Mandatory Volunteering In Schools

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3.3 million students from all throughout the United States are planning on graduating this school year. Many of them are busy with applying for scholarships and universities, preparing for and taking exams, and participating extracurricular activities as well. In many schools throughout the United States, students are required to volunteer as a part of their graduation requirements. However, this should not be the case. Schools should not require volunteering to be a graduation requirement because it causes students to put in little effort, not learn from their experiences, and some students do not have the amount of free time needed to do so. By requiring volunteering, students may not put effort into their work. Some people tend to not work hard when they are made to do tasks they initially did not want to perform; a poor performance is the result of this. This is not acceptable in volunteering. Volunteering requires effort. A bad performance affects those in the community who are being helped. For example, if a student chooses to volunteer at a nursing home, they must help the senior citizens with enthusiasm and aid their needs. The student cannot simply stand there and barely do anything because doing so does not benefit
This would be especially true if they do not give any effort like previously mentioned. Learning from their experiences is an important part of volunteering. Arguably, it is one of its many joys. People who volunteer willingly learn about how they are being helpful and making a difference in their communities. Unwilling and forced volunteering weakens that joy. The students may pay little attention to the impact they may be making on their community. They instead would be occupied by the set number of hours they need to complete rather than those who they are supposed to be helping. The learning experience will be weakened by the required volunteering

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