9th-12th Grade
Subjects:
Library / Technology and Social Studies
Key Words/Concepts click to view
| PHIL: | Caring/Sharing; Government; LEAGUE Event Lesson: The Drive; Time/Talent/Treasure; Volunteer; Volunteerism |
| SOC: | Citizenship/Civic Engagement; Civic Responsibility/Virtue; Common Good; For-Profit; Giving; Good Character; Nonprofit; Personal Virtue; Responsibility |
Focus Question(s):
How might individuals and society address the issues of poverty, homelessness and hunger, and their underlying causes?
NOTE: Prior to this lesson, use the Blue Sky Activity in which students envision a better world. If you already have a Blue Sky display, revisit it before beginning this lesson.
Purpose:
Students will explore Jane Addam’s philanthropic acts. They will identify nonprofit organizations within their communities. They will also learn how the nonprofit sector relates to the other three sectors (government, for profit or business sector, and households sector) of the American economy/society.
Duration:
One forty-five to fifty minute class period
Objectives:
The learner will:
- explore An Example of Philanthropy from History – Jane Addams.
- define the four sectors of the American economy/society.
- identify the nonprofit organizations within his/her own community.
- define the nonprofit sector as that part of the American economy/society that exists for the purpose of providing a service to the community rather than for the purpose of making a profit.
- categorize various types of volunteer efforts and formulate ways to serve the common good.
Materials:
- Attachment One: Four Sectors of the American Economy/Society
Teacher Note: Prior to class, decide if you wish to use this as a handout for students, an overhead transparency, or simply as background information for your introduction of the four sectors of the American economy for your students.
- Attachment Two: A Nation of Volunteers In Your Community Today
Teacher Note: Make a copy for each student plus an overhead transparency for later use in recording the brainstormed ideas of each group.
- A list of the organizations within the community that provide services. A list can be compiled by using information from:
1. United Way,
2. The local Chamber of Commerce,
3. The yellow pages of a phone book under the "Social Services" heading, or,
4. Prior to class, use the Web site: www.guidestar.com, go to Advanced Search and search for a list of nonprofit organizations by your community's zip codes and by keyword category. To receive even more specific information about individual nonprofits in or near your community, register with guidestar.com (free and very easy) and obtain a password to access that information. This way, your students may use your password to investigate local nonprofits online and save time and paper.
- Handout 1
- Four Sectors of the American Economy
- Handout 2
- A Nation of Volunteers - In Your Community Today
Teacher Preparation:
It is important to be sensitive to the possibility that someone in your class may have some personal experience with homelessness, hunger and poverty.
Instructional Procedure(s):
Anticipatory Set:
Write the following quotation on the board. Ask students to explain.
“Deeds make habits, habits make character, character makes destiny!”
—Notes from Jane Addams’ college journal
- Inform the class that Jane Addams, (1860-1935) was one person who exemplified the American tradition of civic responsibility and philanthropy. The daughter of a prosperous small town businessman, she traveled to Europe after her education. After attending a bloody bullfight in Spain, she decided she had something better to do with her life. She then decided to voluntarily give her time, talent, and treasure to work for the common good in the city of Chicago during a period of large scale industrialization, immigration, and urban growth. She created a Chicago community center in 1893, named Hull House, with clubs and many activities to meet the many social needs of Chicago citizens that attracted more than 2,000 Chicagoans each week. Hull House is still flourishing today as an important nonprofit organization providing vital services to thousands of Chicago area residents. Show her picture if possible using the web site below.
- Teacher Notes: For further background information on Jane Addams, check the Learning To Give briefing paper at http://www.learningtogive.org/papers/index.asp?bpid=71.
To see or print a photo and story of Jane Addams, go to http://nobelprize.org/peace/laureates/1931/addams-bio.html. Either of these could be used as a handout for students to further explore this famous woman philanthropist.
- Once students have reflected on the meaning of the opening statement(s), ask them to think about how that information might apply to volunteer work.
