Study Goals
Research Questions
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Do AmeriCorps members help Habitat organizations serve more families, engage more volunteers, and offer services related to housing?
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Do AmeriCorps members benefit from their service by gaining useful workforce training, learning new skills, and experiencing an increase in civic engagement?
Findings
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AmeriCorps members increased the ability of local Habitat sites to serve more families by building and rehabbing more homes:
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On average, host affiliates were expected to build approximately nine more homes per year than comparable sites that didn’t host members.
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AmeriCorps members helped Habitat sites serve more families by engaging more volunteers:
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On average, Habitat sites that hosted members engaged 70% more volunteers than non-hosting sites.
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Habitat affiliates thought AmeriCorps members improved the ability and sustainability of the organization by helping the organizations with:
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Short-term productivity
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Expansion of reach
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A pipeline of strong employees
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Sustainable change
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AmeriCorps members benefitted from their service by learning new skills:
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Seventy-eight percent of members gained homebuilding skills
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Sixty-five percent gained leadership abilities
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Sixty percent learned project management skills
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Full report
Further information
Habitat for Humanity International