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	<description>Opening up Volunteer Development</description>
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		<title>I have a few questions to ask you about these websites, PeaceCorpsWiki.org and PeaceCorpsJournals.org</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Mar 2008 14:33:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[What made you want to develop Peace Corps related web sites when you returned from service? Mike: I didn’t even know what a blog was until two week before I COSed! One of my fellow volunteers showed me what they &#8230; <a href="http://developmentary.org/?p=1">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>What made you want to develop Peace Corps  related web sites when you returned from service?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Mike: </strong>I didn’t even know what a  blog was until two week before I COSed! One of my fellow volunteers  showed me what they were and how easy it was to set one up. This was in  mid-2005. After a few months of travelling, and finally coming home, I  searched for current volunteer journals and blogs that were on line –  hoping to see what other volunteers were up to: What projects were they  working on? What countries are they serving in? I found that most of the  sites that I did find that had a list of volunteer websites either were  full of dead links or the page itself hadn’t been updated for a long  time. Frustrated, one night I just decided to start a new site, from  scratch. This lead to PeaceCorpsJournals. I started the research for the  site in March ’06 and the site finally went online that August.</p>
<p>The site is purposely built simplistically so  volunteers with possibly slower internet connections can view the site  from their host country. Trying to view websites in the middle of Africa at an internet café, and waiting for it to  download (and costing more money), made me aware of the need to keep  the site simple in nature.</p>
<p>Also, before I finished service I remember talking  to my APCD about the FOIA Act and how useful it could be. I had wished  the Peace Corps Manual could be online so all volunteers could read what  the rules and regulations were, for their own benefit. Reading just  fragments of the rules, handed out by specific request, make it almost  feel like a one-player game. After the Journals site was up and running I  remembered that conversation and started work on obtaining the Manual  and putting that online.</p>
<p>However, it was still “my” site, run as an  individual, and not the communities. I wanted a place where volunteers  and RPCVs could actively contribute, edit, add, upload, and discuss. A  place where the history of Peace Corps, and the projects the volunteers  had worked on, could be written by the volunteers themselves. We are all  ‘Notable Returned Volunteers’. The wiki site was developed to make that  goal a reality.</p>
<p><strong>Will:</strong> Not to state the obvious, I  had a lot on my mind when I returned to the states. I wrote down many of  my thoughts and reactions. However, I felt a little selfish…and wanted  to know if my reactions were unique because I suspected they weren’t….. I  wanted something sustainable that could grow beyond me to inform the PC  community, future volunteers, foreign nationals and public about what  PC service was like and the impact of our service on the world. I wanted  it to be not just my opinions but also those of others….to create  collaborative entries approaching objectivity. Furthermore, I was in a  unique position to introduce some new ideas, not two years out of Peace  Corps…I had a little distance on my experience but it was still in the  forefront of my mind… everyday, I felt it slipping further into memory  …. Finally, we are the in the midst of an explosion of open source  collaborative web tools….a perfect storm in which to create very useful  website(s).</p>
<p>One of the most interesting and innovative aspects  of my work at my PC site in Armenia was using maps and  developing training programs to teach mapping and planning. (see my next  article of more on this) Last year I started a wiki only dealing with  community maps…mappc.org, but realized that no one else was dealing with  other aspects of institutional memory in the Peace Corps. During the  development of my first wiki site “mappc.org” I began to see a lot of  promise in this type of collaborative environment using many new web  tools such as the dynamic editing of the articles, RSS feeds and Google  map mash-ups which have been modified to run on open source web  collaborative platforms….I saw all types of fascinating and innovative  ways of displaying and collecting information.</p>
<p>In late in 2007, I contacted Jason Pearce, who the  first person to develop this idea within the Peace Corps community with  his website “Third Goal.com” I learned that, ironically, a large factor  in his early departure from the Peace Corps had to do with information  sharing. Jason’s contacts led me to start working with Mike Sheppard,  who had just started “PeaceCorpsWiki.com”.</p>
<p><strong>So is this an original idea creating  websites based on Peace Corps history past and present?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Mike: </strong>Absolutely not!<strong> </strong>Every  volunteer website, be it about their service in the 60s or blogging  about today, contributes to the overall history of Peace Corps and the  accomplishments of the volunteers.</p>
<p>Obviously the most authoritative website is the  official one. However, many more websites were developed to complement  the needs of applicants, volunteers, and the RPCV community. These range   from the National Peace Corps Association to  PeaceCorpsOnline.org and PeaceCorpsWriters.org. Website support groups  also exist for general applicants, minorities, women, couples, and LBGT  to name a few.</p>
