自我发展的途径之一

   自我发展的途径并不难找,许多成功者都发现教学是其中最有效的方法之一。教师通常能比学生学到更多的东西。虽然并非每个人都有机会去当教师,也并非每个人都擅长或喜欢当教师,但每个人都有类似的机会——帮助其他人发展的机会。每个人如果和下属或同事坐下来认真讨论如何改进绩效和提高成效,就会知道在自我发展的过程中,究竟存在哪些能够促进发展的潜在的方法。

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天灾人祸面前

面对天灾人祸,我们牢牢地站在一起。

为那些生死未卜的亲人们祈祷~

发布者 由 Phoenix0 篇评论

Getting it right on the money Apr 2008/NEW YORK/From The Economist

A global crusade is under way to teach personal finance to the masses

“EVERYBODY wants it. Nobody understands it. Money is the great taboo. People just won't talk about it. And that is what leads you to subprime. Take the greed and the financial misrepresentation out of it, and the root of this crisis is massive levels of financial illiteracy.”

For years John Bryant has been telling anyone who will listen about the problems caused by widespread ignorance of finance. In 1992, in the aftermath of the Los Angeles riots, he founded Operation HOPE, a non-profit organisation, to give poor people in the worst-hit parts of the city “a hand-up, not a handout” through a mixture of financial education, advice and basic banking. Among other things, Operation HOPE offers mortgage advice to homebuyers and runs “Banking on Our Future”, a national personal-finance course of five hour-long sessions that has already been taken by hundreds of thousands of young people, most of them high-school students.

That many poor people do not have a bank account—and that few of them understand why this puts them at a disadvantage (let alone other essentials of personal finance)—is at the heart of “the civil-rights issue of the 21st century”, says Mr Bryant. He calls the attempt to help people help themselves out of poverty through financial literacy and economic opportunity the “silver-rights movement”.

In January George Bush appointed Mr Bryant vice-chairman of his new President's Council on Financial Literacy. This was launched as part of his administration's increasingly frenetic response to the financial crisis that followed the meltdown in subprime mortgages, many of them given to borrowers who may not have understood the risks. Often borrowers did not even realise that their monthly payment would rise if interest rates went up, says Mr Bryant. Subprime borrowers on adjustable interest rates, whose mortgages make up just 7% of the total, accounted for more than 40% of the foreclosures begun in the fourth quarter of last year (see chart).

 

The council is not short of expertise. It is chaired by Charles Schwab, eponymous boss of a broking firm. Its other members include the head of Junior Achievement, which has been teaching children about money since 1919, and a co-author of “Rich Dad, Poor Dad”, a self-help bestseller. Already, it has approved a new curriculum for middle-school students, “MoneyMath: Lessons for Life”. (Lesson one: the secret to becoming a millionaire. Answer: save, save, save.) It is starting a pilot programme to work out how to connect the “unbanked” to financial institutions. And it is supporting what, echoing the Peace Corps, is called the Financial Literacy Corps: a group of people with knowledge of finance who will volunteer to advise those in financial difficulties.

April has been declared Financial Literacy Month by Congress. The need to make this more than a slogan is especially apparent this year. But America is not the only country where doing something about the widespread ignorance of personal finance is on the agenda. Governments from Britain to Russia are declaring their commitment to financial education. This month the World Savings Banks Institute, which represents retail and savings banks from 92 countries, will hold a summit in Brussels about financial education in the light of the subprime crisis.

Meanwhile, on March 17th a new campaign to promote financial literacy in the developing world was launched at a conference in Amsterdam. Called Aflatoun (“Explorer”), after a cartoon character based on a Bollywood star, it is the brainchild of Jeroo Billimoria, a social entrepreneur who previously worked with street children in India. Among other things, she founded a successful emergency 24-hour telephone service, called Childline. She found that many of the children she helped were entrepreneurial (indeed, such spirits may have played a part in their decision to leave home) and became convinced that, given better education, they would have done well in life.

Ms Billimoria addresses herself to children aged between six and 14, whom most educators consider too young to understand money. Having begun with experiments in rural India, her non-profit organisation, Child Savings International, has piloted the Aflatoun course in 11 countries, including Argentina, South Africa, Vietnam and Zimbabwe, since 2005. It is now extending the course to 35 developing countries. Only recently, after suggestions from the Dutch central bank and the European Commission, has Ms Billimoria started to adapt Aflatoun for rich countries such as Britain, the Netherlands, Ireland and perhaps America. “My mistake. I never thought it would be needed in developed countries,” she says. If only.

