University of Illinois Extension
There are two major types of committees and the role of each is crucial to the functioning of the club: standing committees and special committees.
Standing committees handle part of the club's regular business. They are active throughout the year and have duties that are generally constant over time and clearly stated. They are appointed each year and serve for the entire year. The size of the club often determines how many standing committees are needed. Small clubs may use committees but include all members on the committees. Committee work could be done on alternating meeting dates or prior to the start of the business meeting.
Examples might include:
Special committees carry out a specific task for a limited period of time. Some groups tend to put every issue into a committee; other clubs spend time discussing when a committee could resolve the issue more easily. Avoid overuse or underuse of special committees. The responsibilities of a special committee need to be clearly stated so the group can complete its responsibility.
Special committees might include:
Each committee should have an adviser who may be a parent or adult volunteer. In clubs with younger members, the adviser role is extremely important in helping provide guidance and parameters to the committee work. As members gain experience and confidence, the adult may play a lesser role.
Advantages of Club Committees
Much of what a club needs to accomplish can be best done by committees. Committees give more club members an opportunity to participate and to assume some of the responsibilities, help to avoid spending too much of the club's time on small details, concentrate the full attention of only a few club members on one subject, and offer the opportunity for training in group leadership.