<p>We are just ‘joining the club’ along with them.</p>
<p><strong>Will:</strong> No is not the first nor will  it be the last website with a Peace Corps theme.</p>
<p>I would like to talk further about “ThirdGoal.com”  started by Jason Pierce, who has generously offered to serve as a web  advisor for our nonprofit.  “ThirdGoal.com” is using Word  Press Technology (same as this blog site) to give people the ability to  anonymously post blogs about their experiences in a particular country.  Jason encountered problems in 2003 when first started pod casting from Guyana;  this lead to his early departure from PC. When he returned to the  states he started “Third Goal” and the site has continued to grow over  the past few years and is a terrific example of a sustainable Peace  Corps project. It certainly meets “Goal Three” of Peace Corps !  “Thirdgoal.com”  the first Peace Corps related website to my knowledge to successfully  make use of Web 2.0 technology. I encourage you to read more about  Jason’s experience at “Jasonpearce.com”.</p>
<p>National Returned Peace Corps Association (NRPC)  and Peacecorpsonline.org/.com They are great sites, but in my judgment  don’t cater to many of the challenges faced by PC current volunteers.</p>
<p>The property of PeaceCorpsWiki is that of the  contributors….furthermore I only have time to remove the spam from the  postings…contributors that utilize the site will eventually catch bogus  information or stuff that doesn’t belong on the wiki. Only general  comments directly bashing the concept of Peace Corps will be removed  with a strong warning. Anonymous user’s IP address will be blocked.</p>
<p>We are not making a sustained effort to reach back  into the history of Peace Corps. However I have been surprised to see  many, many entries by volunteers who served in the 1960s and  1970s…..Many volunteers in-country are highly interested in building  some aspect of the wiki….it’s attracted an amazing cross section of  collaborators all interested in sharing experiences ideas and  technologies to assist current PCVs in their work.</p>
<p><strong>Where do you see these websites going, how  will they grow and do you think they have a sustainable future?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Mike: </strong>There are over 190,000  returned volunteers. Every one of them is welcome to create a page about  themselves and their Peace Corps experience. The achievements that the  volunteers did in country who later became Senators, Governors, and  Ambassadors are just as notable as the achievements of the volunteers  who are now teaching in a Small Town, America, working at the Emergency  Room at Chicago General, or even the RPCVs who never made it home. We  were all willing to dedicate two years of our life to help people we  never met, in a community we never been to, in a language we didn’t  know.</p>
<p>I see the wiki growing into a network of  inter-related stories, memories, and frustrations we all felt while  serving. The excitement we felt when the new water pump was installed.  The frustration we had when no one came for our first meeting exactly at  5pm. The sorrow when our host-grandmother died…</p>
<p>These are the stories, the history, which makes  Peace Corps unique. It is the only organization I know of that actively  promotes as one of its goals the ability to share your story, your  achievements, your experiences.</p>
<p>In that sense, it is very sustainable.</p>
<p>The wiki will also provide informative resources  for future applicants: Information about each country, what to pack,  villages/community, recent projects, and possibly even how to take a  bucket bath. The list of what information is provided can be as big as  the contributors to the site would like it to be. It is a community,  everyone helps in creating and expanding the site.</p>
<p><strong>Will: </strong>Yes: I believe the wiki  technology or some divertive of it will continue to play an important  part in the development of the Peace Corps institutional memory. These  sites form an important foundation for volunteer empowerment.</p>
<p>Another thing, I think it is very important that  all these websites are able to be loaded onto smart phones and over poor  internet connections. These devices are the future in my opinion not  laptops. Fancy graphics loaded websites with cookies and advertising are  just frustrating to use, this why we have limited the ability to embed  external  images. Yesterday, I created a new wiki article  for PeaceCorpsWiki on my smart phone.</p>
<p>Yeah, we haven’t addressed how to monitor wiki  content and deal with the real financial issues. First, we are  developing a style guide to keep some consistency in the wiki. Currently  the organization of the wiki is a bit organic and will remain that way.  Collaborators are welcome to try new methods of organization.</p>
<p>Second, we are in the process of becoming  incorporated as a public charity nonprofit cooperation in Virginia. We will  receive this status once our articles of incorporation are approved by  the Virginia State Corporation Commission. We will file for 501(c)(3)  status with the IRS, which will give us the ability to apply for grants,  and accept tax deductable donations. While we wait for an IRS  determination regarding our tax status, we are in need of an existing  501(c)(3) to assist in our incubation. In the meantime we are counting  on the work of our administrators and contributors to make the site  better and more functional for the benefit of the larger Peace Corps  community.</p>
