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Volunteer

  • Volunteers preparing food for birds
  • Volunteers walking through fen
  • Volunteers in Haven

Volunteers are vital to our mission of creating positive relationships between people and nature.  They work throughout the Museum to ensure that our critters are fed, our visitors are happy and our collections are in good working order.

We’re always looking for volunteers to join our team!

Volunteer Application

If you are interested in a weekly or biweekly volunteer position, please fill out the application form. Our volunteer manager will arrange an interview and you can learn more and see what positions are open.  We ask you to commit to volunteer for at least one year. Ages 18 and older are welcome.

If your schedule does not allow you to commit to a full year of volunteering, we encourage you to help with our special events.  It’s as simple as sending an email and attending an informational session. Sign up for as many or as few events as you like.  Ages 16 and over are welcome.  This is an ideal opportunity for group volunteering, so bring your friends!  Just email volunteer@naturemuseum.org to get started.

Weekly and Biweekly Volunteer Opportunities

Animal Care

Animal Care volunteers work in the Istock Family Look-in Lab to care for our living creatures.  They feed the animals, monitor their health and keep the habitats clean.  The Museum’s living collections include snakes, turtles, salamanders, frogs and toads, rats, and many invertebrate species. 

Bird Care

Bird Care volunteers care for the birds in the Judy Istock Butterfly Haven. They prepare food, feed the birds, monitor their health and keep the habitat clean.


Judy Istock Butterfly Haven Interpreter

Judy Istock Butterfly Haven Interpreters answer visitors’ questions and enforce USDA rules in our most popular exhibit.  The Judy Istock Butterfly Haven displays more than forty types of tropical butterflies, several bird species and many tropical plants.  Interpreters serve as a resource to make sure our visitors make the most of their experience

Butterfly Lab

Butterfly Lab volunteers ensure that the chrysalides make it into the Judy Istock Butterfly Haven as adults.  They keep the lab area clean, pin chrysalides to the display case,and record butterfly emergence.

Horticulture

Horticulture volunteers work on Nature Trail’s, the Museum’s first outdoor exhibition. They rid the grounds of invasive species and maintain the natural landscape. This is a seasonal volunteer position, generally active between April and October.  Horticulture volunteers embrace Chicago’s unpredictable weather with hardiness and stamina.


Green Team

Green Team volunteers focus on environmental sustainability. They lead tours to highlight our sustainable design and educate visitors on living green in their own homes.

Museum Collections and Archives

The Chicago Academy of Sciences’ collections and archives are extremely diverse and vitally important to the mission of the Museum. They represent the disciplines of ornithology, mammalogy, herpetology, entomology, malacology, botany, geology, paleontology, oology, photography, art and history. Volunteers assist collections staff to preserve and organize the scientific collections and archives of the museum.

Museum Naturalist

Museum Naturalists are knowledgeable guides who deliver their own informal presentations on topics relevant to the Nature Museum experience.  Naturalists aim to supplement the exhibits content and enhance a personal connection to nature and science.

Public Interpretive Programs (PIP)

PIP volunteers deliver daily public programs. They educate children and adults using curriculum kits, live animals, and their sunny dispositions.

Visitor Studies

Visitor Studies volunteers help determine how visitors interact with exhibits by completing observational studies and exit interviews.  Their work results in quantifiable evidence of which exhibit elements resonate with visitors and which could use some work.

 

©The Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum