There are a lot of unpaid positions being advertised here lately.  Leaving 
aside the issue of personal fulfilment and so forth, I'd like to know if 
volunteer positions actually make a difference to HR managers or hiring 
committees.

    When I was in high school, I was strongly encouraged to volunteer by my 
guidance counselor, so I served as a volunteer for several years with a local 
museum, and later with a community NGO.  I was given to understand this was 
useful for college applications and for the résumé in general.  That habit 
stayed with me, and I volunteered off and on throughout college and beyond.

    By the time I was applying to jobs out of grad school, my advisor told me 
to not even bother listing the volunteer positions--that no one in academia 
could care less, and presumably no one in major NGOs or the corporate 
environment would either.

    So the question is, does volunteering really offer any advantages to anyone 
past the high school stage?  If so, what are they?   

    And if not, who ends up filling these positions, and why?

                                                                                
              - J. A.

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