What counts as Civic Engagement?
Earn Truth points by:
attending a lecture series
visiting a museum exhibit
learning from a guest speaker
attending a city council meeting
attending a campaign event
registering to vote (senior year)
attending a school board meeting
volunteer for a campaign
participate in National History Day
become an active member of Model UN, debate, Project Citizen
participate in a TEDX event, poetry slam, writing contest, etc.
observe a debate round at the AHS tournament
read a title from the Great Works list or approved ACS list (1 point per book with a cap of 10 per year)
attend a lecture on campus
Earn Beauty Points by:
attending and reflecting on:
an art exhibit
a dance performance
a musical performance
a photography exhibit
Earn Goodness points by:
Performing acts of kindness by volunteering your time or talents to someone in need:
1 hour of service = 1 civic engagement point
What Activities are Capped?
Summer Service = cap of 30 points earned during summer months (typically June 1-August 20)
Runs/Athletic Event Fundraisers for Charity = cap of 5 points per event; this includes physical participation in the event as well as volunteer roles like working check-in tables, water booths, clean-up crew, etc.
Campaigns/Civic Engagement = cap of 5 points per year; includes volunteering for political leaders (either elected or campaigning), working as a capitol page, unpaid internships, documented participation in marches/demonstrations, volunteering a legal office (your work is indirectly benefitting those in need, but you don’t have face-to-face contact with people)
Fostering a Pet = cap of 5 points per year, with required documentation of your hours spent caring for the pet. This is an adventure that usually involves the entire family, so it is difficult to track. If you have clear documentation of personal interaction with foster animals, you may appeal to your teaching team for number of points approved.
Participating in/Leading a Non-Sports Event Fundraiser for Charity = cap of 10 points per year; ex: Leukemia and Lymphoma Society
Donations to a School-Organized Donation Drive = cap of 3 points per drive: 1 point for a small donation (1-2 items), 2 points for a medium donation (3-9 items), 3 points for a large donation (10+ items)
What does not count?
Donating personal items to Goodwill, Salvation Army, etc.: There is no way for us to track donation of goods outside of a school-sponsored drive.
Cash donations: While it is admirable of you to support causes in need, we do not associate service points with monetary donations.
Worship experiences: Activities such as singing in the church choir, playing music in the church band, being an acolyte, etc. do not count towards service goals. While those are admirable ways to volunteer your time, they are part of worship. We do offer points for work that high school students do to support those in need (the elderly, children, etc.), so if your work involves direct interaction with a group in need, it will likely count for some points. See your teaching team if you need clarification.
Fundraisers benefiting you or your program: We do not offer points for selling items to raise money for a school organization.
Paid or Trade experiences: If you are being paid for your work, it is not counted as service. If you are receiving something in return for volunteering (entrance into a concert of festival in exchange for working at a t-shirt booth, for example), it is not counted as service.