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VSO - Sharing Skills, Changing LivesVolunteer experiencesSee what our volunteers experienced whilst they were overseas with us: "I have gained a tremendous amount through my experience as a YfD volunteer. Above all I am both humbled and inspired by the people I have met and worked with here, who despite the many, many challenges carry on with a positive and generous spirit".Peter Shanahan - Field Monitoring Assistant - Malawi: "Working for the World Food Programme, as part of my YfD placement, has been a great experience. To work for the UN on the 'front-line' of development work is what many people aspire for, so I felt very privileged to be a part of their work for a year.Nell Williams - Food Aid Monitor - Malawi: "I have been amazed by the enthusiasm and initiative shown by some schools with only the slightest encouragement. It has been inspiring to work as part of a team at World Food Programme where people work together as a team with the highest level of commitment to their work and to the beneficiaries they are trying to reach.Katherine Harrison - Food Aid Monitor - Malawi: "I have gained very valuable work experience in the international development field. I have gained confidence in working with people of diverse backgrounds. I have improved my self-awareness of what I can achieve and the contributions I can offer."Rachel Saunders - Literacy and Recreational Activities Trainer - Guyana: "I have enjoyed my placement immensely and it has been a very valuable experience to me and it has contributed into my decision to apply for a Masters in Global Health in which I will start in September 2007.Masoma Sherazi - Peace Advocacy Adviser - Philipinnes: "My experience has also given me an invaluable insight into many developmental issues. It is in fact on the basis of this experience that I am now considering a career path related to peace-building in the developing world." "With hindsight, I am able to see the relevance of many aspects of the training that was provided by the Youth for Development (YfD) team before my departure. Whilst I may have initially underestimated the finer points of adapting to life in a developing country, the overall experience has been both rewarding and fulfilling and has certainly prepared me for future work in this field. "Jennifer Comery - Teacher - China: "What have I gained from my experience as a YfD volunteer? Where to start!?!Andrew Brooks - Education Researcher: "My work in Papua New Guinea has given me the capability to work more effectively independently, and a greater sense of self-reliance". "As well as the direct gains from the work I also feel I now have knowledge of Papua New Guinean culture, people, language and environment. I have a clearer understanding of the everyday difficulties associated with life in a developing country, and the obstacles that confront approaches to reduce poverty".Steven Wynne - Facilitator Recreational Activities for the Deaf - Guyana: "I want to say that YfD VSO has been a fantastic experience for me. VSO Programme Office in Guyana has been really good to me, working hard to enable Ashton [another deaf volunteer] and I to settle down quickly, and deal with everything we asked them to sort out for usJoe Taylor - Fundraiser - Malawi: "During the course of my placement, my understanding of how an NGO operates has vastly improved and I feel a lot more confident working in an international development context."Jaishree Patel - Intern: Programme Assistant Nutrition - Malawi: "I have a much clearer understanding of the challenges faced when attempting to implement development strategies. I have been able to learn about the skills required to work at field level, in particular, communication and interpersonal skills. Living in Malawi has also taught me about the realities, both the positive and negative, of living and working in a developing country"Amy Merone, YfD volunteer in Nigeria 2006 - 2007: "For me the training has easily been the best that I have attended and I have subsequently used training techniques that I learnt prior to going overseas, time and time again in workshops in Nigeria. The emphasis on participatory approaches to development is fantastic and it really is great fun. It makes me smile to think about all the crazy workshops and activities that I have been involved in, as a result of the training with VSO. I can honestly say that on the day I left for Nigeria I felt that VSO had prepared me as much as was possible for volunteering overseas."Hannah Tompkins - Disability Advocacy Advisor - Guyana: "My experience as a volunteer has afforded me a fantastic opportunity to increase my knowledge of disability in a development context. I have been able to build on my existing skills and knowledge, by gaining direct experience of working in disability in Guyana, as well ongoing learning about the international disability agenda. This has been extremely satisfying.Amy Merone, volunteer in Nigeria 2006 - 2007 and about to start work with the Terrance Higgins Trust: "I volunteered in Nigeria working within an HIV clinic as a HIV Health Educator and Community Outreach Worker and it was the most fulfilling and happiest time in my life. The skills and experiences that I gained there will probably be unmatchable to anything else that I do and the friendships and relationships that I formed within the local community were incredible. It was the most challenging thing that I have ever done in my life so far, but I would give anything to still be there.Sarah Mary Telford, a volunteer in Mongolia in 2002-03, is a Programme Officer at World Vision: I am certain that without my VSO experience I wouldn't have got my job with World Vision. The experience it gave me was invaluable.Nicolle Morgan, a volunteer in Namibia in 2004-05: "YfD was an absolutely fantastic experience and opportunity that has hugely influenced me to want to work in 'development' in Africa on a much longer-term basis."Rachel Avery was a volunteer in Cameroon in 2000-01. At present she is a Community Woodland Officer at the Scottish Wildlife Trust: "It has profoundly changed my life, particularly my perception of money and its worth. I am now much more engaged in issues of fair trade, political activism (eg World Development Movement) etc."Sanchayeeta, a deaf volunteer from London worked with the Federation of the Deaf in the Philippines:
Maija Elina Paasiaro, Fundraiser and Capacity Builder, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia Maija Paasiaro has exchanged life as a researcher and writer for a publishing company in London for a role working with two Mongolian organisations looking to eliminate child labour and support women farmers. Read more about Maija Richard Taylor - volunteering in Ethiopia helped hundreds of people gain life-saving access to water. Richard Taylor’s year spent volunteering in Ethiopia helped hundreds of people gain life-saving access to water. Ten years on, it’s proved to be his springboard to a sought-after career. Now a policy officer with the Department for International Development in Sudan, Richard claims VSO gave him a unique insight that he still uses today. Read more about Richard Read more © VSO unless otherwise stated | Privacy statement | UK registered charity number: 313757
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