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Hedgehog

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Everything posted by Hedgehog

  1. Bizzare. I've never paid much attention to that graph -- sort of figured that it was a guide to the types of activities that make sense for various age groups. I'm voting for ignoring it. Well, my son earned his 50 miler award for backpacing 54 miles in the backcountry when he had just turned 13 last summer and earned his backpacking merit badge in the fall. Nobody told me that he couldn't do that. Nonetheless, I'm too busy putting the OUTING back in ScOUTING for my unit -- going camping with hiking, fishing, mountain biking in April, camping with horseback riding in M
  2. My suggestion is to go by G2SS and ignore the charts and suggestions. G2SS controls.
  3. Under the Department of Revenue’s regulations for sales by exclusively charitable, educational, and government organizations, the organization is permitted to have two "occasional sales" per year where the selling is allowed to be done tax-free. See 86 Ill. Adm. Code 130.2005: Under this second exception, examples of exempt sales are infrequent sales of cookies, doughnuts, candy, calendars or Christmas trees by Scout organizations or by other exclusively charitable organizations or by exclusively religious organizations.
  4. OK, this is not personal legal advice, but merely my opinion as a tax lawyer for your amusement and entertainment purposes only... 1. If the CO is a tax-exempt entity, a 501©(3) for Federal and similar exemption for state purposes, then the entity does not pay income tax on its charitable, educational, etc. operations. However, if a tax-exempt entity operates a business that competes with other businesses, the income from that business is considered to be unrelated business income and is taxable (think gift shop or coffee shop at hospital). For state sales tax purposes, a tax-exempt en
  5. I appreciate the offer, but I'm not planning to use Powerpoint at all. The games sound interesting, but Im thinking of using real challenges to teach leadership and teamwork
  6. @@Stosh Isn't your advice about a "lack of support leadership" contradicting your criticism of my statement that the PL is responsible for making sure the other scouts are suceeding their positions of responsibility? Sometimes, I get the feeling that if someone else says something, you will tell them it is wrong. But if you say the same thing, then it is the best way to proceed. I've studied leadership not only in college, but throughout my life. One of the things that stuck with me was that excellent leaders ADAPT to a situation. What works for one situation may not necessari
  7. I've also found that making a decision to be the most difficult part of leadership for the boys. For example, when the boys are deciding on outings, there is a tendency to come up with ideas, talk about them and then move on to something else without actually making a decision. There is a balance between listening to people and trusting your own instincts (or you own wants) but ultimately a decision has to be made. Even putting something to a vote is making a decision. I also think that the exercise you did gives the boys a sense of how difficult it is to actually lead. I find that peo
  8. I like @@MattR's approach of learning through doing and I agree with his learning through doing. But I agree with @@Stosh that leadership isn't JUST telling people what to do and having them follow. Servant leadership is about listening and building consensus. Servant leadership is about working to enable the scouts you are leading to succeed in their roles. Servant leadership is asking not what the scouts you are responsible for can do for you, but what you can do for them. @@Eagledad and @@qwazse, I agree -- challenging activities can teach lessons better than any simulated activitie
  9. Any chance your cousin would let you share it with me to use as a reference? My problem is that the boys view it as a game and don't really internalize the lessons. I guess I'm thinking more real life challenges that require leadership, decision making and challenges. Yep, that's the one... 4 hours of PowerPoint, check the box... you're trained. That is the method I've been using. Took one boy aside this weekend and told him that he was showing real leadership because every time I saw him he was doing what had to be done without anyone telling him what to do. He
  10. Our youth training program is awful. It is the BSA troop leadership training program and really is a waste of time. We do it on a Saturday in a classroom setting and I don't see any of the skills being either useful or used. That being said, we've got two 8th graders going to NYLT this summer with a couple other scouts thinking about it. I'd love to develop a weekend (Friday through Sunday) training program within the troop. Some of the ideas (off the top of my head) that I'd like to focus on are: 1. Servant Leadership (or Leading by Doing) vs. Command Leadership 2. How Leaders
  11. A neighboring council has a merit badge event (for lack of a better term) that is at least closer to actual learning. The classes are held on two Saturdays that are two or three weeks apart. There was one STEM fair done at the Princeton Plasma Physics lab. It was clear on the prerequisites and what needed to be done before you got there. It also provided that certain badges required post badge reports that had to be submitted. My son too young (11 years old) to do the Nuclear Engineering, but man, that would have been exciting if he could have done it. That being said, we didn't do
  12. Troop has around 50 scouts. SM, 10 parent ASMs at each meeting (probably around 4 to 5 on outings), 4 Eagled Out ASMs. SPL and PLs are elected on a troop-wide basis. ASPL is selected by SPL from a list provided by SM. APL are assigned by SM. Patrols are assigned by SM on an annual basis. New scouts are assigned to patrols when they cross over. We have 3 to 4 Packs that send us scouts anywhere from the beginning of March to mid-April. We have gotten around 10 new scouts each year and keep around 9 of them. As for the new scouts, they complete most of their T-1st requirements as part
