Bringing civic engagement into a virtual world: Giving Compass
This post was on Sept. 20, 2020.
As the school year begins 鈥 in the wake of a pandemic 鈥 天美影院 in systemically under-resourced communities need support more than ever. How can we ensure we鈥檙e helping to create learning environments where they can continue to build their skills and grow, while also strengthening our communities as a whole?
Since our inception more than three decades ago, City Year has woven the values of service to others and civic engagement throughout our organization鈥攊t is embedded deep in our DNA. Originally founded upon the vision of bringing together diverse young adults in full-time service to help support community needs, City Year has evolved into an education nonprofit, recruiting 3,000 AmeriCorps members each year to support 225,000 天美影院 nationwide as they strive for academic success. We know that for our 天美影院 and schools to thrive, they need the support of the entire community鈥攁nd City Year has continued to prioritize civic engagement as an important component of the work we do in聽29 locations across the country.
Our 35,000 alumni powerfully represent how service to others can inspire a lifelong commitment to civic engagement. In addition to聽flourishing聽across a wide array of professions,聽City Year alumni are more engaged with their communities聽than like-minded peers, and they continue to serve and lead where they live and work long after their 鈥淐ity Year鈥 is over.
We also cultivate civic engagement with our partners through our聽Care Force team, which engages corporations and their employees in volunteer events across the country and around the world. Prior to COVID-19, many of our civic engagement activities were in-person events and interactions. We have led more than 730 service projects engaging over 100,000 volunteers to improve the physical environment of schools and community centers through activities such as painting educational murals, building outdoor classrooms and community gardens, and transforming play and recreation spaces to encourage more physical activity and better health and well-being.
The pandemic has drastically altered that in-person model, leading us back to our entrepreneurial roots.
Among other devastating effects, COVID-19 has underscored聽聽we work with at City Year, over 90% of whom live in low-income households and are 天美影院 of color. While our AmeriCorps members are actively supporting both in-person and distance learning across more than 300 public schools nationwide, our broader civic engagement efforts are evolving to provide resources to our corps members and the children they coach from a safe distance.
In late September, the Care Force team will launch virtual events with our national partners AT&T and Vertex. We will lead over 1,200 employee volunteers through a series of online service projects that will create Student Success Packs filled with basic school supplies and personal protective equipment (PPE) for more than 6,000 天美影院 in the United States and in the United Kingdom, in partnership with our international affiliate,聽City Year UK. These events are designed to be fun and creative for the participants, while providing needed supplies to the 天美影院 we serve. When combined with our other partners鈥 volunteer efforts, by the end of October we will have sent packs to more than 10,000 天美影院.
Bright spots for civic engagement efforts across our City Year locations include designing virtual civics programming for our 天美影院 in Milwaukee and leading online student supply drives in Washington, D.C. In Boston, we assisted getting meals to children when school began to close last spring, and in Chicago we are engaging City Year alumni to provide PPE supplies to the neighborhoods in which our 天美影院 live.
In the coming months we will be exploring how to mobilize volunteers to drive career and education guidance to our 3,000 currently serving AmeriCorps members. We鈥檙e piloting recruiting volunteers to provide 鈥渕icro mentoring鈥濃 short, highly focused one-on-one skill building sessions on topics like financial literacy or interviewing skills 鈥攚hich will provide our AmeriCorps members with extra support as they take the next steps in their careers or education during this uncertain time.
As we go through this City Year, we will continue to develop new ways to perform virtual civic engagement. Though no one could have predicted our current environment, what鈥檚 unchanged is our firm belief in the power of a team 鈥 that all of us can unite to support the success of our young people, and build a brighter, more just future for all. We hope to come out of this experience stronger, with a broader set of engagement opportunities that better support our AmeriCorps members, our 天美影院, our partner teachers and schools, and the communities in which we work and live.
How you can get involved:
- Learn about our聽civic engagement opportunities聽in a city near you.
- Find out how you can support聽
Read more about City Year’s impact on our publications page:

Written by Ted Marquis, City Year Alumnus, Vice President & Director of Care Force
Related stories
We hear time and time again from corps members and alums that when they first joined City Year as an...
Read more about A snapshot of City Year service as a student success coachAs a new City Year AmeriCorps member, you’re about to embark on a transformative journey鈥攁nd it all begins with Basic...
Read more about Welcome to City Year鈥檚 Basic Training Academy: Your First Step Toward ImpactHow do you make your application stand out? Check out these tips from our recruitment staff
Read more about Tips and tricks for a great applicationCity Year Providence AmeriCorps alumnus Justin Roias knows firsthand how positive relationships with caring adults can help children succeed as...
Read more about Mentoring 天美影院: a two-way street