1. Ask students if any of them are already engaged in voluntary action for the common good in their community.
2. What are examples of the types of things students their age are doing voluntarily?
3. What volunteer activities would they like to participate in or create?
- Pick a well-known nonprofit organization within the community (Red Cross, Habitat for Humanity, etc.) and lead a brief class discussion by asking the following questions:
1. What does this organization do?
2. Why do they do it?
3. Why doesn't the government do it?
4. Do they make any money?
- Divide the class into groups of four to five students. Distribute a copy of A Nation of Volunteers—The 1990s (Attachment Two) to each group plus any other materials listed above, such as a phone book or other lists of nonprofits to assist groups with their brainstorming. Ask student groups to brainstorm existing volunteer groups in your community using the handout as a guide. You may want to appoint or have each group choose a recorder and a leader to facilitate their brainstorming.
Explain that volunteer groups are a part of the nonprofit sector of our economy and that the nonprofit sector, or independent sector as it is sometimes called, exists to provide a service for the common good of the community rather than for the purpose of making a profit. Examples like 4H, U.S. Marines’ Toys for Tots Christmas Collection (a nonprofit organization from the government sector), United Way, or Habitat for Humanity can be used to help get students thinking and creating their lists.
- Once sufficient time has passed to create extensive lists, (approximately 10-15 minutes), call on one group randomly to begin adding to the list on the board or overhead transparency, continuing to label each organization as governmental or nongovernmental. (See extensions) Allow the first group to add two or three and then proceed to the next group until each group has added to the list. Discuss students’ answers in a whole group setting and expand or clarify what various volunteer groups do.
- Ask students to determine the general purpose of volunteer groups in the nonprofit sector. (Responsible and caring citizens address social problems by displaying civic virtue and participating constructively in their communities.) Are most of the groups listed working toward community improvement? Reform? Of those purposes, which area most interests the students personally? Which group might they like to work with/for in doing a LEAGUE Drive project?
LEAGUE Learning Link(s): (click to view)
Have an idea for a Learning Link?
If your Link is accepted for publication on the Web site you will be credited with your name, school, and city.
These "LEAGUE Learning Links” provide ten quick and easy 5-minute mini-lessons to help promote The LEAGUE’s vision and scheduled events in your classroom. You can choose from among these mini-lessons and use as many of them as you would like and in whatever order best meets your needs and the interest of your students. The purpose of these mini-lessons is to provide a deeper understanding of philanthropy (the giving of ones, time, talents, and treasures for the common good) and to promote those philanthropic acts that have been identified as supporting The LEAGUE events. These mini-lessons will also help ensure a deeper understanding of character traits, civic engagement, and promote student leadership. It is recommended that students be encouraged to play as much of a role as possible and appropriate in presenting these lessons to their classmates.
- Read: When you were younger, do you recall being told that there was a way you could tell how far away a thunderstorm is by counting the seconds between the lightning and the thunder? If you slowly count 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005 it is equal to five seconds. For every five seconds you count, it is equal to one mile. So if you slowly count from 1001 to 1005 between the lightning you see and the thunder you hear, the storm is about one mile away. If you can count up to 1010 after seeing lightning and before you hear the thunder, then the storm is about 2 miles away. This is a fun fact that meteorologists agree is pretty accurate. But do you also know that in the same time it takes you to slowly count 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, one young person somewhere in the world dies from hunger or an illness caused by the lack of proper food or proper nutrition?
Discuss: Is it possible that hunger is closer to us than we might think? How might knowing this other fact motivate someone to participate in our planned Drive event? How can we use this other fact to encourage our classmates to join us in our Drive event?
www.bread.org/hungerbasics/international.html
- Read: John Bul Dau was about thirteen years old when he had to flee his Dinka tribe in the Sudan. Northern Sudanese soldiers destroyed his village and villages like it to get rid of the Christians living there. In a journey that covered more than one thousand miles, walking barefoot and unaccompanied by his family, John struggled against the dangers of enemy soldiers, hunger, disease, and wild animals. Despite his ordeal of having to chew on grass, eat mud and drink his own urine in order to stay alive, John was one of only a few “lost boys” of the Sudan to survive. Today he finds himself working toward a degree at Syracuse University majoring in Public Policy, writing a book entitled God Grew Tired of Us. He is building a medical clinic in his former Sudan, and is involved in a host of other good that has earned him such awards as the Distinguished Alumni Award at Syracuse University, Martin Luther King Jr. Award of the Year, and numerous other community involvement awards. When asked about his medical clinic, John says, “You’ve got to have someone stand at the door and point where to start, and then someone else will join. I don’t deserve the credit. The American people deserve it because without them giving me money to buy equipment and materials and medicine and paying the doctors… I cannot do it. So the credit goes to the donors… America (is) where people are so selfless.”
