Why should you trust the information on this web page?

Home-Based (in your own home) Volunteering
Where Your Service is NOT via a Computer or the Internet

(at least not to actually DO the volunteering service, but you may need to report your work online)

credits and disclaimer and Why should you trust the information on this web page?

There are home-based or remote volunteering activites that are NOT virtual volunteering, because the volunteering does NOT require a computer or the Internet, at least not to actually DO the volunteering service.  Home-based volunteering that does NOT require a computer, at least not to DO the service, includes:
  • Sewing or knitting something (masks, blankets, beanies, toys, etc.).
  • Making items that can be sold by an organization to raise money for its programs (bird houses, bat houses, little free libraries, artwork).
  • Fostering an animal (a dog, a cat, a bird) in lieu of a permanent home or the animal being in a shelter.
  • Friendly visitor or health appointment followup/reminder by phone.
  • Counting birds in your backyard (though the reporting must be done online).
  • Growing vegetables or fruit that can be donated to a food bank that accepts fresh food donations.
Below is a list of home-based volunteering that I don't consider virtual volunteering, because a computer isn't used to DO the service, though a computer may be needed to report your activity.

Do not limit your search for home-based / in-your-home volunteering to the list of programs on this page. Ask at programs in your own neighborhood, town or city if you can offer your services as an in-your-own-home volunteer, such as contacting

  • Animal shelters and breed rescue groups.
  • Senior centers.
  • Domestic violence shelters.
  • Drug treatment centers and sober houses.
  • Food banks.

If you have been assigned court-ordered community service

Don't do any of these activities before getting permission to do them. Some courts will NOT accept these home-based activities as community service. Here's advice on volunteering to fulfill a court-order.

Craft-based & letter-writing at-home volunteering opportunities:

Note: I have NOT added any of the myriad of mask-making initiatives out there regarding COVID-19. The reason? There are just too many. If you are looking to sew masks, ask LOCAL senior homes, local homeless shelters, local domestic violence shelters, and public schools if they accept donations of masks. Please know some of the standards for a quality mask (at least two layers) and have a web site that lists these standards and when you contact whatever organization you want to make these masks for, note the standards you are using.

Also, please don't start a craft project or card-making unless you have ASKED an organization DIRECTLY, "do you want/need this and what guidelines should we follow?" So many senior centers do NOT want cards, so many hospitals do NOT want donations of ANYTHING, even new toys, etc. Many places will NOT accept homemade soap because they need cleaning products to make very strict standards..

Make Love Rocks by yourself or together with your family. Love Rocks are very simple to make, even for the craft-challenged. In making them together, talk about how the Love Rocks movement came to be, about safety outdoors, about personal responsibility, and about every person's power to influence other people. When you have made several Love Rocks together, you can distribute them together - not just on one occasion, but over the course of many months. Choose what neighbors should get them, and leave them for those neighbors where they can find them - in a mailbox, on the front porch, in a flower pot on the front patio, etc. Give one with a tip to a waiter or food delivery person. Put them on your teacher's front porch. Put them on a fence post that hikers walk by. Just don't leave them in natural spaces, like beach or amid rocks in a state or national park (keep wild areas wild!).
    Afghans for Afghans (this project was started by three online volunteers who helped with a United Nations project back in 2001)

    Shawl Ministry (faith-based Christian volunteering)

    Quilts of Valor (QOVs), making quilts for soldiers.

    Adopt a Soldier, allows volunteers to send letters and items to soldiers.

    Binky Patrol is an organization that provides donated handmade security blankets to children in need. These include kids battling HIV, drug abuse, child abuse, or chronic and terminal illnesses. Volunteers can make blankets in a variety of ways: knitting, crocheting, quilting, or just sewing up a nice piece of fleece fabric. “Binkys” range from two feet square for preemies up to twin bed size, and all sizes in between. The web site has instructions specifically for people completing court-ordered community service.

    Knitted Knockers is an non-profit that provides handmade prosthetic breasts to mastectomy patients. They organize knitters to make knitted cotton breasts that are lightweight, comfortable, and most importantly, free to those who need them.

    The Mother Bear Project sends knitted teddy bears to children dealing with HIV in emerging nations. They’ve already distributed over 100,000 bears to children in 26 different countries. They welcome all knitters to make bears.