Fools and their money

It is a “well-established fact” that “a substantial proportion of the general public in the English-speaking world is ignorant of finance,” writes Niall Ferguson, an historian at Harvard University, in his forthcoming book about the history of finance, “The Ascent of Money”. He produces a long list of evidence to support this conclusion. According to one survey last year, four in ten American credit-card holders do not pay the full amount due every month on the credit card they use most often, despite the punitive interest rates charged by credit-card companies. Nearly one-third said they had no idea what the interest rate on their credit card was.

There is similar evidence elsewhere. For instance, a survey in 2004 by Cambridge University and Prudential, a big insurer, found that some 9m Britons are “financially phobic”, meaning that “they shy away from anything to do with financial information, from bank statements to savings accounts to life assurance.” Research by the British regulator, the Financial Services Authority, found that one-quarter of adults did not realise that their pensions were invested in the stockmarket.

Financial illiteracy is not limited to subprime mortgage borrowers, then; it is pervasive in all age groups, income brackets and countries. “Subprime is a mere symptom,” says Mr Ferguson, noting that many of the students he has taught in the “best universities in the world, including MBA programmes, don't even know the difference between the nominal and real interest rate.” This problem is more pressing than ever, he adds, because governments and businesses have pushed more of the responsibility for financial well-being onto individuals, whether by encouraging homeownership or by promoting personally-managed retirement accounts rather than defined-benefit pensions.

The education system deserves much of the blame, says Mr Ferguson, who recalls having learnt nothing about personal finance at school in Scotland. In the 2007 survey of American credit-card holders, over half of the respondents said they had learnt “not too much” or “nothing at all” about finance at school.

Americans still leave school not knowing much about money. A sample of high-school pupils aged 17 or 18 gave correct answers to barely half of a set of questions about personal finance and economics posed in 2006 by researchers at the State University of New York, Buffalo. Less than one-quarter knew that income tax could be levied on interest earned in a savings account. Three-fifths did not know the difference between a company pension, Social Security and a 401(k) savings account.

The same survey, undertaken every two years for Jump$tart, a coalition of 180 organisations in America that promote financial literacy, found that one in six had taken part in a course dedicated to personal finance. A further one-third said they had learnt a bit from studying other subjects, such as business or economics. Laura Levine, the head of Jump$tart and a member of Mr Bush's financial-literacy council, says things are moving in the right direction, but that progress is slow. The results of the 2008 survey, which are unlikely to show much change, are due to be published on April 9th.

At present only three American states require that students take a course in personal finance. Another 15 insist that it be incorporated in other courses. Beyond that, it is a case of persuading schools one at a time. “Personal-finance education is not a hard sell conceptually,” says Ms Levine, “but only when it comes to getting it prioritised.” School principals will usually agree that financial literacy is worth teaching, but they are reluctant to give it time and resources.

Even when personal finance is taught, the right lessons are not necessarily learnt. “Wherever you look in America or the OECD, classes in financial literacy don't do much good,” says Lewis Mandell, an economist at Buffalo. “As an educator, I'd like to believe you can teach people to do anything right, but clearly the way we are going about teaching personal finance needs to be improved.”

To Mr Mandell's frustration, the only classroom method that seems consistently to raise financial literacy among high-school pupils is playing a stockmarket-investing game—which rewards taking high-risk bets. Most other approaches tend to show only short-term increases in financial literacy, he says.

According to Mr Mandell, one problem is that if financial literacy is taught, it tends to be before a student's final year—before she has faced any important financial decisions, such as buying a car or taking out a credit card. Another is that teachers are often financially illiterate, too. Financial literacy may be less about acquiring knowledge than forming good habits, something that is arguably better done before high school, let alone adulthood.

This is where Aflatoun comes in. Ms Billimoria encountered a great deal of scepticism when she developed her financial-literacy programme for six- to 14-year-olds. Yet she was convinced that starting with youngsters would be more effective, because that is “when their concept of themselves is developing and by 14 most of their habits have formed.”

