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The volunteer's return: mutual benefit in community service and lived experience

dc.contributor.authorTilbury, Dane, author
dc.date.accessioned2026-05-11T17:52:59Z
dc.date.issued2026-04-27
dc.description.abstractMost research on volunteering focuses on the people being helped—food banks track meals served, mentoring programs measure grades, animal shelters count adoptions. But what about the volunteers themselves? This thesis flips the question around to ask: What do volunteers gain from service, and how do those documented benefits hold up against real, lived experience? To answer this, I first conducted a literature review of nine academic studies spanning thirty years of research. The review looked at three main types of volunteer benefits: psychological and mental health improvements, social and cultural capital, and professional skills that transfer to the workplace. Then, I wrote a personal reflection chapter comparing the research to my own volunteer experience as president of a high school Unified Sports program, a youth little league coach, a two-year mentor for an at-risk youth through Partners, and a current veterinary assistant. The literature review found solid evidence that volunteering reduces depression, increases life satisfaction, builds social connections, and teaches valuable job skills. My own experience mostly lined up with those findings. But my reflection also uncovered things the research mostly misses: the emotional toll of caring for vulnerable people, the boring hours that still somehow matter, the messy way volunteer relationships often end without closure, and the fact that almost all the studies focus on older adults – not seventeen-year-olds like I was when I started. This thesis matters for public health, psychology, and service-learning programs because it backs up volunteering as a real way to improve mental health. But it also adds something the numbers alone cannot capture: the honest, complicated truth that volunteering does not always feel good. Sometimes it is frustrating or painful. But if you keep showing up, something changes anyway. Not a transaction. A transformation.
dc.format.mediumborn digital
dc.format.mediumStudent works
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10217/244440
dc.languageEnglish
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherColorado State University. Libraries
dc.relation.ispartofHonors Theses
dc.rightsCopyright and other restrictions may apply. User is responsible for compliance with all applicable laws. For information about copyright law, please see https://libguides.colostate.edu/copyright.
dc.subjectvolunteer
dc.titleThe volunteer's return: mutual benefit in community service and lived experience
dc.typeText
dcterms.rights.dplaThis Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights (https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/). You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).
thesis.degree.disciplineHonors
thesis.degree.disciplineNatural Sciences
thesis.degree.grantorColorado State University
thesis.degree.levelUndergraduate
thesis.degree.nameHonors Thesis

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