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Scouts with Disabilities

Where parents and scouters go to discuss unique aspects to working with kids with special challenges.


81 topics in this forum

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  1. Autistic Cub Scout 1 2

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  2. Den Chief with ASD

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  3. Successful Surgery

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  4. Dear Mr. Savage

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  5. They lost his paperwork!

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  • LATEST POSTS

    • Recently, National hosted a Safeguarding Youth Symposium in Las Vegas. Both David Chadwick, CEO and Founder of RealResponse and Ju'Riese Coln CEO of U.S. Center for SafeSport spoke among others (see above link). Recall @mrjohns2 informed us of SafeSport in the wandering topic BSA Lifeguard Program To Be Discontinued. I do not know if there are online recordings or transcripts of their presentations.
    • @AwakeEnergyScouter I feel your perplexity. But, that’s only because you’re not the first European scout who I’ve dialogued with. Americans thrive (wallow?) in paradoxes. The YMCA is chock full of non-Christians and women. My brother went swimming at the YWCA. Everybody in my town has participated in Jewish community center activities. None of that makes anyone feel trans or religion-fluid. Likewise, girls don’t shed their femininity being in programs for boys. For some it’s a status symbol. Being on-the-ground with American youth revealed this peculiar mental framework. When I started my Venturing Crew almost 20 years ago, the girls — especially Girl Scouts — who signed up were thrilled to be Boy Scouts. One told me as much and I had a hard time convincing her that she was a Venturer! There is something very valuable for many young women in this country to know that this “for boys” organization lets them work their program. I think it partly had to do with a “victim mentality” foisted upon them by activist types. GS/USA’s “girl power” mantra sort of plays off of that. In BSA, nobody told them they had any special powers. They could work the goals of this program (or not) and nobody made them feel like they were some kind of revolutionary. (Most GS/USA leaders who I knew avoided the whole “girl power” rhetoric. It was the literature that gave off an “us vs. them” vibe.) So, for some young American women, being a girl in Boy Scouts of America carried more prestige than being a young woman in Scouts BSA or Scouting America. Who really wanted there to be Scouts BSA Handbook for Girls  and a Scouts BSA Handbook for Boys? No youth ever! All my boys get the one for boys (although I’ve offered to get them the one for girls if they wanted). I’d be curious to know how many girls there are who, given the choice, would ask for the “for Boys” edition.
    • Yes, and they are all electives.  There is no requirement to do it, unlike the previous version of the Bear rank.  
    • They can? Each rank now has a knife safety adventure. 
    • We may make more of that than is needed, just because many of us were around before and after the change, and we're more trying to find our own way on how adjust. Each country has their own flavor on how they have set up their program, but the comparable program to what many of us have known as "Cub Scouts" and "Boy Scouts" are just "Cub Scouts" and "Scouts" to them. Scouts UK     Scouts Canada   Squirrel Scouts 4-5 years   Beaver Scouts 5-7 years Beaver Scouts 6-7 years   Cub Scouts 8-10 years Cub Scouts 8-10.5 years   Scouts 11-14 years Scouts 10.5-14 years   Venturer Scouts 15-17 years Explorers 15-17 years   Rover Scouts 18-26 years Network members 18-25 years                           Scouts Mexico     Scouts Brazil   Cub Scouts 6-9 years   Cub Scouts 6.5-10 years Scouts 10-13 years    Scouts 11-14 years Walkers 14-17 years   Senior Scouts 15-17 years Rovers 18-21 years   Pioneers 18-21 years
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