Serving Others: An Introduction

When you read biographies of great leaders, many of them talk about how they were shaped by experiences of serving others with their families. No matter the age of your child, volunteering as a family is a great way to spend quality time together while also shaping your child’s character.

Did You Know?

  • Young people who say their parents “spend lots of time helping others” are almost twice as likely to engage in service themselves.
  • Search Institute researchers have found that when kids serve others, their Developmental Assets are built. They also found that when you build kids’ Developmental Assets, they’re more likely to serve others.1
  • An Independent Sector study found that 67 percent of adults who remembered that their family volunteered when they were young said they now volunteer as adults. In contrast, only 42 percent of adults who did not remember volunteering with their family when they were young volunteer now.2

Serving others doesn’t have to take a lot of time. There are hundreds of ways to volunteer together as a family, ranging from quick projects at home to taking family volunteer vacations, making it easy to find one that fits your family’s needs.

Frequent Questions and Concerns about Serving Others

Find answers to frequent questions and concerns about serving others and family volunteering.

Finding Issues That Matter to You

You’re more likely to volunteer and keep volunteering if you find issues and projects that matter to you. For example, one family with teenagers was interested in technology.

Getting Started with Simple, Short Projects

Nothing will kill your family’s enthusiasm faster than becoming involved in a project that drains your energy and time.

Making Volunteer Time Meaningful

Once you find a project you’re interested in and you get started, what happens next?

Reflect and Learn from Your Experience

Your family will get even more out of a volunteer project if you take the time to debrief your experience. Take time to talk about your family volunteer experiences.

Serving Others: Summary and Next Steps

Find valuable resources to help your family get involved in service to others.

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1. Developmental Assets: A Profile of Your Youth (Minneapolis, MN: Search Institute, 2005), 2003 weighted aggregate dataset, unpublished report.

2. Independent Sector, Engaging Youth in Lifelong Service (Washington, DC: Independent Sector, 2002).

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