SCOUTER Interactive - Your Guide to Scout Out the Net! SCOUTER Magazine and Network
SCOUTER  |  NetCompass  |  NetRoster  |  Forums  |  ClipArt  |  Headlines  |  Auctions  

You are 1 of 1094 Active Users

 Locator >
SCOUTER : Archives : Scouts-L : May 1997 : Post
Menu > Email this page to a friend Send page to friend
 


Check out the new SCOUTER Discussion Forums and Post Your Questions Now!

Advancement to First Class vs. Merit Badges

Kenneth Wheeler (wheele1k@NCR.DISA.MIL)
Fri, 30 May 1997 10:07:46 EST


I was wondering if anyone can shed some light on Troop policies or BSA
policies on Advancement through First Class vs. Merit Badges.

Background:

A review of requirements for Tenderfoot through First Class, and some
of the outdoor and preparedness oriented merit badges (orienteering,
camping, first aid, swimming, etc) shows a great deal of overlap
between requirements for the different area's. Our current adult
leadership troop philosophy, not strongly held, is that multiple
requirements can be met for the same event. I.E. demonstration of
first aid skills for advancement in rank can be used to "sign off" a
merit badge requirement provided the boy has "declared" for the merit
badge and his MBC signs off on his achievement of the skill.

I do not agree with this philosophy. My preference, recognizing that
very few things in this life have no exceptions, would be to have work
on merit badges start after attainment of First Class rank. My review
of the requirements suggests that there is a two step structure to
advancement T-FC and Star through Eagle, with the attainment of First
Class being the goal for producing competence in basic outdoor skills
(camping, basic first aid, basic orienteering), able to take care of
himself and his fellows, and have a good time in the woods.

Merit Badges would then be over and above this basic competence, and
would serve as reinforcement for the basic knowledge gained while
advancing through First Class.

Again, my thought is that this would be a general policy, applied with
common sense, and is geared towards mastery of skills, not the
intangibles of leadership, maturity and judgement that come with time
and experience. I am approaching this from an intellectual point of
view, as I have no real experience (I was a Boy Scout for about a year
as a 12 year old, but was one of the boys that scouting lost before
making first class), and have been working with my son's troop for all
of 3 months now. I am looking for other opinions from the more
experienced scouters on the list as to how thier programs are
structured, or whether BSA has an existing policy that I do not know
about. Thanks for your time.

Ken Wheeler, ASM, Troop 994, Fairfax Station, VA,

Terry Howerton Sakima Group, Inc. SCOUTER Magazine Kansas City

A few Commercial Links from the SCOUTER NetCompass...


Featured Link eFundraisingClick here for more information
World's Leading Fundraising Company

Featured Link Pie iron and open fire cookingClick here for more information
Free pie iron recipes,recipe book available,contest

Featured Link Corn maze, Pumpkin Patch & Country FunClick here for more information
Get lost...in over 20 acres of cornfield mazes including a Haunted Maze at Dewberry Farm! Shoot the incredible Corn Cannon, take a hayride to the pumpkin patch, or have a campout around a campfire.

Featured Link Panama Canal and Rainforest AdventureClick here for more information
Canoe jungle rivers and waterways of the Panama Canal. Hike the jungle and old Spanish Treasure Trails. Visit and live with Indians of the rainforests and camp at centuries old forts. Retrace the paths of Conquistadors, Pirates, and 49’ers.

Featured Link Fundraising DepotClick here for more information
Fundraising's DISCOUNT Superstore featuring hundreds of great fundraising products & programs.

Featured Link Wilderness Dining -- Food and CookwareClick here for more information
Free shipping on freeze dried and dehydrated camping food, utensils, pots, pans and ovens for backcountry cooking. Also offers free recipes and ideas for gourmet backpacking meals.

Featured Link Boy Scouts - Earn the Whitewater Badge!Click here for more information
Boy Scouts - Earn the Whitewater Merit Badge with Appalachian Wildwaters

Add your link to SCOUTER NetCompass





Join SCOUTER.com

Join SCOUTER.com and participate in the Discussion Forums & receive our email newsletters. First, please enter your e-mail address. We'll see if we have you in our records (must be complete and valid e-mail address to complete registration):

E-mail address

Postal/ZipCode


Site Members Login


SCOUTER Forums

Share your questions, answers and ideas in the SCOUTER Forums!


FREE Web Hosting from SCOUTER!
SCOUTER.com provides free web hosting to more than 2,000 Scout units!

What's become of SCOUTER Magazine, the print publication?

Buy the Back Issues

NetCompass
Categories

Advancement
Calendar
Campfires
Discussion Lists
Graphics and Clipart
Leaders Resource
Medical Issues Library
Meeting Activities
Scout Skills
Scouting History
Scouting Organizations
Service To America
Training
Where To Go
Youth Protection

Sponsors

Site Dedication

SCOUTER celebrates the life of William Hillcourt... Scoutmaster to the World and the founding inspiration for the grassoots resources we share.

© 1994-2005 SCOUTER.com. All rights reserved.

SCOUTER is an independent publication and has been the primary Scouting portal on the web since 1994.
It is not officially affiliated with the Boy Scouts of America, the Girl Scouts of the USA or the World Organization of Scout Movements.
Web Developer/SaaS Hosting by FastRoot, Chicago - Terry Howerton

spacer.gif (57 bytes)