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      Experience Corps Baltimore: Exploring the Stressors and Rewards of High-intensity Civic Engagement

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          Abstract

          Purpose:

          Experience Corps (EC) represents a high-intensity, intergenerational civic engagement activity where older adults serve as mentors and tutors in elementary schools. Although high-intensity volunteer opportunities are designed to enhance the health and well being of older adult volunteers, little is known about the negative and positive aspects of volunteering unique to intergenerational programs from the volunteer’s perspective.

          Design and Methods:

          Stressors and rewards associated with volunteering in EC were explored in 8 focus group discussions with 46 volunteers from EC Baltimore. Transcripts were coded for frequently expressed themes.

          Results:

          Participants reported stressors and rewards within 5 key domains: intergenerational (children’s problem behavior, working with and helping children, observing/facilitating improvement or transformation in a child, and developing a special connection with a child); external to EC (poor parenting and children’s social stressors); interpersonal (challenges in working with teachers and bonding/making social connections); personal (enjoyment, self-enhancement/achievement, and being/feeling more active); and structural (satisfaction with the structural elements of the EC program).

          Implications:

          Volunteers experienced unique intergenerational stressors related to children’s problem behavior and societal factors external to the EC program. Overall, intergenerational, interpersonal, and personal rewards from volunteering, as well as program structure may have balanced the stress associated with volunteering. A better understanding of stressors and rewards from high-intensity volunteer programs may enhance our understanding of how intergenerational civic engagement volunteering affects well being in later life and may inform project modifications to maximize such benefits for future volunteers and those they serve.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Gerontologist
          Gerontologist
          geront
          geront
          The Gerontologist
          Oxford University Press (US )
          0016-9013
          1758-5341
          December 2015
          3 March 2014
          1 December 2016
          : 55
          : 6 , In This Issue: Function and Mobility End of Life Care and Planning Mental Health
          : 1038-1049
          Affiliations
          1 Department of Mental Health , Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, Maryland.
          2 Johns Hopkins School of Nursing , Baltimore, Maryland.
          3 The Greater Homewood Community Corporation , Baltimore, Maryland.
          4 Mailman School of Public Health , Columbia University , New York.
          5 Davis School of Gerontology , University of Southern California , Los Angeles.
          Author notes
          *Address correspondence to Vijay R. Varma, MPH, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205. E-mail: vvarma@ 123456jhsph.edu

          Decision Editor: Nancy Schoenberg, PhD

          Article
          PMC4668764 PMC4668764 4668764
          10.1093/geront/gnu011
          4668764
          24589989
          07d8f866-d827-4b8f-a528-110bfe6e1b96
          © The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
          History
          : 6 September 2013
          : 28 January 2014
          Page count
          Pages: 12
          Categories
          Research Article

          African American,Qualitative research methods,Volunteerism & civic engagement,Focus groups,Stress & coping (anxiety & agitation)

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