Discuss: Do you agree or disagree with John Bul Dau’s assessment of America being made up of selfless people? Why? Against seemingly insurmountable odds, John has not only survived, he is making it a point to forward things on to those who also stand in need. In what ways are we forwarding things on to those in need during our Drive event? How might we be able to “stand at the door and point” out to our peers where we need to start? How might what we are doing during our Drive event be seen as a selfless act?
- Read: Empty Bowls is an international fund raising project carried out at the community level to get rid of hunger both at home and abroad. The project was started by a Michigan high school teacher. During the 1990-91 school year, John Harton joined a drive to raise charitable funds in his community. His idea was to give artists and his students a way to make a personal difference. In his art classes, students made ceramic bowls. The finished products were used as serving pieces for a fund-raising meal of soup and bread and the guests could keep their empty bowl. The rest is history. The present-day Empty Bowls program features individuals or artists who create and donate the bowl(s) they have made and then serve a simple meal in them. Those who come to participate in the event choose a bowl to use and keep as a reminder of all the empty bowls in the world. In exchange for the meal and the bowl, guests are given an opportunity to donate to the Empty Bowls program. These donations are then given to local hunger eliminating organizations, such as food banks or soup kitchens or in some cases to national or international charitable groups. These organizations use the money to buy food to feed the hungry. Besides raising money for various food distributing organizations, the project also increases awareness of hunger and hunger related issues as well as advocates for art education
Discuss: Addressing the issues of hunger can take many different approaches. Our Drive event is one such approach. In what ways are we being given an opportunity to make a personal difference? How might our Drive event help to increase awareness of hunger and hunger related issues? Mr. Harton’s Empty Bowls project also was a way to advocate for art education. In addition to addressing hunger and hunger related issues might there be something that our Drive could advocate? If so, what?
- Read: Objects in the mirror are closer than they appear. This phrase is etched or painted on the passenger side mirror of most vehicles. Unlike the mirror on the driver’s side and the rearview mirror mounted on the inside of vehicles, this passenger mirror is constructed in such a way as to give a wider view. This allows the operator of the vehicle to see more of what is behind him or her than could otherwise be seen. To be able to provide this wider view, the mirror is constructed in such a way that objects in the mirror appear smaller than they normally would be. Our brains would tell us that because they are smaller they must be further away, hence the reason for the “warning”. However, unless otherwise constructed mirrors typically reflect an image in exact proportion to that image lending truth to the idiom mirrors don’t lie. We may or may not always like what we see when we look into a mirror, but mirrors tell the truth. It’s how we interpret what we see that makes the difference.
Discuss: It’s possible to approach our Drive event looking into a passenger-side mirror. That is, we can look at hunger as a small problem that is far away. Why would a warning such as the one that appears on the passenger-side mirrors of most vehicles also be an appropriate reminder for us during our Drive event? Looking at hunger through the operator’s side mirror and the rearview mirror might also give us the impression that hunger is somewhere else and not right in front of us. How might taking a “front windshield” look at hunger help us see that hunger is potentially all around us?
- Read: People who live in areas where there is a lot of snow during the winter months are well acquainted with their snow-blowers and shovels. When temperatures plummet and the snow flies, driveways, sidewalks, building entrances and entire streets require frequent shoveling or plowing and in some instances de-icing. However, many people are finding a way around the backbreaking work of shoveling and blowing snow, the expense of snow plowing, and having to spread salt to melt ice. Snow Melt systems are now being installed in many concrete driveways, sidewalks, building entrances and in some cases entire sections of streets. These systems use electricity or heated water running through pipes imbedded in the concrete to heat the concrete and melt the snow and ice. There are other types of heat being applied to streets in many cities. These projects are known as the Heat the Streets Run and Walk for Warmth. Both of these projects are annual charity events sponsored by non-profit organizations. They raise awareness and additional funds needed for low-income families who are struggling to cover their increasing utility costs, resulting in the loss of heat during the winter months. They also provide much needed warm clothing to those who otherwise would not have them.
