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Everything posted by mrkstvns
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Beacon of Freedom - BSA Inner City Youth (Boston)
mrkstvns replied to RememberSchiff's topic in Open Discussion - Program
Interesting. There are a huge number of obstacles to creating and running a successful inner city unit, most of which are not even mentioned in that article. Here in Houston, the local council (SHAC) runs a program called "Scoutreach" that is intended to create and support scouting units in underserved (mostly low-income) neighborhoods. One of the biggest obstacles they encounter to creating inner city units is getting qualified adults to volunteer. The inner city neighborhoods have a lot more single parents, more parents working shift work, more kids being raised by grandma, more parents who can't pass a background check (arrests, drugs, etc.). Here, the council supports some units by providing paid leaders. That's an expensive approach when your organization really wants dues-paying families, but I suppose it's necessary if you want to avoid having the organization branded as an elitist group that's not genuinely open to all. I'd enjoy hearing about what other councils are doing to get scouting programs into neighborhoods that lack active units.- 10 replies
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Have y'all heard about the first ever useful use of social media hashtags? It's called the #Trashtag challenge and the idea is simple: go clean up an outdoor space. Post before and after pictures using the hashtag #Trashtag It ties in perfectly with scouting's emphasis on service projects, the environment, and Leave No Trace. Info from Bryan on Scouting: https://blog.scoutingmagazine.org/2019/03/12/trashtag-challenge/ Info from the Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2019/03/12/will-trashtag-challenge-really-get-bored-teens-offline-cleaning-up-planet/?utm_term=.5a7adc1fb19b Just a reminder to scouters who might be thinking of doing a unit service project around this effort: you also might be able to earn a Hornaday Unit Award, or other conservation awards...
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I've been looking at that one too! Also thinking about doing some hiking in the Kisatchie National Forest in Arkansas. I've heard they have some good trails there. If you ever get into Texas, the Lone Star Trail is nice. It's about 140 miles --- mostly forested, mostly flat with only slight elevation changes. Easy for anyone who has hiked Philmont or any mountainous terrain. It's (mostly) National Forest land, so backcountry camping is allowed.
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Okay....I can see that causing a dip in the numbers. But I wouldn't have expected it to make the numbers plummet by 34%. Philmont plans to be open for treks this summer, so I'm hoping that the numbers of Backpacking merit badges edges back up this year. I'd hate to think that such a big drop is due only to declining outdoor focus or fewer adult leaders who know how to hike the backcountry.
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Lifeguard vs Aquatics Supervisor
mrkstvns replied to PinkPajamas's topic in Wood Badge and adult leader training
Sadly, our local council never offers the Aquatics Supervision courses (heck, they don't even have an Aquatics committee). The Aquatics Supervision courses look pretty good. Participants need to get in the water and actually practice recommended response methods. It's practical, relevant, and actually does show a scouter how to supervise aquatic activities. Night and day different from Safe Swim Defense, which is nothing but a worthless panacea that scouters do online as a mere check-off, without ever having to even see a river or lake. -
Makes sense. That's also in line with the guidelines for Eagle projects: a scout who doesn't spend all of the raised funds for a project is supposed to turn over the excess cash to the beneficiary organization.
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Correct. The HIPAA law imposes duties of confidentiality on health care providers and insurance companies, but if you yourself disclose information to a private citizen, that's your business. If it turns out that they don't safeguard the information, welllllll, that's between you and the untrustworthy person/organization you trusted. See: https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/covered-entities/index.html
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What?!?! Is this for real? When/where was this announced??
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The saddest observation I see in the list is that Backpacking is down by a third... Sad because that should be such a core activity of any unit's program.
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Lifeguard vs Aquatics Supervisor
mrkstvns replied to PinkPajamas's topic in Wood Badge and adult leader training
I might be mistaken about this, but my understanding is that the two Aquatic Supervision Courses are aimed at adult scouters only while the BSA Lifeguard is appropriate for either adults or youth age 15 or older. -
It's sometimes even worse. I was at a Merit Badge College event where the organizers requested A&B medical forms. For a 3-hour, classroom event. The overreach can be utterly stupid...
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I was reading an article about Scouting for Food... http://www.newstribune.com/news/local/story/2019/mar/10/scouting-food-nets-more-10000-pounds-goods-samaritan-center/769227/ The last line of that story jumped out at me: "He said someone also gave away a $100 bill Saturday, adding the amount of cash received in total was "pretty substantial," though he did not have an exact count." If your scouts are participating in a Scouting for Food activity, and someone hands them a "pretty substantial" donation, who gets to keep the money? Is it a donation to the scout unit, or a donation to the local food bank? What do you think?
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I don't know that ringtones are gonna do the trick, but I agree that the badge is a tough one. What I think makes it outdated is that it requires LOTS of completely irrelevant calls that nobody has ever heard (aside from scouts trying to earn Bugling merit badge). Let's face it. The only bugle calls that most scouts (and scouters) pay any attention to are Taps and Revellie. (Maybe To the Colors also, but I don't think I've ever heard that at a scout camp).