An important part of the teaching is getting the children to start saving, ideally by opening bank accounts. Typically, they have only tiny amounts, but this is enough to get them used to handling money properly. At first this faced a lot of resistance, as people asked, “How can young children handle money?” recalls Ms Billimoria, but “it soon caught on and parents started giving children money to save.” To demonstrate its broad applicability, Aflatoun was piloted in economies beset by different difficulties. Zimbabwe, for example, was selected for its astronomical inflation rate. The course was adapted to encourage children to save by buying assets such as pencils, which, unlike the country's money, could be a store of value.

A nudge in the right direction

“The depressing truth is that financial literacy is impossible, at least for many of the big financial decisions all of us have to take,” says Richard Thaler, a behavioural economist at the University of Chicago. Aptly for someone who has built his career on the study of irrational financial behaviour, Mr Thaler admits that even he finds it hard to know the right thing to do. “If these things are perplexing to people with PhDs in economics, financial literacy is not the right road to go down.”

Instead, policymakers should “focus on making the world easier”, he argues in a new book, “Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth and Happiness”, written with Cass Sunstein, a law professor (and an adviser to Barack Obama). By this he means defining more carefully and simply the financial choices that people have to make, and building “sensible default options” into the design of financial products, so that the do-nothing option is “financially literate”. Today, the best choice typically requires some working out and an active decision.

This does not mean that the same choice is right for everyone. The growing complexity of financial choices in part reflects remarkable innovation, much of which has benefited consumers. As Operation HOPE's Mr Bryant points out, thanks to the availability of subprime mortgages, “homeownership has lifted many poor people out of poverty; the challenge is to make the product better.”

Sweden's system of saving for old age contains an example of what Mr Thaler means. It offers Swedes a choice of funds to invest in, but includes a well-designed low-cost default option, which has become the choice of 90% of the people. The same approach might be taken to America's company 401(k) retirement plans, in which today's choices require a high degree of financial literacy. Employees might also be automatically enrolled in savings plans, with a right to opt out, instead of today's under-used opt-ins.

Mr Thaler deserves to be taken seriously, as one of his earlier attempts to apply behavioural economics to saving has had impressive results. Recognising that people find it harder to save money they already possess than to promise to put aside what they might have one day, he designed the Save More Tomorrow scheme, which gets people to commit themselves to saving a slice of any future pay increases. Where implemented, the plan has already brought about sharp increases in saving rates.

Another idea would make it easier for people to choose a suitable credit card, by obliging card companies to supply customers with two downloadable files, perhaps once a year. One would explain the issuer's charging rules; the other would list the charges the consumer has actually incurred. The consumer could then upload this to one of several websites that Mr Thaler believes would soon appear. With one click, the most suitable card would be recommended. A similar system could work for America's Medicare prescription programme, in which preliminary research suggests that matching the drugs a person needs with the right insurance plan would save on average $700 a year, he says.

Better product design and financial education need not be alternatives, points out Mr Mandell. They can work in tandem. He is enthusiastic about schemes such as the Child Trust Funds introduced in Britain. These “baby bonds” give every child a fund that matures at adulthood, letting everyone start out with a nest-egg. Mr Mandell is particularly excited by the curriculum being designed to be taught in conjunction with these funds, starting when children reach the age of seven. “Teachers will be able to talk about money realistically, because the kids will have ownership of wealth.”

If you can make it there

One of the most interesting attempts to combine teaching and superior products is taking place in New York, championed by a mayor, Michael Bloomberg, who made his fortune selling financial information. He has created an Office of Financial Empowerment, which is trying to use the powers of government to promote both financial education and better design of financial products.

The city's regulatory powers mean that it can crack down on firms that exploit financial literacy, and educate the public at the same time, says Jonathan Mintz, New York's Commissioner of Consumer Affairs. It has found that many tax-preparation agencies are offering “rapid refunds” which, as many consumers do not realise, are in fact loans in anticipation of refunds. Its publicity blitz about these loans led to coverage on news programmes “in 22 states and Canada”, allowing the city to promote the message that “anyone promising a tax refund within two days is selling a loan—don't do it.”