Discuss: Our Drive event is an effort to meet human needs by providing people with things they might not otherwise have or be able to afford. What human need(s) is our Drive event addressing? What might motivate someone to be a part of our event? The word warmth refers to physical temperature as well as to good feelings and comfort. How might our participation in our Drive event provide good feelings and comfort for everyone involved?
- Read: A proverb is a simple and concrete saying popularly known and repeated. It typically expresses a truth, based on common sense and practical experience. Proverbs are often metaphorical, which means that they suggest a likeness or similarity between two or more things. Scripted in the artistry of the Chinese language, one will find many ancient proverbs. Here is one such proverb:
“A bit of fragrance clings to the hand that gives the flower”
Discuss: What truth, based on common sense or practical experience might this proverb be saying to us? How might this proverb serve as a motivational metaphor for our involvement in our Drive event?
- Read: Many years ago the story of “How the Pig Died” circulated in a small an out of the way farming community. The story is about a family of five--a mother and her four children whose ages ranged from 5-14 years of age. They were barely making a living on a small 4 acre farm during a time in our history that we know as the Great Depression. This struggling family was able to raise just enough in the way of a garden to provide them with food for the table. The one cow that occasionally provided milk shared the barn with a broken down old mare that the kids just could not see putting out to pasture. On this small farm, each of the kids had their chores and was pretty good about doing them without being told. It seems that Mr. Amamas who rented three-and-a-half acres of the farm to plant and harvest corn, paid the yearly rent this year by giving the family a piglet. The family was excited and looked forward to the day when they might eat ham and munch on fresh bacon. But it seemed that everyone just assumed that feeding the pig was someone else’s responsibility and although five able hands went about their daily chores, not one of them thought to feed the pig. Consequently, there was to be no ham or fresh bacon in this family’s future because the pig died.
Discuss: How might this story be a picture of what is happening around the world to cause the deaths of so many people due to lack of food and nutrition? How might our Drive event show that it is everyone’s responsibility to feed the world’s hungry and poor?
- Read: The Horn of Plenty or cornucopia, its Latin interpretation, is a symbol of food and abundance. A myth of ancient Greek gods and goddesses tells how a goat’s horn was given as a “thank you” to one of the goddesses for providing milk to the baby Zeus in a goat’s horn. It was believed that a goat’s horn had the power to give to the person in possession of it whatever he or she wished for. Since food in ancient times was often difficult to get, the legend of the Horn of Plenty, spilling out with food often represented the wishes of ancient peoples. The original depiction of a cornucopia was that of a goat's horn filled with fruits and flowers. Today, the cornucopia is typically depicted as a hollow, horn-shaped wicker basket filled with various kinds of festive fruits and vegetables. It has come to be associated with fall festivals and a celebration of abundance as well as an expression of appreciation and a willingness to share the harvest with those less fortunate.
Discuss: During our Drive event we will be collecting items to be given to individuals in need or organizations that will do this for us. In what ways might what we share be granting “the wish” of some people? Why do you think some people choose to share of their abundance while some do not? In what ways might our donations to our Drive event be an expression of our appreciation for our own abundance?
- Read: There are hunger strikes and then there are places where hunger strikes. So what is the difference? One type of hunger strike is a method of non-violent resistance in which participants do not eat as an act of political protest, to provoke feelings of guilt, or to achieve a goal such as a policy change. Most people involved in this type of activity will take liquids but not solid food. Hunger strikes have always been a voluntary act. Many however, are forcibly ended through the use of force-feeding because people have to eat to stay alive.
The other type of hunger strike is what happens when natural and man-made disasters and/or consequences result in food shortages, hunger, and malnutrition. When hunger strikes in these ways, it is usually far from being a voluntary act and far too often results in serious illness and even death. There are those who feel that while we see pictures on our televisions intended to evoke feelings of empathy for those struck by disaster and even in some cases, perhaps feelings of guilt at our having life so much better than the victims of these disasters, we seem to be more interested in ‘force-feeding’ those on voluntary hunger strikes than we are in feeding those who are victims of involuntary poverty and famine.
Discuss: Would you agree with this statement? Why or why not? What is our Drive event doing to voluntarily help those who are involuntarily hungry and/or needy?
