|
Volunteering |
|
|
|
Friday, 21 March 2008 11:06 |
Volunteering at Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization
Volunteers play an important role in extending and augmenting IRCO’s services to immigrants and refugees. Most of our volunteers work directly with clients, establishing working relationships and developing skills in teaching, mentoring, and intercultural communication.
Select from the following areas for volunteer opprotunities:
- Refugee ESL Tuturing
Refugee ESL Tutors work one-on-one with adult refugees to teach survival and vocational English. This is an excellent opportunity to improve teaching skills, practice cross-cultural communication, and be exposed to Portland's refugee communities. Tutors are provided with an orientation, observation classes, a teaching manual, and ongoing support. Tutors are provided with general teaching materials, but also expected to plan lessons specific to their students' needs.
Volunteers commit to at least 3 ½ hours per week (two hours of tutoring, an hour of lesson planning, plus transportation) for 4 months. Program hours are flexible and locations are available throughout the community. Having access to flexible transportation may be necessary from some locations.
- Refugee Computer Lab Assisting
Refugee Computer Lab Assistants guide students in practice of computer basics, such as opening files, printing, saving, and formatting, and demonstrate teacher-led activities such as mouse use keyboarding placement, opening programs, and searching the Internet.
Volunteers should posses intermediate computer skills, including keyboarding at 30 wpm.
Volunteer hours will be irregular and ‘on call,’ but will always be weekdays, Monday – Thursday, between the hours of 9:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. The computer lab is at the IRCO main building, 10301 NE Glisan Street.
- Youth Tutoring and Mentoring
After School Program for Immigrant and Refugee Education
IRCO’s After School Program for Immigrant and Refugee Education (ASPIRE) seeks reliable and flexible volunteers to tutor and potentially mentor its youth. ASPIRE serves the Latino, Slavic and Asian Pacific Islander students at three southeast Portland schools -- Binnsmead, Marysville and Lent. We work with students in grades 4 through 8 and their families by providing bi-lingual/bi-cultural case management services to children and their families to enhance the educational abilities of the students and increase parent involvement and understanding of the school system.
IRCO's Successful School Transition Program
The Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization (IRCO) seeks reliable and responsible volunteers to assist two 8th grade males at a middle school in SE Portland from 3:30-5pm on either Tuesdays or Thursday. The person should be flexible, patient, reliable, and comfortable working with youth. Interview and background check required.
IRCO’s David Douglas Mentoring Project
David Douglas Mentoring Project (DDMP) is seeking energetic volunteer mentors interested in supporting elementary and middle school students who would benefit from interactions with a caring adult.
DDMP is a one-on-one mentoring program that matches a student from the David Douglas School District with an adult mentor from the community. Students selected for the program are those with highest needs (low academic performance, behavior issues, language and cultural barriers) and could benefit from having a positive role model.
The students we serve are from Lincoln Park Elementary, Mill Park Elementary, and Ron Russell Middle School, and are in grades 4 through 8. Mentors will meet with their mentees at least one hour a week at their school after the school day.
Tutor Immigrant and Refugee Youth for ASPIRE
The After School Program for Immigrant and Refugee Education seeks dedicated and responsible volunteers to tutor individuals or small groups on Tuesdays at Marysville School from 3:45-4:45, and/or Wednesdays from 3:00-4:30 at Lent School. Tutoring experience not required, but desire to work with children, interview, and background check are.
Tutor Immigrant and Refugee Youth for African and Slavic SSSES
The African Social and Support Services for Educational Success program seeks tutors and instructor assistants to help teach ESL, math and US acculturation to African refugees at David Douglas High School on Wednesdays from 2:40-5pm.
The Slavic Social and Support Services for Educational Success program seek tutors and program staff assistants to help tutor in ESL, math and literacy to Slavic immigrants and refugees at David Douglas High School on Wednesdays from 3-4:30pm. SSSES is also looking for tutors to help elementary students with ESL and literacy—dates can be flexible. Tutoring experience not required, but desire to work with children, interview, and background check are.
- RIFS Program Mentor
Make a difference in the life of a refugee or immigrant survivor of domestic violence in IRCO's Refugee and Immigrant Family Strengthening (RIFS) program. The RIFS Mentor program is designed to assist case managers with support services to clients. Mentors work one-on-one with clients and/or their children to help them access community resources, improve their life skills, and negotiate the social and legal systems. Mentors/Volunteers with bilingual skills frequently act as interpreters.
