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District guidelines for community service require the student to
identify a social problem, develop a plan for personal involvement in
addressing the problem, submit an evaluation of the experience, and
verify the completion of service hours.
Community Service Hours Log
FOR BRIGHT
FUTURES COMMUNITY SERVICE--WHAT COUNTS, WHAT DOESN’T
1. Service may be volunteered to the school and/or the community.
2. Students must perform volunteer services on their own time, which can
include the participant's lunch break.
3. Participation in performances and festivals counts if the following
apply:
a. Volunteer service meets an identified community service need, and
b. There is no admission charge accepted for the performance, and
c. Student participation is of voluntary nature, and
d. The performance does not promote the sponsoring organization, and
e. Neither the student organization nor the sponsoring organization
receives payment for the performance.
If participation meets the above criteria, then partial rehearsal time
may be counted. Performing hours may be matched with the same number of
rehearsal hours. For example, a chorus member performs 1 hour at a
nursing home and is given 2 hours of credit (1 hour for the performance
and 1 hour for rehearsal).
f. Band performances in community parades such as 4th of July, Veterans
Day, Martin Luther King Day, will count; homecoming parades do not
count.
4. Students may not be paid for service rendered.
5. Volunteer service involving academic requirements for a class will
not count.
6. Service rendered, as a prerequisite for employment will not count.
7. Attendance at self-improvement workshops, conferences, or
competitions will not count as service.
8. Fundraising for non-profit organizations or charities will count.
9. Service may not be performed for a student's family or for a
profit-making organization, except for institutions like hospitals,
nursing homes, or the humane society.
10. Service performed as a result of disciplinary action taken by the
school or courts cannot count.
11. Volunteer work for the purpose of promoting a particular religious
or political point of view or person cannot count as volunteer hours in
this program. For example, if your church youth group helps with the
Special Olympics, those hours would count, but not time spent
distributing flyers advertising a church revival.
12. Participation in Varsity or Junior Varsity Athletics and regularly
scheduled band and chorus performances does not constitute volunteer
service under this program.
13. The above criteria will not cover all circumstances. If a question
exists regarding the acceptance of an activity for volunteer service,
the student's counselor should approve the service prior to the
student’s participation. A good guideline would be to ask how the
activity addresses the social problem that the student has identified to
work on as a part of his/her community service plan.
14.
Some common activities, which do not count, include: acolyte, altar
server, lay reader, vacation Bible School, babysitting, working in
church nursery, church choir and clerical work for religious, political,
or profit making organizations.
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