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407 Volunteer Burnout. Ninth District PTA Summer Leadership Conference June 4, 2011 Jennifer Zaheer Ninth District PTA VP of Education & Parent Involvement jen.zaheer@gmail.com. Definition of “Burnout”. From wikipedia:
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407 Volunteer Burnout Ninth District PTA Summer Leadership Conference June 4, 2011 Jennifer Zaheer Ninth District PTA VP of Education & Parent Involvement jen.zaheer@gmail.com
Definition of “Burnout” From wikipedia: “Burnout is a psychological term for the experience of long-term exhaustion and diminished interest.” PTA relies on volunteers for its programs, and more and more of us have to perform with less resources. Burn Out is a real danger for PTAs across the board.
Recognition of Volunteer Burnout The Four Stages of Burnout According to Mark Gorkin (AKA "The Stress Doc"), there are four stages of burnout: • Physical, mental and emotional exhaustion • Shame and doubt • Cynicism and callousness • Failure, helplessness and crisis
Recognition of Volunteer Burnout (source: Volunteer Today) • complaints that it's no longer fun to work there • a rise in the amount of worry expressed by a volunteer • chronic crankiness, combativeness with others and overreaction to minor problems • a volunteer's work performance slipping (e.g. not completing assignments, is missing deadlines or just isn't showing up or is unreachable)
Develop a plan of work. Decide how to distribute the work. Secure support and resources. Get the word out. Deliver the program. Evaluate the program and follow up. Burnout Prevention: Successful Programs • Identify needs and priorities. • Establish goals for your program. • Define the scope of your program. • Determine how to deliver the program. • Create a budget for your program.
Burnout Prevention: Elements of a Successful Team • Goals are set by the group and agreed to by the group • Group practices active listening • People are allowed to do their jobs • Expectations are clear • Training and resources are provided • Effective, two-way communication is practiced • Group has a culture of respect
Burnout Prevention: Why is a team important? The sum is always greater than the parts! Strengths and weaknesses balance out! Together Everyone Achieves More
Symptoms of Poor Teamwork • Guarded communication • A lack of disagreements • Unwilling to share information • Ineffective team meetings • Unrealistic goals • Unhealthy competition • Little faith in others
Recognize! • Time: Stay organized—volunteer time is valuable. • Appreciation: Say THANK YOU, often! • Privacy: Volunteers have lives outside of their service—keep that in mind at all times. • Rest & Relaxation: Everyone deserves time off from work—make sure you and all volunteers get some. • Honesty: Be upfront about expectations, time commitments and goals
Tips for Finding Solutions • Assess the problem and find the solution that works best for the person AND the situation • Use your resources—use your training, Toolkit, capta.org and pta.org, council and district officers • Evaluate your goals and keep those programs that service them, eliminate or change those that don't • Resolve problem issues and conflicts quickly—do not be a source of gossip, keep all confidential • Use Professional Governance Standards and Volunteer Moral Code to guide you
Tips for Finding Solutions • Think “outside the box” and avoid ineffective ruts • Be accessible and open to new ways of doing things • It's ok to “plaque & release” • Find new volunteers while appreciating the “usual suspects” • Delegate! • Consider a PTA Retreat to plan ahead and refresh the mind and spirit • Increase your membership so that your volunteer base is always expanding and ever-inclusive
All volunteers are valuable: Keep in mind we all work for the children! Volunteers Are Our #1 Asset!