Tips for partnering with SLP clubs 

Tips for partnering with SLP clubs 

Here are a few ways to get other Kiwanis family members involved in your club’s service. 

By Tony Knoderer

When your Kiwanis club is involved in a service activity, it’s always a great idea to partner with fellow clubs from the Kiwanis family — including one or more clubs from our Service Leadership Programs. More volunteers mean more impact, of course, but collaboration also builds a relationship between clubs. That’s especially important when you sponsor an SLP club. For a successful collaboration, use these tips:  

  • Encourage participation. Which of the Kiwanis club’s service activities would be a good fit for SLP members? Ask your club’s advisors to the SLP clubs you sponsor — and then have them share information about those opportunities at SLP club meetings. (Extra idea: Have the Kiwanis advisor hold a vote for the SLP members to choose the service they’re most interested in supporting.) 
  • Issue invitations. Create an invitation email or card for one or more activities. Include dates, times and locations of each event if you already know these details. Give the email or card to the Kiwanis advisor to send to the SLP club and collect RSVPs for the Kiwanis club. 
  • Make sure everyone feels comfortable. Help SLP club members learn about Kiwanis. For example, the Kiwanis advisor can talk about the similarities of the two clubs. And during a Kiwanis club meeting, encourage your own members to visit the SLP program’s website. (Links can be found here.) If you’re partnering with an Aktion Club and have members who haven’t worked with adults with disabilities, it might also help to read and use the guidelines for working with Aktion club members.   
  • Make volunteering with SLPs easy for your own members. Have your club’s webmaster work with the Kiwanis advisor to create a page where the SLP clubs’ service activity schedules can be posted. Include an invitation for Kiwanians to participate — with the Kiwanis advisor’s contact information so people can reach out and sign up for an event.  

Does your club have a success story based on collaboration with club from one of our SLPs? Let us know! Email shareyourstory@kiwanis.org. We might share your story with other Kiwanis clubs! 

How to revitalize a stagnant club

How to revitalize a stagnant club

Kiwanis leader Bobby Quinten shares how his club recovered and thrived after a steep membership decline. 

By Bobby Quinten, 2024-25 governor-elect, Texas-Oklahoma District

During the 2024 Kiwanis International Convention, Bobby Quinten hosted an education session where he described how his club — the Kiwanis Club of Mansfield, Texas, U.S. — rebuilt after a dramatic membership drop. Kiwanis International asked him to re-create that presentation in written form. 

On Friday, March 6, 2020, the Kiwanis Club of Mansfield held its weekly breakfast meeting at Methodist Mansfield Medical Center. My home club counted 25 paid members and averaged eight to 12 attendees, along with a few Key Club students, each week. We sponsored six Key Clubs in the Mansfield Independent School District and supported the local Feed the Kids for Summer program.  

On March 12, the medical center said we could not return due to the coronavirus outbreak. Our club thus began a seven-month odyssey of canceled meetings, awkward Zoom calls — even meeting in the park. By October, when we landed in a church classroom, our membership had dropped from 25 to six. Nineteen members had fallen away through a global pandemic and a summer of social and political turmoil. 

Thankfully, our six surviving members never thought of closing the club. Today, the Kiwanis Club of Mansfield is back to 21 members, including a corporate partner. We still sponsor six award-winning Key Clubs and now a Builders Club. We celebrated our 50th anniversary last year and earned Distinguished Club status in 2022-23. 

How did that happen? Here are a few revitalization lessons that Mansfield Kiwanians learned together. 

Less club, more Kiwanis
While our club may have seemed healthy pre-COVID, we had problems. Mansfield Kiwanis did very few service projects or fundraisers. In fact, half of the membership never attended anything. Those who did attend had formed cliques over time — so when one member quit, others quit.   

Activities were chosen for the fun factor more than any potential community impact. Our Friday morning programs had no focus or themes. We had little meaningful contact with our Key Clubs, even though students came to our meetings regularly.  

The year 2020 revealed cracks in our club structure that were already there. It is great to be a social club. Fun is an integral part of being a successful club. However, there must be a full commitment to Kiwanis along with the fun. Somewhere, Mansfield had lost its Kiwanis identity. 

Leverage the uniqueness of Kiwanis
To survive, we reclaimed what makes Kiwanis unique in Mansfield. We focused on our distinct mission to improve the world one child at a time. We repledged our commitment to teach servant leadership and community service to students of all ages. 

Every week, we emphasized one of our century-old Objects of Kiwanis — those behaviors that should drive every relationship and every activity in every Kiwanis club. We returned to an aggressive, hands-on volunteerism and committed to a more diverse membership and inclusive services. 

Build membership through connections
It took three years, but Mansfield Kiwanis built itself back by making connections. First, we used social media and marketing to publicize meetings and activities. We joined the local chamber of commerce to strengthen our community relationships. We held programs that resonate with our mission and Objects. 

However, most club growth occurred one by one: One person joined, and then that person invited someone who joined, who then invited someone else. Friends, family, neighbors, parents of Service Leadership Program members, and business partners all became a part of Mansfield Kiwanis. As we grew, we conducted service projects based on the new members’ passions and interests.  

