The core of any machine is its intricate network of cogs and wheels, which tirelessly rotate to keep the machine running. The AFS machine is powered primarily by volunteers, with support from AFS Partner organizations and their staffs. Which role is best for you? Here's a rundown on voluntary AFS "parts":
Volunteers:
Volunteers are the lifeblood of AFS. After all, it was World War I
volunteer ambulance drivers who first conceived of AFS back in 1914. Since then,
AFS has evolved into one of the world's largest international community-based
volunteer organizations. Through volunteers, AFS transforms the lives of young
people, inspiring them to explore new dimensions of global philosophy and
service. For every one AFS staff member, there are 200 volunteers, most of whom
can be found working with participants in communities around the world,
advancing the adage "Think globally, act locally." AFS volunteers also
play important leadership roles, serving on AFS national boards of directors.
Participants:
AFS is an adventure in learning that lasts far beyond the exchange
experience itself. By living with a host family and attending school in another
culture, AFS participants come to appreciate differences and realize connections
with their global neighbors and share their knowledge with others in their home
communities. "Participants" can be defined as high school students,
educators, school administrators or anyone taking part in an AFS program.
Host
Families: A host family can be a single parent, a childless couple or
two parents with children already living at home. Families applying to host an
AFS student indicate their preference as to a boy or girl and nationality, and
AFS will try to place a student whose profile is compatible with family's.
Hosting an AFS student provides two-way interactions that vibrantly bring to
life the culture of a far-away land, perhaps seen before only through the
distant, impersonal headlines of a newspaper. Families are not paid. They are
expected to supply love, moral support, comfort and basic needs for their hosted
student, just as they would for their own children. Students bring their own
spending money, and their clothing and medical expenses (in most cases) already
are covered. The student's natural parents remain the legal guardians throughout
the exchange experience, while AFS looks after the student's general welfare.
The host parent(s) is responsible for the student's well-being on a day-to-day
basis. Both families and students are supported by the local AFS volunteer
committees, which provide orientations, meetings and social functions throughout
the year.
Host Schools:
In secondary schools around the world, the presence of AFS students is
valued by administrators, educators and fellow students. Increasingly, educators
understand that there exists an element of intercultural learning for all their
students when they have an AFS participant in their classroom. AFS students come
to be viewed as resources and contributors to the classroom environment. While
they are not required to do so, many AFS participating schools contribute
extracurricular fees, field trip costs, workbooks and other educational expenses
for their AFS students.