Duties will vary according to the volunteer's skills and interests, but we ask for a commitment of at least 5 hours per month for a minimum of 6 months. Hours are available Monday to Friday, 8am - 5pm. IRCO staff will provide an orientation, an intensive training, and support. Volunteers work primarily on-site at IRCO, but may need access to independent transportation to reach other locations.
- RIFS Program ESL Teacher
This is a unique opportunity to help survivors of domestic violence achieve self-sufficiency by helping them build the English language skills they need to communicate with police, health care workers, and case managers. Classes also cover women's rights under state and federal law and provide information about resources and safety. RIFS staff will provide orientation, training, curriculum, materials and support.
Volunteers commit to training time plus approximately 4 hours per week for eight weeks. Classes are held at sites throughout the Portland Metro Area.
- Childcare Activity Specialist
Interact with children from different cultural and linguistic backgrounds in IRCO’s Refugee and Immigrant Family Strengthening (RIFS) Childcare Program. Volunteer roles include organizing activities, reading stories, playing games and more with children between the ages of 1- 6. This allows the children’s mothers to attend ESL classes, which is an important step in their transition to their new life in the United States. The RIFS Program will provide an orientation and support.
Commit to 3 hours a week for 2 months. Program hours and location vary.
General Volunteer Information
Volunteer Coordinator
Contact (503) 234-1541 x 224
Download - Volunteer Application
|
|
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 01 July 2008 10:36 )
|
Newsflash
Leslie Yoder greets regular visitor Shawana Young, a Senior and People with Disabilities Program Home Care Worker. After reading about Multnomah County senior services now offered through the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization (IRCO) in the August Mid-county Memo, Yoder made a call that changed her life for the better.
Yoder completes paperwork with Young’s help. [...] Full Article A very complex mix
What Amanda Lim brings as IRCO’s new board president
By Ronault L.S. Catalani
The Asian Reporter
There’s an old Sulawesi saying about power: “Trust most those who have truly sorrowed.”
As old school as it sounds, it’s still the wisest way to delegate power — ask any political science scholar. Indeed, this Old World prescription retains [...] Full Article Approximately 60 refugees from countries including Nepal, Ethiopia, Myanmar (formerly Burma), Barundi and Cuba recently attended a workshop at the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization on public safety, basic laws and emergency services.
In the countries where many of the attendees formerly lived, people in uniform were not seen as friends or advocates. In fact, many [...] Full Article Portland took in close to 2,000 refugees yearly, until the U.S. State Department implemented lengthier background checks following the attacks. Now, about 1,200 refugees arrive in Portland each year.
It may be less than the pre-9/11 peak, but that number still keeps Outer Northeast Portland’s Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization’s (IRCO) employees, most of them former [...] Full Article Immigrant children, many from conflict-torn nations, see Santa for the first time
By Nikole Hannah-Jones
The Oregonian
The children didn’t laugh or race about as they entered the winter wonderland with the sparkling white Christmas trees, dancing gingerbread men and enormous lollipops. They didn’t examine the mounds of brightly wrapped packages stuffed under the trees.
Instead, the babes folded [...] Full Article When Sokpak Bhell first arrived in the United States from Cambodia in the early ’80s, like many refugees she was relieved to be in this country, but adjusting wasn’t as easy as she expected.
In Cambodia, where she moved from one refugee camp to another, older people who had visited the United States told her that [...] Full Article The Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization will be starting new programs immediately in youth mentoring, health research and conflict resolution for newly arrived Africans, made possible by funding from new federal grants. Representing $1.4 million in funding over a three-year period, the projects have been funded by the U.S. Department of Education, the National Institutes [...] Full Article At Immigrant community conference “The best revenge on a system that does not value you is to get an education. What a win-win!”
Those words were spoken by Claudette La Vert, a special education teacher in the Reynolds School District, at the African Youth Leadership Conference Sept. 29 at the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization.
Nearly 100 [...] Full Article The Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization, elected new officers and appointed three new members to its board of directors. Assuming the helm as the board chair is Amanda Lim. Lim is Fiscal Analyst for the Oregon Department of Human Services Office of Family Health. Kristin Lensen, of Kristin Lensen Consulting, was named Vice President. Monica [...] Full Article The general understanding of most people is that the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization specializes in services targeted at people from other countries, and rightly so. However, as the organization has grown and expanded its services, it has offered more and more services to the local mainstream population.
One example is IRCO’s services to seniors. In [...] Full Article
|