it can stagnant. In addition, if the same people keep the same jobs for a very long time, the rest of the club members might feel excluded or marginalized -- with no opportunity to contribute their ideas and services to the club.
Consider instituting “term limits” for these reasons:
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To keep fresh ideas flowing into the club.
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To make members feel the club is inclusive and welcome to new people (and your club doesn’t run the risk of not being able to remove a less-than-effective volunteer).
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To give a potential volunteer assurance that they are not going to be “stuck” in the job longer than the term.
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It supports a club culture where members know they are expected to take a turn serving the club.
Afraid that imposing term limits will leave you with a lot of vacant positions that are difficult to fill? Implement Effective Recruiting Strategies!
Main Cultivating Volunteers Tips | < previous page | next page > |
Sharing the Universe videos are produced by the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP) from research conducted by the Institute for Learning Innovation, the ASP, and from astronomy clubs like yours. www.astrosociety.org/SharingTheUniverse
The Sharing the Universe project is funded by the National Science Foundation and is supported by the Division of Research on Learning in Formal and Informal Settings (DRL) of the National Science Foundation under Grant Number DRL 0638873. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in the material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
Video production by Flying Moose Pictures