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Answer key
have qualifications or a particular skill.
If you don’t have these, it’s crucial to
consider what sort of impact you can have
as a volunteer. It’s also important to bear
in mind that there are age requirements in
certain countries.
My first volunteer experience was at a
safari park in Thailand. It was rescue work
taking care of birds that had been injured.
Besides learning a lot about the bird’s
names and habits as well as all the various
diseases they get, I also got to know more
about wild cats, as there was a section of
the park dedicated to them.
Teamwork’s vital for all projects, and
working on the project taught me an
invaluable amount about this. I really
developed my abilities in that respect.
I guess it was the biggest takeaway
thing for me.
Basically, when you volunteer you’re there
to get involved, and you’ll have a lot of
fun doing that. You might also pick up
odd things like how to make a fire without
matches, or how to build a hut with the
most basic equipment. I’d built one before
back home with my dad using screws
and nails, so it was a real eye-opener for
me when I was instructed in how to make
one stay up using just string to keep it
together. Volunteer work’s as tiring as any
job, but it can turn out to be a thoroughly
enlightening experience.
With so many organisations offering
volunteering placements abroad, it’s not
easy to determine which project might be
the most ethical, sustainable, or beneficial.
Generally speaking, the longer you stay
the better. Short-term volunteering can
be damaging to communities and it’s
generally advised that it’s not appropriate
to stay less than a month. It’s often said
that a commitment of around 12 weeks
allows enough time for you to integrate
with the local community and deliver useful
work, so bear that in mind.
Your commitment also depends on what
the organisation needs – it might need
help delivering a specific project, such
as reviewing the organisation’s accounts
or budgets, for example. Make sure
you’re working to their time frame, and
not forcing them to adapt to your travel
schedule.
Volunteer work abroad is sometimes
offered by for-profit agencies based
outside the country where the volunteer
work takes place. They can allocate you to
crucial to use as little fuel as possible
out in the depths of space, and there is a
constant search for new types of energy.
But efficiency is important too, and Jenny’s
ingenious software enables vehicles in
space travel at accelerated speeds more
economically, by navigating the obstacles
in space more efficiently.
Some meteorology students have
produced a balloon that’s out of this
world. They’ve created a camera-operated
weather balloon and sent it over 30 km
into the Earth’s atmosphere. The
readings they’ve got so far are incredibly
detailed and could be helpful for weather
forecasting and many other uses. The
photographs taken by the balloon’s
camera are stunning too.
Something that’s attracted media attention
is another type of vehicle – an underwater
rover that can operate in the harshest
conditions. It can explore the ocean depths
where there’s absolutely no light, and it’s
being used to learn about the behaviour
of the most difficult to reach marine life.
There are hopes of taking it to the polar
regions, where scientists hope to find out
more about what might be living there.
It’s been a privilege to chat to scientists
exhibiting here. Their ambitions to find
solutions to the problems on this planet
are wonderful to see. The originality is
extraordinary, though what shines through,
above all, is their attitude. If something
goes wrong, they work on it till they find
an answer.
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