    Leggings for Life takes requests from veterinarians and pet owners, for injured and disabled animals that need custom-made clothing and cushions for their special needs. They work to create ongoing partnerships, since assistance items will wear out and need to be replaced.

    At Knots of Love, volunteers make crocheted caps for chemo patients, who are often cold in clinics and hospitals, and wigs aren’t comfortable all the time.

    Knit-A-Square invites yarn crafters to join in a project that is simple enough for even beginners: knit or crochet an 8-inch square. The collected squares are sent to South Africa, where they are assembled into blankets for orphaned or vulnerable children affected by AIDS. These blankets, along with toys and knitted clothing, go to children in 54 countries. Over 12,000 knitters have contributed already, and you can join them at Facebook

    Snuggles Project, part of the Hugs For Homeless Animals, connects good-hearted yarn crafters with animal shelters near them that could use security blankets to comfort animals and make the place feel more homey.

    Halos of Hope is a non-profit that collects colorful caps for cancer patients from knitters, crocheters, and seamstresses who donate their time and skills.

    Mats for Cats invites crafters to make soft cage liners for cage floors at cat shelters. Mats for Cats is affiliated with the Potsdam Humane Society in Potsdam, New York, but the mats generated are shared with shelters all over, and feral cats as they are identified.

    Project Linus gathers homemade blankets for children distributed through hospitals, shelters, and aid agencies. Donated blankets can be sewn, quilted, hand-woven, knitted, or crocheted, but must be high-quality and free of smoke or pet hair.

    Feel Better Friends mobilizes volunteers to crochet dolls to resemble a specific child dealing with any traumatic health issue. The dolls have the same hair and eye color as the child, and the hair/wig can be detachable for children going through chemotherapy. The point is make the child feel less “different” because of the health issue.

    Knitting Rays of Hope collects handmade knitted, crocheted, or loomed hats to give to babies in neonatal intensive care units and to cancer patients. They have distributed over 2400 hats since 2012.

Animal-based at-home volunteering opportunities:

  • Watch the Wild, a program of Nature Abounds: you can observe and report what is taking place in your community, from trees and plants to weather and wildlife activity. "In as little as ten minutes, your observations help us to understand how our eco-systems are changing and helps us to adapt for the future." All you need to do is choose a location or route to observe, whether it be your backyard, a route you drive regularly, or an area that you play, visit, or hike in regularly, sign up to participate, then record your observations and report them to Watch the Wild/Nature Abounds via mail or email.
     
  • ebird database, supporting the National Audubon Society. You go "birding" or bird-watching, observing birds with your eye or binoculars, and then enter into the database when, where, and how you went birding, completing a checklist of all the birds seen and heard during the outing.
     
  • Call your local humane societies, ASPCA chapters, animal shelters and breed rescue groups, and ask if you could:
     
    • Make appropriate food treats for dogs and cats and drop them off at the shelter. You can find a variety of recipes to make treats for dogs and cats online.
       
    • Make appropriate bedding for dogs and cats and drop them off at the shelter. You could use scrap materials gathered from your own home and that of neighbors. There are lots of suggestions for making your own dog and cat beds online.
       
    • Organize a dog and cat toy drive, or a food and supply drive for the shelter.
       
    • Foster a dog or cat. That means you care for the dog or cat in your own home until it is adopted by someone else. You do this through your local humane society, ASPCA, animal shelter, or dog or cat rescue organization. It is a real commitment; if you take in a dog or cat, there is no where else for that animal to go until it is adopted, so don't take on a foster animal unless you can make the commitment needed!
     
  • If you want to make a bat house or a bird house or bee house for a wildlife conservation group, contact that group FIRST, before you start building, to ask if they would even want it. A better place to donate such might be a community garden (contact them FIRST before building!).
Please never, ever start making something or gathering items BEFORE you contact the organization and make CERTAIN your efforts are wanted. Many senior centers and hospitals do NOT want cards and letters from patients for residents or patients, for instance. Many food banks CANNOT accept fresh produce from individuals. Most hospitals do NOT want donations of toys, food or blankets.

Be prepared to be told "No, thank you" and respect that.