We accepted that Kiwanis is not for everyone, and that is fine. Interestingly, only one member who left voluntarily in 2020 ever returned to the club. However, when the Kiwanis mission connects with a person’s passions, any club will have active and productive Kiwanians.   

Engage your members regularly
With a weekly email, a current Facebook page and a simple website, we communicated regularly with every member. Once schools opened again, rebuilding our Key Clubs became a paramount activity. We enlisted new members to become committed Key Club advisors. This rejuvenated our energy after 2020. 

“Doing Kiwanis” kept our club from falling back into a social club mentality. We stayed busy and involved members according to their interests, skills and strengths. New members gave us their ideas for projects and fundraisers.  

New members also provided fresh leadership. By 2023-24, our president, president-elect, treasurer and five directors all had joined since 2020! We now have more women than ever before, and we are a much younger club than before. 

Keep the main thing the main thing
When we lose sight of our unique mission, resources and values, we become just another community organization. In Mansfield, we remind ourselves regularly of the Kiwanis mission and Objects. 

New-member induction ceremonies always include the mission and Objects, our Kiwanis International history, our club history and SLP information. In that way, our new members also understand what makes Kiwanis special.  Everyone is encouraged to spread the word about how the Kiwanis Club of Mansfield is making the world a better place for children and families. 

Five questions to ask your club
Could your club use a boost? Ask yourself these five questions: 

  1. What kind of club do we really have? Is there enough “Kiwanis” in our club? 
  2. What makes us different from other community organizations in our town? Are we leveraging that difference to grow our club and make a greater social impact? 
  3. Who do we know who will bring fresh ideas, perspectives and causes to our club?  How will we make that connection? 
  4. How can each member use their strengths, skills and interests to drive the Kiwanis mission? 
  5. Do locals know our club exists? If so, do they know what we do and what impact we have? If not, how will we tell them? 
Microgrants create meals, mentors and music

Microgrants create meals, mentors and music

From April through June, smaller Kiwanis clubs made a big impact through the Kiwanis Children’s Fund.

By Erin Chandler

In April, May and June 2024, the Kiwanis Children’s Fund awarded new rounds of microgrants to clubs making a big difference with fewer members — giving away books and personalized shelves to hold them; providing honey, fruits and vegetables to their communities; advocating for mental health, and more. Here are four projects that address kids’ needs in each of the Kiwanis cause areas: health and nutrition, education and literacy, and youth leadership development.  

Health and nutrition

Raintree Children’s Services Oven Repair and New Vision Lunch Project
Sometimes, clubs can make the greatest impact by simply providing for the repair or replacement of essential appliances — and the Children’s Fund is happy to help. The Kiwanis Club of Third District, New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., and the Kiwanis Club of Spalding-Christiana, Jamaica, each proved that with projects that received microgrants in June. For more than 10 years, members of the Kiwanis Club of Third District have cooked a monthly meal with the adolescent girls at Raintree Children’s group home. They even plan to make a cookbook together. However, they recently discovered that the temperature control in the home’s oven was broken. A Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrant will help to repair the oven thermostats so that this enriching project can continue.  

Similarly, for four years, Kiwanis Club of Spalding-Christiana has gone all-out annually to prepare a healthy and delicious meal for the kids at New Vision Children’s Home, but the club recently learned that the door on the home’s deep freezer is faulty, requiring weights to keep it closed and maintain the temperature. A Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrant will allow the club to donate a new freezer to the home so food can be safely stored throughout the year. 

Education and literacy

Musical Instruments for Elementary Schools
The Kiwanis Club of the Desert, Tucson in Arizona, U.S., began donating gently used musical instruments to elementary schools in 2022. Each year, they choose a different school to benefit from the project based on the number of students who participate in the free lunch program. To give kids whose families are struggling financially a fair chance at discovering and nurturing a passion for music, the club has partnered with the Kiwanian-owned Chicago Music Store to create an inventory of instruments that can be loaned out at each school. The store also offers discounts on cleaning kits and supplies. This year, with help from a Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrant, the students at Butterfield Elementary School will tune up their own musical instrument library. 

Youth leadership development 

Safety Town
Every year, the Kiwanis Club of Springfield, Oregon, U.S., hosts Safety Town, a two-week course that teaches local 5-year-olds how to be safe around strangers, animals, water, railroads, earthquakes, fires — and especially on roads. The club sets up an eight-block town inside a local school gymnasium, complete with buildings, sidewalks and a floor mat depicting streets, crosswalks, traffic lights and signs. A Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrant will help the club update the “town” with new pedal cars and materials to repair the buildings, as well as snacks and craft supplies. Safety Town’s life lessons are not limited to small children: Teenagers serve as mentors, helping the younger children learn — and some teens return after their first Safety Town experience to continue to help out.  

How you can help
To learn more about Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrants, visit kiwanis.org/microgrant-program.  

If you want to help the Children’s Fund provide grants like these that reach children around the world, you canmake a giftto The Possibility Project. Your club can alsoapply for a grantto help kids in your community today.