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Are You Ready for Partners?. Presented by Margaret Landsparger June 21 and 22, 2005. Volunteers as front line support. Are you paying students to maintain your labs, fill paper trays, answer basic user questions? Why not use volunteers to do those tasks?. Outline. About Michigan Tech
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Are You Ready for Partners? Presented by Margaret Landsparger June 21 and 22, 2005
Volunteers as front line support Are you paying students to maintain your labs, fill paper trays, answer basic user questions? Why not use volunteers to do those tasks?
Outline • About Michigan Tech • About our Partners • Definition of the program • Program mission statement • Three roles the Partners fill • Partner responsibilities • Typical semester within the program
Outline continued • Why ten weeks of training? • Benefits to the volunteers • Benefits to the department and university • What does the program cost? • How self sufficient are they? • Recruiting and retention • Pitfalls to avoid • Helpful resources
About our Universitywww.mtu.edu • Michigan Tech • Located in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan • 6500 students in five colleges • Known for its high male to female ratio; currently 4:1 • Volunteer program currently has a ratio of 4:1
West Engineering Computer Support • Volunteers as help desk support • Paid student employees • CAEL Coordinator • User Support Staff • Windows Application Specialist • PC System Administrator • Unix System Administrator • Director
About our Partners • The volunteers are called Partners. • They maintain computers in eight different labs across two departments. • Currently working with PCs, Sun Blades, Sun Rays and Printers. • Maintain friendly environment with fish tanks and plants.
Definition of the Partner Program • The Partner program was created in 1991. • Made up of volunteers from all grade levels and currently nine different academic areas. • Volunteers are either Senior Partners, Partners, or Partners in Training (PITs). • Partners work 3+ hours a week.
Definition continued • Volunteers must be able to show they can apply this knowledge through hands on exam. • Must attend minimum number of meetings and any training required. • The Partner group formed a registered student organization on campus.
Program mission statement • The mission of the Partner program is to provide general users with a clean, working computer environment while allowing Partners to learn and grow through volunteering, assisting the users and training sessions. Partners better themselves by gaining not only technical skills, but also leadership and communication skills, discipline, responsibility, and respect from their peers, faculty and staff, and future employers.
Three roles of the Partners • Partners In Training (PITs) • Partners • Senior Partners
Partner responsibilities • Answer user questions to the best of their abilities. • Pro-actively identify and resolve problems that might prevent users from working in the labs. • Assist staff with various computer and networking issues. • Train new recruits called PITs.
Partner responsibilities continued • Ensure that lab policies are followed by all users. • Perform any assigned duties for the shift being worked. • Fill paper trays and perform printer maintenance. • Clean and straighten labs. • Responsible for equipment check out.
Typical semester • First of the term meeting. • Relay information • Sign up for hours • Look for suggestions • Eat and give out door prizes • General business • Ten week training course for PITs
Typical semester continued • Fall/Spring picnic • Various social events • Recruit for next semester • Actually done all year long • Food booth at Spring, Winter and Fall festivals to recruit and raise money • Practical at end of semester.
10 week training program • Introduction to our labs and policies • Hardware and software • Known problems and fixes • Support structure • One-on-one mentoring with senior partner
Benefits for the volunteers • 24 hour access to buildings • Book scholarship of $250 / semester awarded to one Partner • Early registration for classes • Extra home directory space
Benefits for the volunteers • Chance to learn from peers • Appreciation dinners and social events • Eligible for permanent account, including home directory space and email account • Certificate acknowledging time • Extra job recruitment opportunities from various companies
It’s not just the perks The knowledge that I learned from the program was applicable to so many more things than just the partner program, from my PC to all of my classes. - Caitlin T.
Benefits to department • 50 self-trained volunteers completing over 140 hours per week of front line support, troubleshooting, and hardware maintenance. • Partners hold general training sessions for all users on software packages and platform basics.
Other benefits to the department • Even working with 2-6 year old computers and 5-15 year old furniture, we had the labs the Partners maintain voted the best computer labs on campus in 2004. Great marketing point for department.
Benefits to the University • Some of our student volunteers tend to be über geeks. These geeks have saved the university a few times. • Found hole within university wide password system. • Found access hole to backup data.
For the same program, using paid student help: 140 hours X $6.50/hour = $910 X 30 weeks = $27,300 20 paid students attending 2 meetings = $260 10 hours of a FTE with 40% benefits on a base salary of $35,000/year = $7070 for the same 30 weeks. Office supplies = $100/year Total = $34,730 What would it cost?
What it costs us For our program, using volunteer student help: 140 hours X $0.00/hour = $0 X 30 weeks = $0 20 hours of a part time fixed term employee with no benefits on a base salary of $13.00/hour = $11,000 for 44 weeks. Book Scholarship = $500/year Food for meetings - $400/year Office supplies = $100/year Total = $12,000
Savings over paid students Cost using paid students $34,730 Cost using volunteers $12,000 Total savings of about $22,000
How self sufficient are they? • Partners recruit new volunteers from peers, classmates and friends. • Partially self-funded, receiving money from student government for being a student organization, funding from alumni, and selling food at festivals. • Self-monitored to some extent. • Senior Partners do most of the training.
Recruitment and retention • Recruit from all majors and all class levels. • Ask volunteers what perks they would like. • Target freshmen for most longevity. • Ensure that all volunteers are there for the right reasons. • Provide an organization to be proud of.
Pitfalls to avoid • Not everyone makes a good volunteer. • Perks must make the effort worth the time. • Remember that you are competing with other volunteer programs in your area. • Keep lines of communication open, they are the front line, they need to be in the know.
In summary • Volunteers can be cost effective. • Provide a strong peer environment. • Put a recognizable face in the labs.
Helpful Resources • Ellis, S.J. (1999) The volunteer recruitment (and Membership development) book. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Little, H. (1999) Volunteers, How to get them, How to keep them. Naperville, Illinois • Vineyard, S. (1989) Beyond banquets, plaques and pins, Creative ways to recognize volunteers. Downers Grove, Illinois • Vineyard, S. (1991) Secrets of motivation, How to get and keep volunteers and paid staff! Downers Grove, Illinois
Contact Information • Margaret Landsparger • margaret@mtu.edu (960) 487-2270 • Michigan Technological University • www.mtu.edu • Mechanical Engineering • www.me.mtu.edu • Chemical Engineering • www.chem.mtu.edu • Partner program web pages • www.me.mtu.edu/cael/