Orient and Train

By admin ,

Value Proposition

Training transforms motivated recruits into competent, confident, and reliable humanitarians who are ready to serve. This capability ensures that volunteers have the knowledge and skills necessary to safely and effectively deliver the National Society's (NS's) mission, maintaining the quality and consistency of services while upholding the Movement’s Fundamental Principles.

Purpose & Strategic Importance

Effective volunteer training is strategically vital for three main reasons:

  • Quality and Standardisation: It ensures that all humanitarian actions—from basic first aid to complex disaster response—meet consistent, high-quality standards across all branches and operations.
  • Protection and Safety (Duty of Care): Training in areas like safety, protection, and the Code of Conduct is non-negotiable, protecting both the volunteer and the vulnerable people they serve, thereby fulfilling the NS's duty of care.
  • Capacity Building: It enables the NS to build and maintain a reservoir of specialized skills (e.g., logistics, psychosocial support, or community engagement) that can be rapidly mobilized for both development work and emergencies.

Without robust training, the risk of ineffective, inconsistent, or potentially harmful actions by volunteers increases, undermining the credibility and operational capacity of the NS.

Scope 

This capability covers the full cycle of volunteer learning and development, from initial basic training to advanced, specialized modules.

Core Activities Included:

  • Needs Assessment: Identifying the specific knowledge and skill gaps for different volunteer roles.
  • Curriculum Development: Designing and updating training content, methodologies (online, in-person, blended), and materials.
  • Delivery and Management: Implementing training sessions and managing the logistics, resources, and scheduling.
  • Certification and Accreditation: Assessing volunteer competence and formally certifying their readiness for specific roles or deployments.
  • Training of Trainers (ToT): Developing a corps of qualified volunteers and staff to deliver training consistently across the organization.

Boundaries: This capability focuses on learning and certification related to skills and organizational knowledge. It relies on the Recruit capability for new volunteer intake and feeds directly into the Deploy capability for activation and assignment.

Process & Key Activities (Learning and Development Cycle)

The training process ensures a continuous loop of learning, assessment, and application.

  • Assess: Review current volunteer roles, identify competency gaps, and conduct learning needs assessments based on programme and operational requirements.
  • Design & Develop: Create standardized curricula, learning materials, and assessment tools, ensuring alignment with national standards and IFRC guidelines (e.g., Code of Conduct, PGI principles).
  • Deliver: Conduct engaging training sessions, utilizing diverse methods appropriate for different volunteer profiles and contexts (e.g., in-person simulation for disaster response; digital modules for policy awareness).
  • Evaluate: Assess volunteers' learning (through tests, practical exercises) and evaluate the training program's effectiveness (through feedback surveys) to ensure it achieves desired outcomes.
  • Certify & Register: Formally record successful completion and update the volunteer management system (VDMS) with new competencies, making the volunteer eligible for deployment.

Results

The primary aim is a well-trained, verified, and ready workforce.

  • Outputs (Deliverables):
    • Standardized and updated training curricula and modules (e.g., Code of Conduct, Basic First Aid).
    • Completed Training of Trainers (ToT) courses and an expanded pool of qualified instructors.
    • Certificates of competency issued to volunteers.
    • Updated VDMS records listing current volunteer skills and training history.
  • Outcomes (Short- to Mid-term Effects):
    • Improved volunteer knowledge and application of Movement principles and safety protocols.
    • Greater consistency and quality of service delivery across branches.
    • Increased volunteer confidence and readiness for deployment.
    • Reduced risk of incidents related to lack of training or non-compliance.
  • Impact (Long-term Strategic Change):
    • A highly professional and specialized volunteer workforce.
    • Enhanced organizational reputation and trust based on service quality.
    • Strengthened overall National Society capacity and resilience.

Enablers & Resources

Success relies on robust institutional support for learning.