Another initiative is to use the city's system of helping people to apply for the earned income-tax credit as a chance to encourage them to open a bank account. As well as explaining to applicants the importance of saving, the city is working with banks to offer carefully designed accounts, and has even persuaded some philanthropists to provide matching funds for the first $250 someone saves. “You are not just educating me, you are allowing me to nod my head and say yes, and get a windfall,” says Mr Mintz. “Financial education is much more effective when it is connected to something real that is happening.”

With Miami, San Antonio, San Francisco, Savannah and Seattle, New York has formed the Cities for Financial Empowerment Coalition, which met for the first time to share ideas on March 18th. There was general agreement that education and better product design should go hand in hand. Most big banks have started to sponsor financial-literacy efforts, if only to cover their backs. However, Mr Mandell remarks, by increasing the charges for bank accounts with only small balances they have in effect deprived children of what was traditionally the best practical educational tool, an account of their own.

Indeed, one of the biggest problems may be the illiteracy of financial-service firms, which often fail to provide the products that poor consumers most want. That, at least, seems to be the conclusion of a recent survey in two of New York's poorer neighbourhoods. Many people were using fringe financial products such as pay-day loans or money orders rather than the services of mainstream banks.

The mainstream financial providers are “missing genuine markets”, says Mr Mintz. “One of the open secrets in this industry is that when people are engaged in behaviour that seems irrational, often it has a rational basis.” Which only goes to show that consumers are sometimes only as literate as the products the financial-services industry chooses to sell them.

Mr Bryant makes the same point more colourfully, noting that some of the first people to be hit by the subprime-mortgage crisis were the very brokers who had sold people inappropriate mortgages. Having drunk their own Kool-Aid, they found themselves with enormous debts and no job. “It takes less credentials to be a mortgage broker than a pimp on a street corner in Harlem,” he says. “Because a pimp needs references.”

 

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新学年,心想事成

      才第二周上班,但已经感觉和年前接上轨了,大学同学发信息问我是否有“过节疲倦感”和“上班第一天综合症”,很奇怪,丝毫没有,第一天来就立刻进入了状态。很高兴,为自己。

      年前公司内部进行了7 Habits的培训,这是加入JA后第二次接受7 Habits培训,这一次感悟非常深,对组织,对工作,对和自己朝夕相处的兄弟姐妹们,实实在在地从工作环境中,从同事身上感受到了快乐和充实,这种感觉真好!

      新的一年开始了,新的学期也开始了,祝愿自己心想事成!

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布拉格之旅漫想

      晚上回到家,打开邮箱忽然看到老师发给我的照片,我都不知道啥时拍摄的。每张照片还有一句描述,我不由自主地开心笑了。想起前几天与学生和老师前往布拉格参赛的整个过程,很丰富,很充实。本想将照片上载到博客里,结果失败了:(

      人在旅途,所学所获,实非语言所能详细描述。与学生和老师相伴的每一时每一刻都是那么有意思,在机场办理手续时,身后没人看护行李包,我招了半天手,他们却没看到,我一着急就吼了他们两句,他们不理会,赶紧帮我看包;二中的祝梦公总是陪着我一起寻找办手续的地方,等我找到了他就跑去叫其他人;人大附中的赵弥一路帮我看护着摄像机和照相机,帮我提着行李包,二位老师总是尽量分担着我的工作,不断叮嘱学生注意事项。。。。。。在路上,你才能充分享受到一支和谐队伍所带来的乐趣,尽管大家因为第一次出远门不清楚不同的文化和过程,但团队之间的配合和协助使我们14个小时的旅程轻松易过。

      与不同国家的学生、老师、JA工作人员以及JA各国董事的交流,对我们所有人都是一次难得的经验,短短几天的所得让我意识到这决不是一次普通的比赛。我抓紧时间和其他国家的JA工作人员,老师,学生交流,询问他们的情况,借到“它山之石“。怎么样让更多的中学生在高考的大环境下更早地了解经济商业知识,更早地清楚自己未来的方向,是我的工作动力,也是我和组织共同的mission,更多地了解NGO,更好地了解志愿者的心理,邀请更多的、有着丰富教学经验的老师加入到我们队伍里来,一路上占据着我的大脑。

       尤其今天培训时,看到招募高中企业志愿者如此艰难,我快速地转动着自己的大脑。有几位志愿者来问我大学课程和高中课程的授课时间,当我告诉他们高中课程全部是周一到周五,而且每学期平均十次课时,他们抱歉地对我说,由于工作时间原因,他们还是要选择大学课程。我无奈而又期望地拍拍他们的肩,说:舍不得让你们走!一边与他们一起大笑,一边心里狠狠地对自己说:自我鼓励一下,绝对没问题。

       当理想和现实出现差距,我期望通过行动去超越。The more I know, the more I dare.  我相信无论工作和生活,都像这次旅程。用心去度过,去体会。

            

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07秋第一次志愿者培训

      今天是培训07秋高中课程志愿者的第一天。早上不到6点钟醒来,眼未睁开,已闻窗外雨声,虽然空气清新凉爽,但我想着今天的培训,心中暗暗叹到:今天能来者有几多?

      上午是《学生公司》课程培训,一共来了11位嘉宾,一位高二学生,来了解JA课程;5位高中老师,还有5位志愿者。对来参加培训的人,我有一股发自内心的敬佩,大周末早上,又下雨,还来这么远的地方培训,我无法不敬佩他们。community上报名的人近30名,真正来培训的人有1/3(来的人里面又有一半是教师),而来培训的人里面有几位能去上课,我心里没底。我只知道我还要再组织一次《学生公司》志愿者的培训。吃午饭时,我乐观地对自己说:我喜欢做training,感谢老天又给了我一次机会能够在众人面前忽悠,难得。

       下午MESE培训,俺那叫一高兴啊,一共来了26人,虽然网上报名的近70人,但我心里乐开了花。我花了半小时兢兢业业地

介绍了JA后,就将大把宝贵的时间让给了模拟。从2点10分开始,我们一共做了8轮模拟,我看到志愿者们的眼睛都战斗得冒烟了,别说高中生喜欢,这帮大孩子们都如此认真,如此较劲地算着、画着。8轮之后,第一名和最后一名的公司“高层”分别分享了胜利和失败的心得与经验,然后大家又与我讨论开课的学校,授课的经验,提建议,等我们从培训现场出来后已经6点了,志愿者又开车将我的打印机和电脑送回办公室。

       回到家里虽然快8点了,心里却非常温暖踏实,虽然明天去办公室有一大堆工作等着我,但心里已经计划好工作的顺序。有一种稳定,有一种强大,在心里。我喜欢这种朴素的感觉,喜欢与志愿者,与老师,与学生之间朴素的交流。

       祝志愿者快乐!祝自己快乐!

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收获来自事业起航——分享Albert谢的经验

20日北工大通州区的实验学院有个事业起航的workshop,我作为志愿者去参加。21Albert谢在北航有2个事业起航的课,一个是常规课,一个是seminar。我作为听课者去参加。

 

一个是在本职工作上的收获:不同学生群体的不同需求及其差异性,提高大学生的协调组织能力,与志愿者课下的沟通。最重要的是,在听课的过程中,志愿者真诚的经验分享带给我这个学生巨大的体会和收获。

 

Albertseminar中从自己的经历出发,总结归纳自己的体会和领悟,与学生共享。我受益匪浅:

 

Well prepared:很多人抱怨为什么自己总是生不逢时,为什么别人把机会抢走,而不落在自己身上。每一次机会来临时,你是否准备好决定着你是否抓得住,而每一次是否抓得住都影响着人生的发展。对这个Well prepared可能每个人又会有不同的理解,而我个人的体会是“修心”,即将精力和能量集中在修炼自己的内心,包括不断学习和提高技能。

 

 海纳百川,厚积薄发。这是我对Albert讲述自己11年大学教师经历的体会。在自己的工作领域内不断吸收不断学习,不断挑战自己接受新任务,知识不会白学,你不知道什么时候它们将派上用场,同时机会也会在你挑战自己不断尝试的过程中,与你相逢携手。

 

“骑牛找马”, 在事业发展中,职业规划不是一条直线,“骑牛”体现出“行”,而不是坐等,在这个过程中还会碰到“毛驴”,可以考虑“骑驴”来追赶千里马。有时候在骑马时,还会出现“马死”现象,那我们要“马死落地行”,调整自己的心态,重新回到地面上来,步行前进。

 