  13. How about something with rope? There is a magic trick called the Popcorn Knot where you tie a knot in a rope and then when you pull the rope, the knot pops off to the floor. You could talk about scouting being the knot that ties things together. Starting in tigers it bring parents and their kids together, as the kids in a den move through Cub Scouts the become friends and work together. The diffferent dens come together as a pack. As you talk about this you tie the knot. You have two boys hold each end of the rope. Tell the audience that there is a magic in Cub Scouts because the kno
  14. I love jeans and given the opportunity, I'll wear jeans. However, when backpacking and camping in the conditions in the Northeast, wearing cotton isn't a good idea. I've been on backpacking treks in the late fall where it was 45 degrees during the day. That is enough to work up a sweat carrying 30 pounds on your back doing 10 miles. If you are wearing cotton, the cotton will absorb the mositure. When the sun goes down, the temperature drops below 30 degrees If that moisture hasn't evaporated, you are at risk of hypothermia. Most scouts (and a lot of scouters) believe hypothermia is
  15. Burn out typically isn't a result of doing too much of something you enjoy. From the adult side, it is a result of having too much to do without any assistance (e.g. Cubmaster of pack of 50 boys where no other parents help with anything) or getting too much aggrivation from others in trying to do your best (e.g. adults who ignore BSA rules and interpret the program the way they want it). For the boys, burnout is doing the same thing, over and over and over again. By the 5th year of Cub Scouts, the Webelos are just doing more of the same. My son's den tried to ramp it up and make
  16. Or they might want to join a bunch of different patrlols. When we get a group of 2 or 3 guys from a den, they want to be together. When we get 4 or more, they usually have a buddy they want to be with. I think the there is a big draw for they crossovers to be with the older "cool" scouts. I like the NSP concept. It would make our patrol leaders' lives much easier. They just are getting the hang of leading after six months and then three fifth graders join their patrol causing all of the 6th graders to regress ( I tell them that is is just another challenge and that in life just when y
  17. SM conferences must be scheduled a week in advance. BORs can be done the same week as SM conferences or the following week. EBORs are scheduled by council and take up to a month after the paperwork is approved. That just represents a complete misunderstanding of the purpose of a BOR which is to see how the program is working for the scout. Unfortunately.
  18. https://www.chess.com/blog/jim_ostler/history-of-chess12 https://www.chess.com/article/view/the-10-most-important-moments-in-chess-history http://www.mark-weeks.com/aboutcom/caa-hist.htm Also, Troop 334 has a great powerpoint on the merit badge (although the history portion is somewhat lacking). Just search BSA 334 Chess Merit Badge on Google. The MB book is not that good on the history part.
  19. When we tried a NSP last year, the overwelming response from the new scouts was "when do I get to join a real patrol?" We listened and let them join existing patrols. Most dropouts are boys who aren't sure they want to do scouting but do it because their parents think it is a good idea. I suspect that any Den leader can tell you who will stick with scouting. We find the Webelos are sort of burned out on the Cub Scout model and the NSP just makes it seem like more of the same. The biggest indicator of who stays with the troop is if the new Scout goes camping before the end o
  20. The one question that I like to ask is how the scout thanked the sponsors.
  21. I have a difficult time interpreting telling the boy to go to the CC and COR with his issues about the Scoutmaster as anything but telling him to take on the Scoutmaster. Also, I think your disparaging comments about a 14 year old who is struggling (and it appears succeeding) to lead AS A RESULT of a Scoutmaster who appears to be doing everything in his power to have the boy fail are out of line when you (as well as the rest of us) don't know the situation. NO SCOUT should have to function in a hostile environment. That is not part of the program. This Scout seems to be trying to make the
  22. Let me ask my son who is a 13 year old Star Scout.
  23. Stosh: I don't think that any Boy Scout should be expected to take on an adult who: 1) has a grudge against the boy because he won as SPL rather than the SM's son; 2) shows no respect for the BSA program (no blue cards, no merit badge counselor registration, no uniform, no CoH); 3) shows no respect for members of the Committee; 4) violates YPT guidelines regarding texting; and 4) has expressed a belligerent attitude toward the boy. I can tell you that if that was my son, it would not be a battle he fights alone.
  24. My suggestion for what it is worth. Start by having a discussion with Dad. Explain the rules and that a mistake was made through no fault of him or his son. Then explain the plan to get things back on track. Stress that this could cause problems when he goes for Eagle and you want to fix it once and for all. Next, have a Scoutmaster conference with the Scout. Explain the rules and that a mistake was made and it wasn't his fault. Tell the scout that he is amazing for having accomplished what he had done so far. Then (preferable with one of the boy's leading the discussion) go through t
  25. The miles for the 50 miler can count toward other requirements (Scout son counted three days and 30 of those miles toward his backpacking merit badge). The hikes for the Hiking MB can count toward the Second Class and First Class requirements but not toward other merit badges. The First Aid requirements are "Satisfy your counselor that you have current knowledge of all first aid requirements for Tenderfoot rank, Second Class rank, and First Class rank." There is no requirements that they need to be signed off on. I suspect any merit badge counselor wouldn't rely on the sign off, but wo
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