Food donations

  • If you want to grow food for a local food bank, call the food bank FIRST and make sure they accept fresh produce and know all of the guidelines before you invest in the time and effort doing this.
     
  • Do NOT make cakes, pies, cookies, muffins and other sweets for any group before calling first and asking, including fire stations, police stations, senior centers, etc. - and don't be surprised if they say no. Some no because they greatly prefer healthy food and are overwhelmed with high-calorie, unhealthy donations. Some say no because they cannot accept such donations.
     
  • Food donations are always best done locally but CALL FIRST: family shelters, domestic violence shelters, drug treatment centers and sober houses, food banks. etc.
Friendly visitor or health appointment followup/reminder by phone.

Not everyone has a computer, a smart phone, and/or Internet access. Not everyone is Internet savvy. And not everyone is best reached by email.

Some government and nonprofit health care programs need volunteers to make phone calls to patients or clients
  • regarding followup care.
  • to remind about appointments, like breast-cancer screening.
  • for a daily or weekly checkup.
  • a reminder to take a medication.
  • to provide assurance.
  • to just have a "friendly visit."
For instance, CONTACT Reassurance in East Tennessee provides highly-trained volunteers to make daily calls to seniors who live alone or are home bound, and have little to no caregiver support.

These efforts are LOCALLY based, so to find them, you need to look locally. Look on VolunteerMatch and All for Good, look on whatever local volunteer center web site your city might have, use keyword searches on Google, Bing and Duck Duck Go, and contact local places like senior centers, Planned Parenthood clinics and local nonprofit health clinics. Be prepared to pay a small fee for a criminal background check and to go through an extensive training program.  

Tracking hours

Most of the programs talked about on this page will NOT track your volunteer hours - you will have to do that yourself. Also, if you need the organization to write a letter for you confirming your service hours for a court or a school, you will have to ask BEFORE you start volunteering if the organization will do this. If you explain how you will track the time volunteering at home , and agree to a probation period of, say, a week, that shows you will get a lot done, some programs will agree to sign such a letter that attests to your hours. But always ask BEFORE you begin volunteering!

You can always track volunteering hours yourself, if you want a tabulation of your volunteering hours, but note that probation officers and judges will probably NOT accept such self recording and reporting. To track your hour, use a spread sheet or a traditional paper notebook and note the organization you assisted, what you did, the day, and how many hours you contributed. Ask any organization you want to help about their policy regarding a letter to confirm your hours BEFORE you start volunteering if you need such a letter, and if they agree, be sure that agreement is in writing - then, when you finish volunteering at an organization, or when you are ready to start filling out college applications, ask the organization you have helped to write a letter on their letterhead confirming how many hours you contributed and what you accomplished (and adding anything else they would like to say).

Some courts and schools will NOT count online volunteering or home-based volunteering as part of your community service. You must get permission from them first before you embark on online volunteering or home-based volunteering to meet your community service obligation. It is your responsibility to understand the court's or school's or university's requirements for documenting your community service.

And keep in mind that an organization has every right to fire you / let you go as a volunteer, no matter how urgently you need to complete your community service. They are under no obligation to keep you -- especially if you have missed shifts, violated policies, etc.

Also see

© 2010-2020 by Jayne Cravens, all rights reserved. No part of this material can be reproduced in print or in electronic form without express written permission by Jayne Cravens.

 


 The Last Virtual Volunteering Guidebook available for purchase as a paperback & an ebook
This book is for both organizations new to virtual volunteering, as well as for organizations already involving online volunteers who want to improve or expand their programs. The last chapter of the book is especially for online volunteers themselves.


 
More suggested books:

 
Volunteering: The Ultimate Teen Guide (It Happened to Me)

 
The Busy Family's Guide to Volunteering: Doing Good Together

 
Doing Good Together: 101 Easy, Meaningful Service Projects for Families, Schools, and Communities

 
Engage Every Parent!: Encouraging Families to Sign On, Show Up, and Make a Difference

 
Volunteer Vacations: Short-Term Adventures That Will Benefit You and Others

 
Children as Volunteers: Preparing for Community Service


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 My book: The Last Virtual Volunteering Guidebook

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© 2010-2023 by Jayne Cravens, all rights reserved. No part of this material can be reproduced in print or in electronic form without express written permission by Jayne Cravens.

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