- Read: Do you know the letter carriers’ credo? It is “…neither rain, nor sleet, nor snow, nor gloom of night will deter the pickup and delivery of the mail”. Do you know that the mail is not all that the U.S. Postal Service picks up and delivers? Once a year, people find a pamphlet in their mailboxes announcing the annual National Association of Letter Carriers Food Drive. This is a time when letter carriers will collect nonperishable food donations left by mailboxes and take them to the local food bank for distribution in the community. In 2006, this one day drive in the state of Oregon collected over 1.4 million pounds of food for hunger relief in local communities. Asked why the US Postal Service would take on this major project in individual communities, a spokesperson replied, “We couldn't do our work without our fabulous volunteers and without people willing to donate in this way. We’re proud of our community, but we can't say ours is a great community if it can't take care of those less fortunate."
Discuss: This is an example of how the government and individuals work together to address the issue of hunger. How might our Drive event also involve partnerships? Why, if the US Postal Service collects so much food, should we have to conduct our Drive?
www.nalc.org
Extension:
As each new organization is listed on the board, identify the organizations that are supported or funded by the government sector in some way. Example: Toys for Tots is operated by a governmental department, the Marine Corps, as a nonprofit organization. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting is another example of a nonprofit organization that exists with government funds being a major support for its work. This helps students to see that the government sector has a very important connection with the nonprofit sector and with the for profit sector of the economy/society.
Post Service Reflection: (click to view)
Reflection plays a very important role in promoting student learning. The following suggested activities are ways to help students reflect on their learning after they have participated in a service event. Choose one or more of the activities most appropriate to the service event and your students.
ACTIVITY ONE:
Have the students write down some of their thoughts and ideas about their involvement in this most recent League Event. Assign them to groups of three or four. Have each group listen to the thoughts and ideas of each of its members. Using words and phrases representative of the individuals in the group, have each group create a rap, a poem, a song, or a skit that represents the combined thoughts and ideas of the group. Conclude the class with a performance of each composition and a brief discussion of what was learned as a result of these performances. (Note: Groups that perform their composition could be “rewarded/recognized” in some way. An “Oscar” Award could be given to the group whose performance receives the most votes from their classmates, and/or other categorical awards could be given etc.)
ACTIVITY TWO:
Review this League Event with the students asking them to share their experiences: what they did, how they felt, and what impact they think they had. When everyone has had an opportunity to contribute to the discussion, share this scenario with the class: An Assistant Principal in another school district is experiencing some frustration over the lack of interest and involvement by the 9th graders in their League Events. We are being asked, as a class, having been 9th graders last year, if we would discuss what might be done to involve more 9th grade students in upcoming LEAGUE Events.
Assign students to groups of three and give them a number to represent their group. Have them complete the following work sheet:
GROUP #__________
- Names of the students in our group
- The problem as we see it.
- Some solutions we have considered.
- The solution that we think might work best and why we think so.
Collect each group’s worksheet. Read these worksheets to the class indicating only the group number. As the students listen to each group’s recommendation/suggestion, have them rank (See Below) each group’s recommendation/suggestion based on how effective their recommendation/suggestion might be in motivating more 9th graders to be involved in LEAGUE Events.
Solution Ranking
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No Way...It’s Possible ...This Will Work |
| Group 1 |
0 1 2 3 4 5
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| Group 2 |
0 1 2 3 4 5 |
| Group 3 |
0 1 2 3 4 5 |
Group 4
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0 1 2 3 4 5 |
Group 5
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0 1 2 3 4 5 |
Group 6
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0 1 2 3 4 5 |
Group 7
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0 1 2 3 4 5 |
| Group 8 |
0 1 2 3 4 5 |
Tally the results and conclude this reflection with a brief discussion as to why the recommendations/suggestions receiving the most points might be a good way to motivate 9th graders to become involved in LEAGUE Events.
