A national survey of 10,000 K-12 volunteers and school administrators reveals the volunteer problem schools have been diagnosing wrong for years.
Every K-12 administrator who has run a volunteer program has the same set of conversations. Recruitment is hard. Coverage is uneven. The good ones drift away after a year, and the new ones don't always finish the onboarding paperwork. The diagnosis usually lands somewhere familiar: not enough people are interested, not enough budget exists to manage the program properly, or the screening process is too cumbersome for the kind of casual volunteer most schools rely on.
In a 2026 national survey of 10,000 K-12 volunteers and school administrators, all three of those diagnoses turn out to be wrong.
That's the finding. The interest is there. The budget isn't the bottleneck. The screening isn't what's driving people away. The actual problem is something else, and it's something most programs aren't measuring because they aren't asking volunteers the right questions.
Talk to a superintendent or operations director about their volunteer program and the language is consistent across districts. "We can't find enough people." "Our front office can't keep up with the management overhead." "The background check process scares off the parents who'd otherwise help."
Each of these claims has the texture of something true. None of them are what the data describes.
| What schools think | What 10,000 volunteers and admins describe |
|---|---|
| Not enough people are interested | Plenty are. They don't know what's available. |
| There isn't budget to manage the program | Budget isn't the bottleneck. Systems are. |
| Screening scares parents away | Screened volunteers report feeling more comfortable on campus, not less. |
The diagnostic gap matters because the fixes that flow from a wrong diagnosis don't help. Recruitment drives that try to fix a communication problem produce more sign-ups that never convert. Budget requests that try to fix a systems problem produce more spending without changing the volunteer experience. Friction-reduction efforts aimed at screening — the part of the process volunteers actually value — sometimes make programs less safe without making them more retained.
The State of School Volunteerism 2026 report was built around parallel surveys of both populations: school administrators and the volunteers themselves. Both groups were asked the same kinds of questions about safety, screening, communication, organization, and cost. Where their answers diverged, the report notes the gap. Where they aligned — sometimes in ways neither side would expect — the report notes that too.
The most striking pattern in the data isn't any single finding. It's the consistency. Volunteers and administrators describe the same kinds of problems, in the same kinds of language, with the same kinds of frustrations. But they describe them as separate problems instead of one problem with two faces.
A few of the threads the report follows:
Each of these is a fixable problem. The report walks through what the data shows and what kind of structural change closes each gap. None of the conclusions require more budget than the program already has.
The State of School Volunteerism 2026. Original research from 10,000 K-12 volunteers and school administrators surveyed nationwide.
By downloading you agree to receive the report and (rarely) editorial follow-ups. We don't sell your data. Unsubscribe in one click.
The volunteer screening and management problem hits K-12 differently than it hits youth nonprofits or faith-based organizations, even though all three rely on similar volunteer pools. The reason is duty of care. A district that loses a volunteer to a preventable management problem doesn't just lose a set of hours. It loses the redundancy that keeps coverage tight enough to maintain supervision ratios, classroom support, and event safety.
That cost compounds. When the front office can't track who's been cleared and who's pending, the easier path is often to let a volunteer onto campus without confirming. When the schedule isn't consolidated, the easier path is often to skip the reminder that would have kept a parent showing up to their committed shift. When the screening rationale isn't communicated at sign-up, the easier path is often for the volunteer to walk away from a process they don't understand. They take months of context with them.
The districts running tightest right now are not the ones with the largest volunteer pools. They are the ones whose systems make it hardest for a volunteer to fall through.
There's a section of the report that will probably challenge how your program is funded next year. It's the section on screening cost — specifically, what volunteers themselves said when they were asked directly whether they'd be willing to pay for their own background check.
The answers run almost entirely against the assumption most K-12 programs operate on. Most programs assume volunteers expect screening to be provided at no cost to them. Most programs have never asked. When the survey asked — with specific dollar amounts attached — the resistance turned out to be a minority position.
A program that's been absorbing the full cost of volunteer screening out of an operating budget may be carrying a line item that the volunteers themselves are willing to share — possibly more willing than the program would assume to ask.
The specific numbers, the dollar amounts tested, and the breakdown by volunteer type are in the report.
The report closes with six conclusions, each grounded in the survey data. The through-line across all six is structural. The volunteer problem in K-12 is not a recruitment problem, not a budget problem, and not a generational problem about parents being less engaged than they used to be.
It's a systems and communication problem. Volunteers want to show up. Schools want them to show up. The infrastructure between those two intents is where the loss happens, quietly, in ways that don't surface until a role sits empty for a season.
The report covers what that infrastructure looks like when it works, what's typically in place when it doesn't, and what shifts when both groups are asked the same questions side-by-side.
Six findings. Original research from 10,000 K-12 volunteers and school administrators surveyed nationwide. Published by SecureVolunteer, built by Bchex. Free download.
By downloading you agree to receive the report and (rarely) editorial follow-ups. We don't sell your data. Unsubscribe in one click.