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Web Opens World to Digital Volunteers
Online charity work fits your schedule and extends your
reach, say wired nonprofits.
Michelle
Madigan, special to PCWorld.com
Friday, December 27, 2002
If volunteering
is on your list of New Year's resolutions but your time is
short, cyberservice may be the answer. Just ask Laurie Moy,
who now runs an international nonprofit organization. Her
service started with an interest in international issues and
an Internet connection.
Moy, now
the executive director of Pearls of Africa, an organization
that serves people with disabilities in Uganda, became an
online volunteer three years ago. The Internet makes volunteering
easier than ever: You don't have to move across the globe
to make a difference, Moy says.
Fit
Your Schedule
She discovered the opportunity through NetAid.org,
which connects people with organizations focused on fighting
poverty. The site lists volunteer jobs that can be done
from your own PC and often on your own time.
"People
are engaging in communities internationally" through
the Internet, says Bea Bezmalinovic, head of NetAid.org's
online volunteering program. "Ten years ago this would
not have been possible."
Bezmalinovic
says that while the time people have to volunteer is declining,
virtual volunteering offers a way for people to adapt volunteering
to their schedules. As access to the Internet expands, more
people are signing up.
Pearls
of Africa is run entirely by online volunteers who research
and develop programs, solicit donations, and run a children's
resource library in Uganda geared toward disabilities. Moy
traveled to Uganda in November 2001 with the United Nations
to open the library.
"I
never dreamed it would have taken me this far," Moy says.
"I log on and I have e-mail from all corners of the globe
and we are working on one path together."
Virtual
Volunteers
World Computer
Exchange, based in Massachusetts, relies on virtual volunteers
in its mission to bring computers to schools in Asia, Africa,
and Latin America. Since it was founded in October 1999, the
organization has helped 676 schools and almost 256,000 students
go online, says Tim Anderson, president and founder.
"The
schools we're connecting to the Internet would not be able
to bridge the digital divide for ten years," Anderson
says.
His 100
volunteers, whom he recruits through NetAid, help gather and
test computers to ship them to the schools. Volunteers in
the various countries also offer technical support.
Virtual
volunteering is growing within the United States. VolunteerMatch
, which links volunteers with more than 23,000 organizations
offering about 40,000 volunteer opportunities, is helping
that cause, says Jason Willett, director of communications.
Since 1998, nearly one million people signed up for an opportunity
through VolunteerMatch.
Online
Mentors
One of these groups is NetMentors
, which offers online career development for teenagers. It
serves as a virtual career counselor with expertise on 70
different careers. With about 800 mentors, the group has counseled
1000 students entirely through its Web site.
"We
encourage people to do traditional mentoring, but if that
is not an option, we offer another way," says James Green,
executive director. "This way has time and geographic
advantages." Using technology, NetMentors is a vehicle
for students to get in contact with individuals they wouldn't
normally have access to.
Amye Love,
an elementary schoolteacher and a NetMentor volunteer for
the past three years, can participate from anywhere at anytime.
In less than one hour each week, she helps several students
make career choices by answering questions on what it takes
to be an educator.
"Kids
today rely so much on their computers," Love says. "It's
an interesting technique that will take off."
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