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Each year, "Scouting" magazine publishes a list showing the number of each merit badge earned in the previous year. The 2018 list is available here: https://blog.scoutingmagazine.org/2019/02/11/2018-merit-badge-rankings-a-deep-dive-into-the-official-numbers-from-1-to-137/ As usual, all the top positions are Eagle-required. I always find the bottom 10 to be the most interesting. This year, American Business managed to tie perennial last-place Bugling as the least-earned merit badge in scouting. A mere 551 merit badges earned nationwide... Observations? Comments?
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Shooting Sports in Scouting’s Program
mrkstvns replied to RyanRosier's topic in Open Discussion - Program
We do a Shooting Sports weekend too. Our NRA-certified instructor covers safety rules within about 30 minutes and does another 15 minutes while out on the range showing the boys how to operate the specific bolt-action .22 rifle provided by the council at camp. The boys are then closely supervised by NRA-certified RSOs with the instructor acting as coach. The boys get MUCH more time out on the range than they spend in lecture. 2 3-hour sessions. Wow. Just Wow. I'm not even a kid and I'm bored just contemplating it... -
Shooting Sports in Scouting’s Program
mrkstvns replied to RyanRosier's topic in Open Discussion - Program
2 3-hour long sessions....YIKES, that sure is a LOT of adult hot air! -
Shooting Sports in Scouting’s Program
mrkstvns replied to RyanRosier's topic in Open Discussion - Program
Fair enough. (And a point well taken.) I also think there's value in spending FAR more time DOING things than talking about things. How you gonna keep the boy interested in scouting when you promise him a Shooting Sports weekend but it turns out he has to sit in a boring classroom for longer than he gets to be outside with a rifle in his hands?? "We been gyped! They should call it a Shooting the Bull weekend." -
I couldn't have said it better!
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Maybe not the way Eagle94-A1 described it, but a ridiculously awesome adventure could still be done *IF* you have a motivated ship with committed scouts and scouters. Check out this story of a ship that did a 3-week cruise to Alaska... https://boyslife.org/video-audio/148626/its-all-hands-on-deck-for-a-sea-scout-cruise-to-alaska/
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Agree with what you say....BUT I also agree with carebear3895... Science and technology are a real part of today's world, and no kid growing up can "Be Prepared" without knowing how to deal with it. BSA's inclusion of merit badges in STEM fields is great --- it lets the boys who want to explore those fields do so. The Nova/Supernova awards are great too --- they help foster awareness of STEM and might also help a boy discover something he wants to pursue as a career. BUT I agree with carebear3895 because he is referring to "STEM Scouts", which is not a purely optional award within the normal BSA program (where the focus is still on outdoors). STEM Scouts is an entirely different beast in which kids never have to get out in the woods. STEM Scouts is a type of unit (like a pack, a troop, or a ship). They don't have to camp. They don't have to hike. They don't even have to learn about Environmental Science. It's indoors. It's academic. Instead of field green uniforms, they have lab coats. Instead of fun, they get extra science classes....YECH!
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You are too kind and gentle on National BSA. Even though I support STEM initiatives in this day and age, scouting's value is still in its core outdoor program. That's what kids (and the public at large) expect. Nova is okay as a purely optional program for those scouts (or parents) who want to do it, but the outdoors is the crux of scouting. Turning STEM into the entire focus of a BSA unit is indeed "idiotic". STEM Scouts really doesn't belong in BSA. Maybe BSA and GSUSA could settle their legal differences with a fair trade: we'll give them all the namby-pamby indoor boys (and their helicopter parents) who can't deal with camping, and in return we'll take as many of those outdoor-loving girls as they can manage to bore senseless with STEM, sewing and cookies.
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Hmmm. That could be a problem for our troop since we typically have 40+ scouts going to summer camp so we charter a bus to get them to/from camp. We wouldn't be able to transport scouts anywhere during the middle of the week.
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No. For some reason, I thought it was a brain-child of the 60s or 70s era. I take it you are involved with a ship...
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I came across an excellent web site called 50 Miler that is about 50-percent scout focused and 50-percent general backpacking focused (which, of course, is also relevant to scouts). Many of the blog posts are recent and all (even the "oldies") are of excellent quality --- relevant and accurate. The site isn't about BSA's 50 Miler award, but with it's focus on long distance backpacking treks, it is completely relevant to any scouter thinking about the 50 Miler award... Link: https://50miler.com/
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Ahhh, lunch! The most boring meal of a typical backpacking day. If you're like me, lunch on a backpacking trip is typically a total non-event. All morning long, you've been munching on GORP or some other trail mix with maybe a Nature Valley granola bar along the way....then comes the lunch stop, and what's there to eat? More of the same GORP or granola bars! Nobody wants to stop long for lunch, so cooking is out, and nobody is going to pack loaves of bread and cold cuts, so a little creativity can go a long way. How about some faux pizza? Awesome! INGREDIENTS Flour tortillas Tomato paste (tubes work best for backpacking) Pepperoni slices Manchego cheese DIRECTIONS Squeeze some tomato paste on a tortilla. Smear it around. Add a few slices of manchego cheese and a few slices of pepperoni. Wrap it, eat it, make another. If you can't find tubes of tomato paste in your local grocery store, you can order them from Kroger: https://ship.kroger.com/p/070796400100/cento-all-natural-tomato-paste