  • People & Roles:
    • Training and Development Officers: Design, manage, and coordinate all learning programmes.
    • Qualified Trainers (Staff and Volunteers): Deliver training and mentor volunteers.
    • Subject Matter Experts (SMEs): Provide technical content for specialized courses (e.g., health, PMER).
    • Volunteer Manager: Integrates training into the overall volunteer engagement strategy.
  • Governance & Policies:
    • Dedicated Training Policy: Defines mandatory training, certification standards, and update cycles.
    • Integration of training requirements into role descriptions and annual performance reviews.
    • Formal recognition of certified skills in the NS structure.
  • Data & Tools:
    • Volunteer Data Management Systems (VDMS): Essential for tracking training completion, competencies, and expiration dates.
    • Learning Management Systems (LMS): Platforms for hosting e-learning modules and blended courses.
    • Simulation & Practical Tools: Equipment and venues for realistic, hands-on training (e.g., first aid dummies, field simulation kits).
  • Facilities & Funding:
    • Dedicated budgets for training materials, trainers' time, and venue costs.
    • Accessible, well-equipped training venues and classrooms.

Examples & Innovative Practices

National Societies employ diverse, flexible methods to ensure training is accessible and relevant.

  • E-Learning and Digital Tools: Many NSs use e-learning modules for mandatory training (like PGI and Code of Conduct) to ensure wide, consistent coverage, freeing up in-person time for practical skills.
  • Simulation Training: The use of realistic scenario simulations (often in disaster-prone NSs) to practice coordinated response, decision-making, and teamwork under pressure.
  • Competency-Based Certification: Focusing training and assessment on achieving a measurable level of competence for a specific role, rather than simply tracking hours spent in a classroom.
  • Peer-to-Peer Learning: Utilizing experienced, certified volunteers as trainers and mentors, which enhances organizational culture and ensures the relevance of training content.

Variations in Practice

Training must be adapted to context.

  • Emergencies: Training is rapidly streamlined during a crisis to provide spontaneous volunteers with essential, safety-critical knowledge (e.g., duty of care, basic principles) before immediate deployment.
  • Rural/Remote Areas: NSs rely heavily on mobile training teams and low-tech materials (e.g., printed guides, radio communication) to overcome connectivity challenges.
  • Youth Engagement: Utilising gamification and social media tools to deliver engaging training content that appeals to younger volunteers.

Common Challenges

Maintaining quality and coverage is difficult due to several common challenges.

  • Resource Constraints: Lack of dedicated funding for materials, travel, and instructor time.
  • Volunteer Time: Difficulty scheduling required training around volunteers' professional and personal commitments.
  • Inconsistent Quality: Varying competency among trainers or lack of standardized curricula across different branches.
  • Tracking and Verification: Inadequate systems (or lack of VDMS) to track who is certified and when re-certification is needed.
  • Relevance: Ensuring training content remains relevant to evolving operational contexts and new humanitarian needs.
Submitted on

Training depends on the right people: trainers, coordinators, mentors, and peers who bring content to life and support volunteers throughout their learning journey. Investing in people ensures training is credible, practical, and inspiring.

Key elements

  • National Training Coordinator overseeing framework and delivery.
  • Branch trainers and facilitators (often experienced volunteers).
  • Subject matter experts (e.g. health, disaster response, psychosocial support).
  • Peer educators and youth leaders.
  • Mentors for ongoing support after training.

Training is not only about materials — it is about people teaching, guiding, and inspiring others. By mobilising experienced staff and volunteers, NSs build a sustainable training culture.

Examples

  • Kenya RC: Youth peer trainers cascade first aid to communities.
  • IFRC Learning Platform: Access to global trainers and facilitators.
Submitted on

Provide peer support and practical insights to enhance learning and skill development.

Key Competencies

Volunteer Empowerment & Innovation – Skills to encourage and guide volunteers in self-organizing and designing their own initiatives.

Engagement & Motivation Strategies – Techniques for maintaining volunteer interest and commitment between deployments.

Submitted on
Description

Oversees the planning, delivery, and evaluation of volunteer training programs.

Key Competencies

Training Design & Facilitation – Ability to develop and deliver engaging, needs-based training sessions.

Adult Learning & Capacity Building – Understanding of effective adult education principles to maximize volunteer learning.

Technical Expertise – Subject-matter knowledge in specialized areas such as emergency response, health, and leadership development.

Volunteer Empowerment & Innovation – Skills to encourage and guide volunteers in self-organizing and designing their own initiatives.

Engagement & Motivation Strategies – Techniques for maintaining volunteer interest and commitment between deployments.

Submitted on
Description

Supports volunteers in self-organizing and designing their own activities, in line with new forms of volunteering.

