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Find information about:
Education Award
Visit My AmeriCorps and take
care of all issues related to the Education Award. Using My AmeriCorps will also speed up the process
for Loan Forbearance and Interest Accrual. Go to:
https://my.americorps.gov
Find out all about the Education Award
in this handout (PDF).
Got questions about the AmeriCorps Education Award?
Click here to read an Ed Award Chat Transcript that provides
some answers to member questions.
Find out which schools offer a match for the AmeriCorps
Education Award.
Click here or on map below to learn which schools currently
offer a match for the AmeriCorps Education Award.

More on the AmeriCorps Education Award:
More information about Financial Aid:
Employment After the WCC
Preparing for Employment After the WCC
The Job Hunt:
- Research: Use newspapers, websites, and other
resources to learn about employers. Find out about specific
jobs by checking out the Occupational Outlook Handbook
available online at
www.bls.gov/oco. The Handbook lists the following
information about an occupation: training and education
needs, earnings, expected job prospects, typical work duties
and working conditions. Take notes on key jargon used in the
field—use this in your résumé and on job applications.
- Network:
- Attend events that professionals in
your field might also attend. Some examples include academic
presentations, non-profit annual meetings, and fundraisers.
Remember to step outside of your comfort zone and approach
people at these events.
- Contact potential employers. Offer to
volunteer for a day assisting them in the field.
- Ask your current sponsor for tips on
finding employment within their organization.
- Your résumé:
- The Basics: List your name,
address, e-mail address, and telephone number at the top.
Include a career objective for the specific job for which
you are applying. Many employers will toss out a résumé that
has not been tailored to them.
- Work Experience:
- Start with most recent job. List most
significant title, employer’s name and city, dates of
employment.
| Example: Crew Member, Washington
Conservation Corps, Olympia, WA (10/06 - 09/07). |
- Use action verbs. List your achievements and skills
relevant to the job. Include language used in job
announcement. Demonstrate communication, management, and
interpersonal skills.
- Highlight technical skills—list software programs that
you know.
- Education: Include degree, graduation date, and
institution. List your major and GPA.
| Example: Bachelors of Science,
Environmental Science, Western Washington
University, Bellingham, WA (June 2005) |
- Include information about your studies without listing
every course.
- List research along with a brief description (if
applicable).
- Training/Certifications: Capture all the great
training you gained while in the WCC. Are you Pesticide
Applicator Certified? Did you receive your WFR? List it
here!
- Other Tips: Avoid using columns to organize. If your
résumé is sent electronically, the text may become jumbled. Use one
easy-to-read font throughout (10-12 point). Avoid personal
pronouns. Leave out humor. Use quality paper and ink. Use action
verbs.
- Include Cover Letter: Three paragraphs:
- Opening - demonstrate knowledge of the organization
- Body - explain how your skills
are a perfect match for the organization
- Closing - ask for an interview, list when and how to
best contact you
- Proofread: Your Supervisor, Coordinator, and Sponsor
are all great resources for proofreading your résumé and cover
letter.
Job announcements
The WCC staff often receive job announcements from
environmental organizations seeking our Alums! We forward these
messages along to our Alums through our ListServ,
available here, or by sending an email to
wcc.update@ecy.wa.gov with the words "Alum Subscription" in
the subject line.
Continue working in public service!
Living on a Budget
(Living on a Budget prepared by King County Individual Placement, Meryl Kamowski)
Income
Probably going to clear ~$1000/month after taxes
Rent
Rent a room in a house, sublet, take on an extra roommate for
summer (college students), pay on time and avoid late fees!
Utilities
Heating assistance (DSHS)
Simple conservation: turn down heat when leaving home and at
night, only keep on necessary lights, keep fridge at (safe) low
setting, let the yellow mellow, shorten your showers (or don’t
shower-like a true WCC member).
Phone
- Phone assistance (DSHS): pays percentage of cost for a
landline
- Consider pre-paid cell phone plan to prevent going over
minutes
- Go in with a friend/relative on a couples/family plan
Food
Those who are eligible will receive an EBT card (similar to Debit card) with
~$152/month. Make sure you find out the date your EBT card
balance is renewed. Apply
online as soon as possible because your benefits will be back
dated. When you have your interview you will need to take a
letter from Olympia saying you are enrolled in an AmeriCorps
program. Your supervisor can request this letter from the WCC
Admin office.
Transportation
- Carpooling: Figure out gas money situation (and be nice
to the driver!)
- Bus passes: Look into purchasing bus pass through a
pre-tax bus pass program.
- Purchase bus pass with pre-tax dollars (King
County Metro pre-tax Toolkit)
Compare monthly pass versus pack of tickets:
Example (Seattle): Monthly Pass $1.50 pass = $54 or 20 $1.50
tickets = $30 (These tickets are good any month)
How many bus trips do you make in a month?
- Greyhound bus companion fare (2 for 1 deal)
www.greyhound.com/
- Rental Cars: Enterprise is as cheap as $14.99/day if you book
a month in advance (Plus an additional fee for drivers under
25).
Clothes, Furniture, and House hold items
Seek out thrift stores, garage sales, and online communities!
Managing it all…
- Budgeting: How much "extra" cash do you really have?
- Direct deposit/Automatic Withdrawal
- Direct Deposit Advance—in case of unexpected expenses
Extra income
House sit, baby sit, yard work, have your own garage sale,
check out Craig’s list for one time/weekend job opportunities.
Fun on a Budget
Seattle
- Mariner Baseball games: $7 bleacher seats and $50
family packs for four (hot dogs included)
- Pacific Northwest Ballet: cheapest tickets $20
http://pnb.org/
- Seattle Repertory Theatre: $10 tickets for any
show/any seat if under 25 yrs.
http://www.seattlerep.org/ Volunteer for free or
reduced admission
- Hike that Seattle favorite: Mount Si. Learn all
about it on the website:
http://www.mountsi.com/.
- St. Mark's Cathedral in Seattle offers their
soaring Compline concert for free each Sunday at 9:30pm. For
more info, check them out:
http://www.saintmarks.org/Worship/Music/Compline.php.
- Fringe Theatre Festival (Fall)
- Frye Art Museum - free admission
- St. James Cathedral offers a series of classical
music concerts during each school year. Mostly free, some by
donation. Visit them online:
http://www.stjames-cathedral.org/music/,then click on
"2005-2006 Concerts."
- Burke Museum - $8 admission
- Crest Movie Theatre - $3 admission 16505 Fifth
N.E. Seattle, WA 98155 (206) 781-5755
- Hunt for places with a cheap or free cover charge for
live music.
- Check out The Stranger or Seattle Weekly
for cheap eats in their food rating sections. Hit up Happy
Hours for meal/drink deals.
Other Ideas:
- Burke Gillman Trail
- UW Arboretum
- Conservatory at Volunteer Park
- Demo gardens and UW greenhouse
- Rent a canoe/kayak from UW Rec. center
- Hang out on Alki Beach or Golden Gardens Park
Questions or comments? Contact
WCC.