<p>Third, I want to expand on the concept that this  nonprofit is not undertaking a centralized or controlled entity. We plan  to use the donations and financial sponsors for development only the  tools on the websites…in other words we aren’t seeking fancy offices or  many staff….Our goal is that management and many important  responsibilities will be shared among the many contributors to the  project.</p>
<p><strong>What’s involved in being an administrator  on the site?</strong></p>
<p>….Oh being an administrator only gives you a few  additional privileges such as being able to block users who are posting  spam as well as to move and delete pages …. The administrator privilege  just means a bit more responsibility in making the wiki run smoothly,  the admin position not to be used to filter content or act as the  “appropriate police.” Administrators have just as much say as our  anonymous posters. Any abuse of contributors on the site should be  promptly reported to the secretary of our nonprofit, who in turn will  put the alleged infraction before the board of directors of our  nonprofit. We want this wiki to be voice for volunteers based on their  experiences good, bad, or otherwise.</p>
<p><strong>If you’re able to establish this sites as  an important element to understanding the past, present, and future of  the PC where do you see your position?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Mike: </strong>There is a mosque built  entirely from mud in Djenne,   Mali.  Beautiful architecture! A wonderful site to see firsthand; the awe of  the size of the building and the amazement that it’s built entirely out  of mud. There is a sense of personal involvement and contribution felt  by the community members, as every year the entire mosque is rebuilt by  hand. The whole community helps out. No one person owns the mosque and  no one person maintains the upkeep &#8211; it is a community effort.</p>
<p>Our place in the wiki site is that we are just  putting the mud together in a huge pile. It takes a community to turn  the pile into something wonderful.</p>
<p><strong>Will:</strong> I would like to be a builder  of the site. However, as months and years separate me from my  experience in the Peace Corps, my ideas about reform and redesign will  not be as relevant. Therefore, in the near future I would like to see  enough strength built into these sites and the supporting nonprofit to  carry forward on their own without my direct involvement. The web tools  will only become better and easier to use.  At least I will  be able to say I did something to contribute to the PC mission in 2008!  The next generation of web community tools promise greater capacity to  credit individual authors as well as integrate existing information into  existing online communities.</p>
<p><strong>You envision a nonprofit being established  around these sites. What exactly does your nonprofit aspire to  accomplish?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Will:</strong> I think if the sites have a  coherent vision and goals for the future they will occupy a much needed  position that will complement the official Peace Corps and other Peace  Corps related nonprofit sites. These sites will complement each other  and at times maybe be competition. I see that as a good thing.</p>
<p>My vision is the nonprofit will be  the entity that protects, fosters, and nurtures the ideas of volunteers  who would like to share their experience through their written work, in  blogs. Hopefully this will be objective and constructive.</p>
<p><strong> In closing ….what does Peace Corps mean to  you? </strong></p>
<p><strong>Will:</strong> I’m going to start with the  positives, it was a great experience and learned much about myself,  being thrown into an environment that I was not familiar with and having  to deal with so my issues that I never contemplated before this  experience.</p>
<p>Peace Corps for years has suffered from self  inflicted institutional amnesia, which is most evident in the dearth of  internet related resources that would be useful to in country  volunteers. Why this situation has been allowed is befuddling. The 21<sup>st</sup> century presents a far different world challenges and opportunities  than existed in the early 1960s when Peace Corps began.</p>
<p>The Peace Corps must grow up! Yes, priority number  one should remain community integration and making personal connections.   However volunteers should have real jobs. Assignments should  have requisite training or expertise to fulfill these functions. They  should know about the history of the Peace Corps in their sites and they  should have opportunity to work with development professionals on  sustainable technologies appropriate to the particular part of the world  they are working in.</p>
<p>There are many that things a wiki type database  could include such as information, about every volunteer, every site,  and government related documents. I would discourage Peace Corps  Volunteers to rely solely rely on the information in this wiki. That is  why we have to strive to the information balanced and objective.</p>
<p>In my opinion Peace Corps runs the risk of  developing into an elitist enterprise that has lost touch with its core  missions. I want Peace Corps to rediscover its missions by tapping an  intensely committed and dedicated community of returned volunteers. I  have found that they believe Peace Corps can again be a powerful force  for international understanding as well as a form of national service  that is highly respected and sought after.</p>
<p>I hope this wiki is the first step in a powerful  idea…and will morph into something important over time.</p>
<p><strong>Wait one more question….So how did this  Peace Corps Wiki start?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Will:</strong> That’s one for Mike,  apparently a friend volunteered to start it over a cup of coffee….looks  like another interview!</p>
<h3>2008 03 20</h3>
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