Key Competencies

Training Design & Facilitation – Ability to develop and deliver engaging, needs-based training sessions.

Adult Learning & Capacity Building – Understanding of effective adult education principles to maximize volunteer learning.

Volunteer Empowerment & Innovation – Skills to encourage and guide volunteers in self-organizing and designing their own initiatives.

Engagement & Motivation Strategies – Techniques for maintaining volunteer interest and commitment between deployments.

Submitted on
Description

Conducts orientation and initial training sessions on Red Cross Fundamental Principles, emblem use, history, and organizational activities.

Key Competencies

Training & Orientation Delivery – Ability to provide engaging and informative sessions on Red Cross principles, emblem use, and volunteer roles.

Submitted on
Description

The Branch Volunteer Coordinator, or focal point, is the face of the National Society for many volunteers. They handle day-to-day tasks like onboarding, check-ins, training arrangements, and recognition events. This role is critical for building trust: coordinators are often the first point of contact for new recruits and the steady support for experienced volunteers.

Key aspects

  • Conducts recruitment, induction, and orientation at the branch/community level.
  • Maintains volunteer records, attendance, and feedback.
  • Organises recognition events and acts as a liaison between volunteers and headquarters.

Branch coordinators set the tone of the volunteer experience. Their ability to listen, solve problems, and motivate makes the difference between a volunteer who stays engaged and one who quietly drops out. Investing in coordinators means investing in the heart of volunteer retention.

Submitted on

Strong governance ensures training is prioritised, resourced, and aligned with organisational strategy. Governance also safeguards quality and accountability across branches.

Key elements

  • National training policy linked to volunteer development and HR strategies.
  • Governance oversight of training standards and equity.
  • Legal compliance for certifications (e.g. first aid recognised by authorities).
  • Dedicated budget lines for volunteer training.

Governance makes training sustainable by embedding it into NS strategy and policy. Without this, training risks being ad hoc and uneven.

Examples

  • Spanish RC: Governance board requires annual training plan reporting.
  • Kenya RC: Training policies ensure standardisation across branches.
Submitted on

Volunteering Policy

HR Policy

Volunteer regulations

Submitted on

Data provides the foundation for monitoring training needs, tracking completions, and evaluating impact. It ensures training is not random but evidence-based and transparent.

Key elements

  • Volunteer management systems capturing training records.
  • Training needs assessments feeding into data dashboards.
  • Disaggregated data on participation (age, gender, geography).
  • Evaluation data from post-training feedback.

Without good data, NSs cannot plan effectively or demonstrate accountability. Data ensures that training reaches those who need it most and that it improves over time.

Examples

  • ARC Volunteer Connection: Tracks training completions nationwide.
  • VDMS (Kenya RC): Manages volunteer training records and diversity data.
Submitted on

Modern training relies on a mix of physical and digital tools. Technology enables scale, accessibility, and blended approaches that combine in-person and online learning.

Key elements

  • IFRC Learning Platform (digital courses, e-learning modules).
  • National e-learning platforms or apps (e.g. ARC’s Disaster Training).
  • Standardised curricula and manuals (e.g. first aid, disaster response).
  • Recognition systems (digital badges, e-certificates).

The right tools ensure volunteers can learn anywhere, anytime. Technology also standardises quality and provides accessible entry points for all.

Examples

  • ARC: Online Disaster Training modules.
  • IFRC: Learning Platform open to all volunteers globally.
Submitted on
Submitted on

General

  • Branch level training – available in multiple languages and can be used in a modular way i.e., you could just do the communication skills session
  • Online CEA module in the induction to IFRC operations elearning – more focused on operations but a good introduction to CEA that can be done remotely by volunteers

    From the CEA toolkit
  • Tool 9: CEA briefing for new staff and volunteers – can be used to guide verbal briefings, as a handout after a verbal briefing, or shared electronically with new staff/volunteers when they join
  • Tool 10 – Code of Conduct briefing - provides a template briefing that can be provided to staff and volunteers on the Code of Conduct and to spark discussion on what it means for their behaviour in communities
  • Tool 14 – Q&A sheet for volunteers - question and answer (Q&A) sheet supports volunteers and staff to respond to questions commonly asked by community members during assessments, implementation and when programmes are coming to an end
  • Tool 16 – FGD guide - guidance on running an effective focus group discussion (FGD), including organization, roles, and responsibilities
  • Tool 17 – Community meetings tool - guidance on running an effective community meeting, including planning, facilitation, and how to document questions and feedback