每天做一件自己不喜欢的事。生活中有太多的“不喜欢”,不喜欢运动是因为累,不喜欢早起是因为被窝舒服,不喜欢改变习惯,是因为改变太痛苦。。。。。。其实喜欢和不喜欢都是自己给了自己一个理由。改变一下,挑战自己,突然发现,原来出一身汗之后是那么舒服,早起后的空气是那么凉爽清新。。。。。。

 

总是躲避困难,幻想轻松过一生的时候,也许你会发现生活总是为难你;而当你认真勇敢对待人生时,却意外发现生活很轻松。

 

Albert最后一张Slides是一条伸向远方的路,出发点是Today,延伸的远处是Future,从Today出发的我们要清晰自己身上的装备:技能,经历,知识等,同时我们要清晰自己往哪里去,而中间会有各种各样的境况发生。我们可能需要不断调整自己,甚至曲折,但走完路程到达远方是我们的终极目标。写到这,我忽然想起唐僧说:“贫僧从东土大唐来,要到那西方取经”。而在《爱丽丝梦游仙境》中,有这么一段话:

 

爱丽丝:请问我该走哪条路?

路人:请问你要到哪里?

爱丽丝:我不知道。

路人:那么走哪条路又有什么区别呢?

 

Q&A阶段,有个学生问:TodayFuture我都明白,只是我现在不知道自己要走向哪里,不清楚自己想要什么。Albert回答说,看看身边有很多人在不断地更换,有的人在这种不断更换中找到了自己想要的,有的人就像浮萍一样不断漂,漂到哪算哪。我们不能说一种就比另一种更好,这和每个人的Value紧密相关。

 

还有个学生问:现在社会上对80后的评价很多,希望听您给我们一些建议,看我们有哪些需要向80前学习的地方。Albert说,希望80后能够不断提高自己的韧性;2015年时,80后的人大概在35岁,正是社会的中坚力量,将进入各个机构的高层,那时社会发展成什么样子,要看这一代人的品质了。

 

    吾将上下而求索。。。

 

发布者 由 Phoenix1 篇评论

打字软件成精了

      我家丁丁伏案工作时忽转身惊叹:“怪了,微软拼音刚安装时敲打‘que ren’即出来‘确认’二字,哪想经过一段时间的训练,现在只要敲打此拼音即刻出来‘缺人’二字”。

      我暴寒,无语。只求再过一阵子,丁丁只要一敲打此拼音,即出来“亲人”二字才好,太有才了!

发布者 由 Phoenix0 篇评论

某一天

    应该说我特想写的这个某一天是上一周的,过一周了,还是有写的欲望,机不可失,立刻动手。 

 

    那一天,阳光明媚,轻柔的春风拂过我的脸,惬意啊。为啥这么抒情,是因为我骑车上下班,而且我骑车的那条路是位于北海景山公园和故宫后门之间,也就是五四大街。路上那叫一个舒服啊:太阳暖暖地洒在身上,一边骑着车,一边哼着曲,听着路边树上的鸟唱歌,看着北海公园路边站岗的哨兵,心里很想进入中南海里转转的,但不知从哪儿能钻进去。 

 

    半个多小时就到了办公室,乐滋滋地坐下来,先在本子上写出今天要完成的任务和想法,然后打开电脑,看志愿者报名情况。课程开展尚在路上,且不敢掉以轻心啊,孜孜不倦地查找经受过培训但还没有报名的志愿者名单,我准备一一打电话招募。同时还要想好如何协调各校之间、同一学校志愿者小组之间的人员搭配。 

 

    没一会儿,问询电话热烈开始,鉴于办公室人少,所以我们program team的同志们都是“接线员”,踊跃抢着接电话,我自信地想,退休了年龄大了,可以去做前台。如果那个公司不在乎让老大妈成为公司“门脸”的话。思绪飞了,赶紧回来。电话铃声接连不断,趁着同事接过电话的空档,我赶紧给高中课程的志愿者打电话。 

 

    印象比较深的是,我打通了一个学生志愿者,我和他之间进行了一段有意思的“交锋”。事情起源是有个高中已有几个企业志愿者报名,我看到他也报了这个学校,就和他谈希望他做组长。他的即时反应有些激动,“我知道让我做小组长是因为企业志愿者忙,没时间,我们学生志愿者也忙啊,大家都是志愿者,就应该公平对待,我将有考试也会很忙;再说人家都是工作的人了,谁会听我的呢。”我听完后先吸了一大口气,让自己保持平静的心态,避免对此刺激情境做任何解释,这样就不会有情绪了。我以商量的语气告诉他可以换一个都是学生志愿者的学校,这样会感觉更公平些。他说一会儿就要上课了,先考虑考虑再说吧。

