
For Interact Information
contact: interact@alamorotary.org
The
Here are some examples of
the Monte
These
students assist the Rotary Club of Alamo with its major fundraiser the Alamo Music Festival
More
fun activities that Interact members participated in
These
students attended Camp Royal a leadership
experience sponsored by Rotary
Giving
back is a major part of Interact here these students participate in holiday
gift wrapping for the Bay Area Crisis
Nursery
Interact
Advisor Beth Randall and Interact members assist at the Glide Memorial Church Food Bank
More
Glide Memorial work by Interact
Interact members host Alamo Rotarians at a joint
meeting at
Interact
members assemble prosthetic LN-4 hands for delivery to third world countries
If you or your student attends

Interact, Rotary International's service
club program for young adults at the secondary school level, was officially
inaugurated on 28 October 1962. The foundation of Interact marked a new
approach to youth service for Rotary. For the first time, Rotarians were not
just serving youth, but were empowering them to serve in their communities and
internationally with their Rotary club sponsors.
Rotary service to youth dates back as
early as 1917, when a committee was appointed to study youth service. Two years
later, a department dedicated to "Boys' Work" was established and in
1920, the Rotary Club of
One
of the earliest predecessors to Interact was known as the Ro Club, a service
club for high school students. Ro clubs' goals and projects were very similar
to those of today's Interact clubs. Yrator Clubs
(Rotary spelled backward) for outstanding high school students also were active
as early as 1934. Their efforts focused on community activities but did not
incorporate the international element that is required of clubs today. In 1939,
Pan-American Clubs for primary and secondary school students were proposed as a
way to increase international understanding and goodwill. The clubs' purpose
was to educate students throughout the
Throughout the 1940s, Rotarians continued to serve the children and young
adults in their communities by sponsoring the efforts of other organizations.
Yet, feeling the need to actively engage youth in community service, Rotary
clubs around the world soon began forming youth service clubs based on the
ideals, principles, and organization of their own clubs. The Rotary Club of
Before the end of his term in 1960,
then-RI President Harold T. Thomas appointed an Ad Hoc Committee on Youth to
study the implementation of youth service clubs. The group studied preexisting
youth clubs and consulted with Rotarians, educators, teenagers, and
sociologists. Committee Chairman Charles H. Taylor of
On 5 November 1962, within eight days of
the official adoption of the Interact program, the first Interact club was
chartered at
From 1967 to 1978, The Rotary Foundation
of RI sponsored "Rotary International Awards for International
Understanding" for Interactors. Recognition was
awarded to Interact clubs that undertook projects that improved international
understanding and goodwill. Youth Exchange participation, visits to foreign Interact
clubs, and projects that aided developing countries were among the most common
projects recognized.
Since 1999, recognition for Interact
clubs has continued in the form of World
Interact Week, which is celebrated every year during the week of 5 November
to commemorate the founding of the first Interact club. During World Interact
Week, Interactors and Rotarians are encouraged to
work together on a variety of service projects. Upon completion of these
projects, clubs are recognized with a special pin and letter from the RI
president.
Interact continues to experience
phenomenal growth. The
For Interact Information contact: interact@alamorotary.org