    From the feedback kit
  • Feedback kit tool 18 – important skills for effective listening - can be used as part of training of data collectors, as well as a reference document for anyone working with communities and receiving community feedback helps you and your teams to develop your skills about how to best listen to communities
Submitted on

General

  • Branch level training – available in multiple languages and can be used in a modular way i.e., you could just do the communication skills session
  • Online CEA module in the induction to IFRC operations elearning – more focused on operations but a good intro to CEA that can be done remotely by volunteers

    From the CEA toolkit
  • Tool 9: CEA briefing for new staff and volunteers – can be used to guide verbal briefings, as a handout after a verbal briefing, or shared electronically with new staff/volunteers when they join
  • Tool 10 – Code of Conduct briefing - provides a template briefing that can be provided to staff and volunteers on the Code of Conduct and to spark discussion on what it means for their behaviour in communities
  • Tool 14 – Q&A sheet for volunteers - question and answer (Q&A) sheet supports volunteers and staff to respond to questions commonly asked by community members during assessments, implementation and when programmes are coming to an end
  • Tool 16 – FGD guide - guidance on running an effective focus group discussion (FGD), including organization, roles, and responsibilities
  • Tool 17 – Community meetings tool - guidance on running an effective community meeting, including planning, facilitation, and how to document questions and feedback

    From the feedback kit
  • Feedback kit tool 18 – important skills for effective listening - can be used as part of training of data collectors, as well as a reference document for anyone working with communities and receiving community feedback helps you and your teams to develop your skills about how to best listen to communities
Submitted on

This Handbook describes 12 activities that Red Cross and Red Crescent (RCRC) volunteers can easily carry out by themselves using resources already available in the community. The activities are designed to help communities to produce more food and income and to stay safe and healthy in areas where there are challenges such as droughts and floods. Each activity selected is particularly relevant for the local context in Southern and Eastern Africa, but most activities can be done anywhere in the world with some small adjustments.

Submitted on

A number of National Societies spoke about their experiences and their work during a psychosocial support workshop at the IFRC General Assembly in Geneva in November 2011. In sharing stories and lessons learned from past catastrophes and crises, one mes- sage became clear: We in the Red Cross Red Crescent Movement need to be better at training and preparing our staff and volunteers for the important work they do in helping beneficiaries. We also need to be better at taking care of ourselves – and of each other.

Caring for Volunteers: Training Manual was developed to answer these expressed needs. It is designed to complement the PS Centre’s 2012 publication, Caring for Volunteers:A Psychosocial Support Toolkit, which focuses on volunteers’ well-being in situations of crisis or catastrophe. It builds on the tools presented in the toolkit, by providing concrete activities and exercises for implementing psychosocial support for volunteers in various contexts.

Submitted on

This booklet addresses the common situations that volunteers and youth may face at the local level. For example, road accidents, domestic and school violence, common criminality (theft, burglary or robbery) and health problems (quality of water and food, diarrhoea, malaria, stress), as well as what to do before, during and after disaster.
The booklet also provides basic guidance on establishing “Volunteers stay safe” procedures. It aims to inform National Society decision makers – leaders, managers and governance – on how to promote a culture of safety and provide operational security support to volunteers.

Submitted on

Training requires safe, accessible spaces and practical equipment so volunteers can practice and learn effectively. This is especially important for skills like first aid, logistics, and emergency response.

Key elements

  • Branch training rooms and community spaces.
  • Equipment for practical exercises (first aid kits, stretchers, radios, etc.).
  • Safe and accessible facilities for inclusive participation.
  • Partnerships with schools/universities for training venues.

Facilities and equipment make training real. They allow volunteers to practice skills and feel confident before deployment. Investing in spaces and tools is as important as investing in curricula.

Examples

  • Bangladesh RC: Training centres equipped for disaster response simulations.
  • Kenya RC: Branches use schools as training sites during first aid campaigns.

No Guidance enabling resources available.

Join the Community of Practice

You need to be logged in to access community conversations.
Please log in or register to join the discussion and connect with other members.