 

    放下电话之后,我先反省了一下自己之前的想法,我本来想的是与企业志愿者在一起有利于他了解企业方面的情况,同时做小组长也能提高协调和组织能力。但对方没有考虑这个。鉴于这个学校还有另外一名志愿者也在申请,我征询这名志愿者的意见,他痛快地答应了,一个团队组成了。我将团队和学校情况一起发给了小组成员与老师。

 

    中午,电话响了,是早上的那个学生志愿者。他说经过考虑希望还是加入这个学校。我告诉他,这个学校就在刚才已经有另外一个企业志愿者加入,共4个人了,他需要换一所学校。他的声音立刻激动起来,你们怎么这样,不尊重人,我就选这所学校,我没给你答复,但不代表我不参加啊。。。。。。我再次吸了一大口气,忽略当前的情境刺激,想象着电话那头他的激动,我平静地对他说,我不想与你辩论,如果你觉得与企业志愿者在一起没问题,我尊重你的选择。但实际上我心里担心的是:站在讲台上面对学生时,会随时接受来自学生的挑战,有些可能是我们根本意想不到的,如果我们不能控制自己的情绪,我很不放心让这样的志愿者去面对我们的学生。想到这,我委婉地告诉了他我对他容易激动的担心。从电话上能听出来,他的情绪已缓和,因为自己的好朋友从这个学校毕业,所以他想做这个学校的志愿者。他说最坏的打算就是企业志愿者都特忙,没时间上课,那他就自己上所有的课。我一听,嗯,不错,这小伙子转过弯来啦。我告诉他小组长已选定,人特好,我一会儿会把他的信息发给团队成员。接下来我们的谈话就缓和了。

 

    放下电话后,我先通知组长有个热情的志愿者期待加入他们。然后给这个学生发了一个邮件,在信中我希望他将拥有一个愉快的志愿之旅。很快,大家就收到了小组长对他的欢迎信。我也收到了他的邮件,他为自己刚才的激动说道歉。我相信他会成为一个负责的志愿者!

 

    对我来说,这是个突发事件,但也比较具有代表性。随着志愿者群的日渐增多,如何满足不同志愿者的不同需求,同时协调好志愿者的分布,是个挑战。而让每个志愿者都能感觉到我们在关注着他们,挑战就更大了。毕竟人手有限,课程很多,学校很多,有时候难免照顾不过来,但将心比心,志愿者意识到我们对他们关注时,那种感觉很好。这是我们在努力寻求做的事,相信也会有更多的志愿者加入我们来互助,比如我们目前庞大的“JA志愿者群”,还有“JA搓饭团”等分支机构,已经如春芽一般开始了“民间”活动和信息共享。

 

    很快,我又投入到接下来的志愿者协调工作中。每一个协调工作的完成,都享受一次愉快谈话。我心里祝愿每个志愿者,尤其是第一次参加的志愿者将拥有一次愉快的经历。

 

    一天很快过去,天擦黑了,我收拾收拾动身回家。路上,春天的温暖依然洋溢。又经过景山和北海了,看到北海公园路边栅栏外有so many的钓鱼者一字排开在等着鱼上钩呢。嘿,多悠闲啊,等过几天人会更多。这也是街头一景。哪天我也来加入一下。

 

    享受某一天!
发布者 由 Phoenix2 篇评论

我与HPGBC2007同行

2007115日(美国时间)JA WORLDWIDE公布,HPGBC2007将从200725日开始拉开帷幕。第一次与此赛事同行,我颇有些忐忑不安。

此次比赛北京共有21支队伍报名。北京时间25日,我们收到来自JA WORLDWIDE发来的各支队伍的用户名和密码,我赶紧以短信形式发给各组组长。26日,比赛正式开始。我人坐在办公室里培训,可心里却不由自主老想到这些孩子。我将手机调成震动,虽然不好意思接电话,但如果来了信息,我能第一时间感觉。

