Your 3-week stay at our partner project
You will spend your first three weeks on the campus of a
small project on the outskirts of the village of Amapurkashi in the state of Uttar Pradesh, northern India.
You will learn about and, wherever possible, take part in the different activities run by the project. You will stay in rooms shared with others from the scheme, and eat simple vegetarian meals with project staff in the campus dining area. You will have the option to join in simple yoga sessions each morning, have basic Hindi lessons and take part in evening discussions about issues of development, history and culture. There will be a trip to buy local clothes to help you fit in.
There is often a day trip to another project or place of interest such as a school in a nearby village. In October and March you can take part in the colourful festivals of Diwali and Holi.
"The lifestyle is great and the college environment both safe and friendly. The evening discussions were excellent, very imformative and enlightening. One of my best moments was dancing with some of the local girls! " - Jo, England, November 2006
Voluntary work
Although it is not a structured volunteer programme, many visitors find they are able to lend a helping hand. Here are some ways they got involved:
- conversational English classes for students
- intensive English lessons with small groups of primary school children
- educational murals and other teaching aids
- sports days
- basic computer training
" My best moment was when I went into the primary school for the second time and realised that the children had learned and remembered what I had taught them the day before!" -
Leonie, England, November 2006
Free time
You will also have a good deal of free time; it's entirely up to you whether you use your time to befriend local staff and students, explore the nearby small town with fellow visitors, sit in on classes in the local school, or just relax and acclimatise to a different pace of life.
Experiences of previous visitors
It is difficult to provide a fixed programme of events for the 3-week period, because it depends so much on what is happening at the project at the time.
But this diary gives you an example of how one project visitor spent his 3 weeks.
For more informal accounts, have a look at some of the blogs by previous visitors.
Your visitor co-ordinator
In Amarpurkashi, you will receive a warm welcome from project staff who will be happy to help you but there is one person whose job it is to look after you. Aarti, the project visitor co-ordinator, is a local graduate who has lived in the village and therefore knows about rural India from first hand experience. She will take you on shopping trips, teach you Hindi, accompany you on other visits and generally be available to help you.
"She showed us all the local places of interest and was available for help when we needed it. She was very patient during Hindi lessons." - Claire, February 2008
After your first 3 weeks:
Visit other projects
During your three weeks you can decide whether you enjoy life in a project and whether you would like to visit another one. IVCS has information on numerous projects across India. These projects do not have any direct links with IVCS but many of them have been visited by other IVCS visitors. Some projects are more suitable for short visits: your role will be that of an observer, gaining a deeper knowledge of grass-roots development work. At other projects, there are opportunities for hands-on volunteering over a longer period.
Get more involved in the Amarpurkashi project
Alternatively, you can remain at (or return to) Amarpurkashi and become more actively involved.
Your role at APK (agreed in consultation with project staff) will depend on your own skills and initiative and on the priorities of the project at the time.
Therefore, it's difficult to predict in advance what volunteer work will be available.
However, teaching English conversation, assisting the primary school teachers, sorting the library and painting murals are tasks that are usually available and actively encouraged.
(Note that the project director reserves the right to decide whether a project visitor may continue to stay in the project; however, he is usually delighted when people choose to stay).
Here are some of the ways visitors have got involved:
- Shelley (a Hindi speaker) spent several weeks researching teaching in the primary school and provided very valuable information which is now being used as the foundation for a new course in teacher training for the primary school teachers.
- Dial (a Hindi speaker and experienced primary school teacher) trained the teachers.
- Greg (a retired IT trainer) taught English in the degree college and trained some local staff in basic computing
It's a good idea to visit one or two other projects (see above) before deciding where to get involved.
.. or do your own thing
A third option is to spend the rest of your time in India as an independent traveller. Your 3 weeks at Amarpurkashi will still have been a valuable experience, and will have given you more confidence to travel in India.
Your "homebase"
Wherever you are in India, you can consider APK as your homebase, and return there for advice
or just for a visit.
A different way of life
India has very specific cultural traditions and etiquette and these should always be respected. Spending time at a development project can be very rewarding but it can also be frustrating. The pace of life is very slow and attitudes and priorities are often very different from those you are used to. You may not have any privacy and you must be willing to fit in and adapt to a very different way of life.
Although our partner project is working to combat injustice, you may still encounter situations you find upsetting, such as gender inequality.
How to apply
click here for application form...
(click here for Word format)
Why choose IVCS?
Our past visitors have chosen IVCS because:
- it is a reliable scheme which has run for many years
- it is affordable for travellers on a low budget
- it is run by a registered charity and all proceeds go to the charity
- there are no paid UK staff and the scheme is run with minimal overheads
- it is a small and friendly organisation; we are happy to answer individual queries from potential visitors
- it is sensitive to local culture and to the needs of our partner project
- the scheme in India is run by our partner project in India, rather than being something imposed upon the project by a Western organisation
- it has an easily-contactable base in the UK
More information
click here to return to the first page describing the scheme
click here to read about the experiences of past visitors