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JMHawkins

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Everything posted by JMHawkins

  1. Thanks, I think I get it now. It's not just more youth involvement, it also makes the, ah, shall we say pagentry of a Boy Scout troop (CoH, uniforms, ranks, ceremonies, etc) totally optional. I think I might even understand the why - the ceremonies and rituals are great for 11-14 year olds, it captures their attention and stirs some part of their developing mind, but the older youth of Venturing are probably less interested in that. In a sense they've already "graduated" and the coming-of-age rituals should be behind them.
  2. That can be as easy as an email. My first thought when I read this was "what about Summer Camp and Merit Badge Weekends?" Then I remembered I dislike most MB classes. And it's not like the cards help that much. Last year we went to a MB weekend and it rained hard overnight. Most of the blue cards scouts were holding on to (in the thigh pockets of their scout pants) got soaked and turned into little piles of blue pulp. We ended up needing to recreate a whole bunch of those. OTOH, a Scout needed to shepherd his blue card from SM to MBC and back is a lesson in responsibli
  3. Yeah, I think Gunny's response is right. It way more important what sort of spirit a scout goes about doing his service with than how many hours he racks up. I'd much rather it be more like a Scout Spirit requirment. But that would drive the bureacracy minded folks nuts.
  4. Thanks BadenP, that helps. But I'm still a little confused about the Crew is not a Troop part. I guess it's just that of course a Troop isn't a Crew, but they are alike in that both are youth organizations with adults helping. Just like a Troop and a Pack aren't the same but both have youth and adult members. I completely understand the Webelos III description of adults who don't get the difference between Pack and Troop, and I'm pretty sure one reason I understand it is that I was a Boy Scout in an old school sort of Troop. But I was never a Venturer, so when you say "Every crew in
  5. SP is right about this. Our biggest headaches have been when the training records the Council had were not up to date and caused problems with adult recharters. So, I would first send the CC of the unit a list of training records for adults registered to that unit and work to get them updated. Do whatever you can to make that process easy. Beyond that, the next step would be to revamp the whole process, but that's outside your scope. I think the rechartering process is something of a joke in the modern world. But BSA needs to fix it's IT system before it can do much better.
  6. I think the thing that makes the average American most upset is seeing someone bullied, regardless of the political issues involved. If a bunch of Rush Limbaugh listeners had been barricading the enterances to Dixie Chick's concerts, it would have been different, and it wouldn't have worked. But, that's not what happend. The Dixie Chicks weren't bullied by anyone, they just made comments a huge portion of their fan base found obnoxious. OTOH, a couple of mayors threatening Chik-fil-A over comments people who don't generally eat there find obnoxious is seen as bullying.
  7. Sorry, didn't mean to sidetrack things with my "unscrupulous" bit. Not referring to any organization in particular really, and especially not the typical scout service project. But I do think there's a lesson worth teaching as we teach scouts about service: there are those who will take advantage of it, and it's worth knowing how to spot it when it happens. Also helping the scouts figure out how to react.
  8. if they weren't mandatory then many would not do them. Service projects can be mandatory without having an hour requirement. For example: Star Rank: 4. While a First Class Scout, take part in one or more service projects that benefit your community in some way and demonstrate the spirit of selfless service. These projects must be approved by your Scoutmaster. Citizenship in the Community: 7c. With your counselor's and your parent's approval, contact the organization and find out what young people can do to help. While working on this merit badge and with your conselor's
  9. In my experience with Venturing for almost 12 years now the problems in getting it off the ground has been a total lack of understanding of what the program is SUPPOSED to be based on their own literature by both National and Council employees. In addition the disjointed and watered down training given on all levels to Venturing advisors and youth officers. IMO how can any revision coming out of National, who doesn't understand the program in the first place, be of any real value to those of us in the field who have been delivering the program. Y'know, to be blunt, you could replace "Vent
  10. I hate the phrase "double dipping." Probably as much as some people hate the phrase "Eagle Mill." I don't see any particular reason the hours can't count for both. Certainly the goal of "service" in advancement requirements is not to get free labor out of Scouts, but rather to teach them about selfless service. To be blunt, I think counting the hours in the first place is the wrong way to go about this. It makes it more of an economic transaction - you get X payment for doing Y hours of work. Getting hung up about "double dipping" just reinforces that they're doing the service in ord
  11. We don't do NSPs, but the general idea of a hike to work on scoutcraft works for any program. Something we did last year was "The Amazing Race" hike. Patrols started out in different directions with their first clue, which led them to a Scouter waiting somewhere in the trail complex. Once they got there, they'd have some sort of scoutcraft tests (tie several knots, identify plants, etc), plus they had to navigate the trials to get there. After finishing the skills at that station, they got their next clue, which took them to another Scouter running a different skill station. If
  12. If he is the only member of the troop who goes to a different school (HS vs Jr or middle school), and he's new to the troop, the item I as his parent would try to get on the Committee agenda wouldn't have anything to do with Venture Crews, but rather with perhaps reviewing the schedule to see if there are future school-scouting conflicts that could be adjusted now so you can avoid these problems down the road. I'm guessing the current schedule was made before your son joined, and so did not take into consideration his school schedule. It's perfectly reasonable - if done in a polite, non-
  13. huh, my reply above should have had a section quoting Eagle732 that said: We try to keep it simple. Adults set the dates. Camping trips are traditionally the last weekend of the month unless a holiday interferes. Boys choose the activities they want to do and which month to do them. But it didn't show up. Well, sounds like things are moving in a good direction though. If people are unsure how to increase youth involvement, maybe my idea of adults scheduling the when but letting the Scouts schedule the what for at least a couple of activities might still work.