怕啥来啥,北京四中老师发信息说,他们其中一支队伍无法登陆。俺盼呀盼呀,中午休息时间到了,赶紧发信给美国,陈述事实,期望解决方案。时差是件神奇的事,让你有功夫缓一缓。结果第二天一大早,打开美国的答复,晕倒!对方回复问‘What do you mean you cann’t log in with xxx(user name) and xxx(password)?’没办法,赶紧再给耿直得可爱的美国人发第二封信,详细解释!第三天,我们收到美国发来的信,说他们已经和比赛队伍联系了。我赶紧问老师,答:未收到任何邮件。孩子们着急,我也着急啊。设身处地的想,孩子们多着急啊。按照规定,北京时间28日晚上12点以前,每支队伍必须递交交决策报告,可学生们根本无法进入比赛信息公布区。无奈,一边给美国人再次写信,发传真,祈祷那边的工作人员早睡早起早上班,一边联系老师,将美国那边负责人的邮箱和电话都发给了他,希望他安慰孩子们不要着急。

已经到了北京时间28日晚上十点半了,还是没有收到美国的答复,我拨打电话,发现无人接听,留言!然后继续等待,中间放着电脑,一边是电话,一边是手机,老师不时发信息告诉我他那边还没有接收到邮件,忽然有一瞬间,我恍惚觉得自己在上演《24小时》。指针接近十一点时,我的生物钟已开始起作用,眼皮都有些打架了。我拿起电话,正准备再拨打,忽然手机响了,老师的信息:打通了电话,已经收到了新的用户名和密码,成功递交决策。您辛苦了,晚安!

顿时欣喜若狂,一边回信息与老师共勉,一边打着呵欠去见周公了。

9日早上,高高兴兴上班。进入办公室刚一会儿,又有学生电话过来。原来一支大学队伍被分配到2个小组里,这帮孩子遵守游戏规则,主动写信告诉美国主办方,美国那边很快就删除了一个小组,只不过是把学生们已做好决策的第一小组删除,并发信告知了学生。学生们很快又做了第二小组的决策并递交。学生们今天一大早打开决策区,发现自己的排名很落后,原来第二组的决策莫名其妙地换成了已删除的第一组的决策。学生们给我打电话反映此情况,同事根据以往经验猜测,担心主办方很有可能对此置之不理,因为从组织者角度出发,从小组内其他成员的共同利益出发,这是一个很难要求主办方为某个小组做什么。

我虽然满怀希望,希望主办方承认自己的错误,但还是以平静的口吻劝说学生们要做好一旦对方置之不理,就不得不被淘汰的心理准备。

10日早上6点,我就收到学生们的信息:李老师,我们已收到JA美国的回复,转发给您,请查收。加油!谢谢您!我一下子毫无睡意,起床上网查收邮件。看到了JA WORLDWIDE的答复,他们在信里首先向学生们道歉,并解释说由于他们第一次使用JA TITAN进行比赛而出现了错误,为了弥补给学生们带来的困扰,他们将让这支队伍自动进入下一轮。但是,他们很遗憾无法为学生更改决策。

通过比赛初期这两段小插曲,我总结了一下这次比赛过程出现的小问题和自己的收获。比赛中出现了JA WORLDWIDE(游戏组织者、规则制订者和赛事终结者),我(JA WORLDWIDE和中国学生赛手们的协调者,也是北京区的组织者和学生们的心理依靠),学生和老师(身临其境趟水者),一开始我们相互不清楚彼此情况,不清楚比赛规则,不了解比赛用的JA TITAN会带来什么样的比赛过程和结果,我也不太清楚比赛需要的选手信息详细到何种程度,因此前期的工作安排和组织上,出现了一定程度的反复和做无用功,所以及时总结记录有利于下一次活动的组织和进展。

同时在问题解决上面,老师和学生们的执着感动着我。虽然比赛对学生、对我意义不同,但我在学生们看到了自己年少时的影子,或者说更加深了对“执着”的理解。同时,我对自己的工作也有了不一样的感受和理解。生活中的感动其实很多,让自己时不时地感动并不会受伤,相反心灵更饱满,更充盈。

我关注着赛事的进展,与我周围的老师和同学们一起,学习着!

发布者 由 Phoenix1 篇评论