
AmeriCorps (sometimes referred to as the domestic Peace Corps) is an organization that helps meet needs in communities all over the country. There are a lot of things one can do in AmeriCorps: work with kids, help the environment, aid in disaster relief, fight poverty. I am in AmeriCorps VISTA and we focus on the last one, fighting poverty, but before I get into the different branches of AmeriCorps I will tell you in general the benefits everyone gets. I know this is going to sound like an ad or a recruitment tactic, but I just want people to know what I do; I get a lot of questions and it's not the easiest thing to explain.
In AmeriCorps (VISTA, State & National) we sign up for one year of service to the country. We don't get paid a salary, but a living allowance, which sustains us at about poverty level (it's on purpose). At the end of your service you can take a $1,200 stipend or a $4,000 education grant (for paying off student loans or going back to school). I chose the stipend because I don't have student loans and I am not planning on going back to school. If you do have student loans you get loan forbearance during your service and they pay the interest in the interim. You can do AmeriCorps up to 3 years, but you can only take the education grant twice and the last time you have to take the stipend. You can see that they drill all of this into us, because I know about a lot of programs and things that I didn't even use.
Now the branches...

AmeriCorps State & National is similar to VISTA because we both serve a year an all of the stuff I said two paragraphs ago. There are some of them at Harvesters too. They can work primarily with clients, mentoring youth, assisting crime victims, restoring parks, and building affordable homes, etc.) Instead of having an end date one calendar year after their start date like VISTAs do, State and National programs count hours and it usually works out to be about a year. I may have gotten some of it wrong, because I am not in AmeriCorps State &/or National. You can learn more about it here: State - http://www.americorps.org/about/programs/state.asp; National - http://www.americorps.org/about/programs/national.asp.
AmeriCorps NCCC is a little different than the other two. I don't know much about it, so I will direct you to the AmeriCorps website for that one: http://www.americorps.org/about/programs/nccc.asp. They live on a special AmeriCorps NCCC is what it says.
Okay, now have I really confused me. Feel free to ask me questions, I would be happy to at least try to answer them.
Okay, now have I really confused me. Feel free to ask me questions, I would be happy to at least try to answer them.
Here is the link to the AmeriCorps website: http://www.americorps.org/