  14. Well, maybe what you can do is make a gentle suggestion during the adult planning conference to nudge things in a more boy-led direction. Eagle732 said:
  15. My son's troop planned a four day campout for this weekend. The troop left on Thurs. and my son was unable to go at that time due to a scheduling conflict....My son has now missed the final campout before school begins; a campout he really wanted to attend. So which is it? Was there a scheduling conflict or did he really want to attend? If there was a scheduling conflict, then he (or you) clearly valued the other thing on the schedule more than the trip, which is fine. Part of life is making choices and deciding on priorities. You cant do everything, so learn to pick what's most impor
  16. Really, it's whatever works for your unit, but a useful concept is a division of labor with the CM responsible for everything that has to do with the youth and the CC responsible for everything that has to do with the world of adults. Neither really works for the other, they just support each other. For a military analogy, I'd say it's more like the CM is the General who commands the troops hitting the beach and the CC is the Admiral who commands the ships getting them there and keeping them supplied. Maybe providing some fire support too. A good Admiral knows the goal of the amphibiou
  17. It was Groucho. But he had another quote about clubs that might be even more appropriate to the recent discussion. I've a mind to join a club and beat you over the head with it.
  18. Congrats, sounds like the right direction. It takes work, but glad to see other folks bought into important changes. Good luck.
  19. I'm with Twocub and ScoutNut on this. Drop this crusade until you can approach it with a little more rationality. You are not being reasonable in your actions or expectations. You may have a legitmate grievance with the troop leader and how your council handled this, but you are blowing this out of proportion and will do nobody - yourself, your wife and your daughter any good by continuing on your current course.
  20. Dean, I think the converstaion you need to have with the SM is one that says (in whatever words you think will be most effective) "Buddy, you're darn lucky it was me out there and not some other new parent who doesn't know you that saw this. They would have flipped out..." Lisabob and Barry both make really good points. This troop needs to put more effort into training the adult leaders and into getting the younger scouts goings. If you're going to have a NSP, you can't just leave 'em essentially unsupervised. Shouldn't there be an ASM assigned to help the NSP and the PL for it? For
  21. Chronic poor maintenance and repair. An obvious safety hazard. Wrenches, pliers and grease guns are probably banned somewhere too.
  22. I think the 15 year prediction is about right, because by then the Boomer generation will have exited most leadership positions in society. Having public debates about morality is a very Boomer thing to do. The younger generations aren't as interested. I also expect by then Society will have significantly bigger problems to worry about. I suspect the overriding moral imperative will be to get along with your neighbor and not be a perpetual PITA. We won't be celebrating "diversity", we'll be celebrating teamwork. I think we will return to a much stronger division between private and
  23. I realize it may sound dumb that my wife wants back in, but we do have a lot of friends in that Troop and it would be a lot of work to organize a new Troop. She really just enjoys working with the girls and wants to focus on that rather than all the other stuff this obviously involves. Plus our Troop being so large has a lot of options and resources that we wouldn't have available if we started from scratch. Indeed, the best thing for you and our wife might be to stage a coup and take over the troop. But would that really be the best thing for the other 100 girls in it? This is
  24. Every society has to have some method of selecting a figurehead. "Eldest child of the previous figurehead" or "guy who pulled a sword out of a rock" or "tarts in lakes handing out swords" don't seem like the best methods, but I'm not sure "Ivy League Grad Making the slickest promises" has worked very good the last few times on this side of the pond either.
  25. I honestly think its more about time management with this age group than anything.
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