ACTIVITY THREE:
Ask the students if they have ever seen the TV reality program entitled Extreme Makeover (A show that features groups of architects, designers, carpenters, decorators and painters selecting a house, usually too small or run down for the families who live in them, and completely remodeling them into wonderful places in which to live. The families who live in these homes are away so that they do not see what is going on. After a specified period of time, the work is completed and the owners return to their home to discover an almost unbelievable transformation.) For those who have seen the show, encourage them to share something about the show that impresses them. Talk about what might be the motivations of the people who work on these houses. Discuss why companies might be willing to donate thousands of dollars of free equipment and building materials. Consider how someone might react returning to their “new” home and why. Discuss any similarities and differences between this TV show and what they were thinking, feeling and doing during this League Event. Talk about the motivations they felt as they became involved; how they donated “dollars” (time equals money); and how they might feel if they were the recipients/benefactors of this League Event activity. Discuss how this Event could become the next “reality show.”
ACTIVITY FOUR:
Have students think about who, in their lives, has made the biggest impression on them so far. Have them consider why they think this is so. Encourage students to expand their thinking to consider whether this big impression was because of a one-time action or something that occurred over time and/or possibly is still occurring in their lives. Challenge them to consider whether this “big impression” had more to do with time, talent, or treasure or a combination of these. Ask them if this “big impression” came about as a result of something someone had done/is doing for them or did it have more to do with who that person is (personality and traits), or possibly a combination of both. Open the discussion by asking the students to share some of the things they did during this League Event. Have them consider the possibility that they too may have made a “big impression”.
Conclude this reflection by giving students an option to:
- Write a letter to the person identified as the one who has made the biggest impression in their lives to date, thanking them for what they did/are doing for them. (Note: Students may not feel comfortable sharing names, so names need not be included.) Encourage students to consider the impact of their letter if they were to send them and challenge them to do so.
- Write a description of this League Event and describe any ‘lasting impressions’ that it had on them as participants.
Handouts:
Four Sectors of the American Economy
The four sectors in the American economy are Government, For-Profit or Business, the Nonprofit or Independent, and Households or Family. While we often think of these as separate entities, they are often inter-dependent. Following is a brief description of each of the four sectors in American Society.
The Government Sector:
The Government sector of American Society exists primarily for the purpose of providing structure to a society. This sector is responsible for making and enforcing the laws under which we live. Government is an integral part of our overall economy as well. Government regulates and serves as a watchdog over our environment. It makes the laws that everyone must follow. Economically, government can provide *public goods, regulate production of goods, use its power through taxes, fees, fines, etc., and influence pressure groups. Nonprofit, for-profit, and family groups often influence government as well.
The For-Profit or Business Sector:
The For-Profit or Business sector in our society has a distinct focus on making a profit. It is the primary function of this sector. Business provides private goods and services. It is market-oriented and relies on voluntary payment of the customer. This sector is efficient at meeting the demands of the consumer and emphasizes customer satisfaction. Business will not attempt any activity that it fears will be unprofitable.
The Nonprofit Sector: also known as the Independent Sector
The Nonprofit sector can provide public goods as well as private goods. The nonprofit sector focuses on client satisfaction, trust, and service for the common good. Nonprofit organizations are not really interested in making a profit, but in merely breaking even in their endeavors. If extra funds are generated, they are typically reinvested in the mission and work of the organization and not returned as personal profit for an individual in the nonprofit.
The Family or Household Sector:
The Family or Household sector is primarily concerned with the well-being of the members of the household. Families take part in activities that benefit others as well as benefit themselves. This is the smallest of the four sectors but collectively, the most influential. It is the family sector that drives the business sector, pressures the governmental sector, and influences the nonprofit sector. Families/households are both for-profit and nonprofit. They are for-profit in an effort to support themselves and to "get ahead." They are nonprofit when they participate in activities that promote the welfare of the family and community.
*Note: Public goods are those goods which consumers cannot be prevented from using nor does one person's use reduce the amount available for use by others.
A Nation of Volunteers - In Your Community Today
Directions: Using the following categories, see how many volunteer groups you can list.
Examples: Agriculture and Food: 4-H, The Military U.S. Marines’ Toys for Tots
Categories of Volunteer Groups
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Examples
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Labor and Employment
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Agriculture and Food
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Business and Industry
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Communications
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Transportation
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Human Services
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Health Care
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Education
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Religion
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Recreation and Leisure
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Cultural Arts
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Environmental Quality
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Justice
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Public Safety
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The Military
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International Involvement
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Political and Social Action
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* Categories of volunteer groups: (Ellis and Noyes, By the People, p. 315-338)