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If you think students spend all their spare time avoiding studying, going out with their mates and having a good time then you'd be right. Well our student bloggers do anyway. While they assure us they don't slack on the study, they've got a lot to answer for when it comes to enjoying themselves while volunteering.

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06012009 Monday Jun 01, 2009

Volunteering with politicians

The summer is finally here and is going full steam ahead. So is my volunteering.

On the 22nd of May, I started a casework internship with a Liberal Democrat MP (not naming names due to issues of confidentiality). When I finished my exams, I knew I wanted to do something different, for the summer, from the current volunteering that I am doing, which is based mostly around research, law, young people and music. I am currently doing a degree that combines Law and Politics.

So, when I went to a meeting with my study supervisor at my university, she advised me to also focus on the politics side of my degree. This is when I started looking at the website of Working for an MP, where I then found the above opportunity, went for the interview and got the position. Although I have just started the position, I find it thoroughly different from anything I have pursued before. As a casework intern, I have already learnt effective methods of referring people's problems to specific council members, how to maintain effective communication with a constituent, how to summarize large bits of information and how to write effective letters.

As well as this, I have gained a wider understanding of the campaigns that this MP is passionate about, through the pre – election preparation. My previous assumptions have been challenged as I have realised that an office of an MP can be extremely busy, that they do try to act as advocates of the general public and that, even in today's world, they can still be said to be fully representative of the views of the public. In the future, I am also going to be able to sit in with this MP when she has meetings with the public just so I know what kind of issues are present in this constituency and am also going to take full responsibility for helping people with their problems through the telephone.

Things also took a very exciting turn for me, this month, as I am now not very far from qualifying as a generalist advisor with the CAB. I have just finished a course which mainly involved me practising my interviewing skills on a variety of legal topics that included employment and benefits. After this practice, I could finally be unleashed on the general public! From this course, I learnt that I had to go over many of the legal principles that I had learnt already, had to slightly amend my communication technique and mainly just had to show the client that I was listening to their problem. I think the hardest thing for me in the course was learning that there is not always going to be a positive solution for the client. In many cases, all we can really do is listen as their problem has gone too far.

Lastly, I also visited Portcullis House, Westminster on behalf of IARS. I went to a debate, conducted with some politicians and young people that centred on the issues of Young People and the Criminal Justice System. My objective was to take notes on the debate so I could write an article for IARS Youth Voice Journal based around this. I found this day very disappointing as the politicians who were present did not really answer any questions clearly. This debate was meant to produce change and was a chance for politicians to show that they are on a young person's side. Instead, the politicians just churned out information that we had heard before and surprisingly, were not such effective speakers. I have yet to meet up with other IARS volunteers and write this up. I will keep you posted.

Here's to next month and let's hope it is as good as this month was. I will also be talking about Lifetracks and how people can still get involved!


Posted by Rochelle ( 3:02 PM )
Link to this post Comments[2]

Comments:

Interesting. Just tell what did you do to get such a role and how i can get involved myself

Joey

Posted by Van Elvin (Joey) Courchene on June 17, 2009 at 12:17 PM GMT+00:00 #

Hey Joey,

Thanks for your question. Sorry about the late reply. The first step would be to go on to www.wfmp.co.uk which is the work for an MP site but most of the roles always need prior experience to this. For example, I had previous experience of telephone skills, writing and casework. I also sympapathised the views of the political party myself and so that always is a useful start.

Hope I was of some help.

Any more questions please do ask.

Rochelle

Posted by Rochelle Sampy on August 05, 2009 at 06:24 PM GMT+00:00 #

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