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 What
Is Boy Scouting?
The Boy Scouts of America was incorporated to provide a program for community
organizations that offers effective character, citizenship, and personal fitness
training for youth.
Specifically, the BSA endeavors to develop American citizens who are
physically, mentally, and emotionally fit; have a high degree of self-reliance
as evidenced in such qualities as initiative, courage, and resourcefulness; have
personal values based on religious concepts; have the desire and skills to help
others; understand the principles of the American social, economic, and
governmental systems; are knowledgeable about and take pride in their American
heritage and understand our nation's role in the world; have a keen respect for
the basic rights of all people; and are prepared to participate in and give
leadership to American society.
Boy Scout Program Membership
Boy Scouting, one of the membership divisions of the BSA, is available to
boys who have earned the Arrow of Light Award or have completed the fifth grade,
or who are 11 through 17 years old. The program achieves the BSA's objectives of
developing character, citizenship, and personal fitness qualities among youth by
focusing on a vigorous program of outdoor activities.
Volunteer Scouters
Thousands of volunteer leaders, both men and women, are involved in the Boy
Scouting program. They serve in a variety of jobs - everything from unit leaders
to chairmen of troop committees, committee members, merit badge counselors, and
chartered organization representatives.
Like other phases of the program, Boy Scouting is made available to community
organizations having similar interests and goals. Chartered organizations
include professional organizations; governmental bodies; and religious,
educational, civic, fraternal, business, labor, and citizens' groups. Each
organization appoints one of its members as the chartered organization
representative. The organization is responsible for leadership, the meeting
place, and support for troop activities.
Who Pays for It?
Several groups are responsible for supporting Boy Scouting: the boy and his
parents, the troop, the chartered organization, and the community. Boys are
encouraged to earn money whenever possible to pay their own expenses, and they
also contribute dues to their troop treasuries to pay for budgeted items.
Troops obtain additional income by working on approved money-earning projects.
The community, including parents, supports Scouting through the United Way,
Friends of Scouting campaigns, bequests, and special contributions to the BSA
local council. This income provides leadership training, outdoor programs,
council service centers and other facilities, and professional service for
units.
Aims and Methods of the Scouting Program
The Scouting program has three specific objectives, commonly referred to as
the "Aims of Scouting." They are character development, citizenship training,
and personal fitness.
The methods by which the aims are achieved are listed below in random order
to emphasize the equal importance of each.
Ideals
The ideals of Boy Scouting are spelled out in the Scout Oath, the Scout
Law, the Scout motto, and the Scout slogan. The Boy Scout measures himself
against these ideals and continually tries to improve. The goals are high, and
as he reaches for them, he has some control over what and who he becomes.
Patrols
The patrol method gives Boy Scouts an experience in group living and
participating citizenship. It places responsibility on young shoulders and
teaches boys how to accept it. The patrol method allows Scouts to interact in
small groups where members can easily relate to each other. These small groups
determine troop activities through elected representatives.
Outdoor Programs
Boy Scouting is designed to take place outdoors. It is in the outdoor
setting that Scouts share responsibilities and learn to live with one another.
In the outdoors the skills and activities practiced at troop meetings come alive
with purpose. Being close to nature helps Boy Scouts gain an appreciation for
the beauty of the world around us. The outdoors is the laboratory in which Boy
Scouts learn ecology and practice conservation of nature's resources.
Advancement
Boy Scouting provides a series of surmountable obstacles and steps in
overcoming them through the advancement method. The Boy Scout plans his
advancement and progresses at his own pace as he meets each challenge. The Boy
Scout is rewarded for each achievement, which helps him gain self-confidence.
The steps in the advancement system help a Boy Scout grow in self-reliance and
in the ability to help others.
Associations With Adults
Boys learn a great deal by watching how adults conduct themselves. Scout
leaders can be positive role models for the members of the troop. In many cases
a Scoutmaster who is willing to listen to boys, encourage them, and take a
sincere interest in them can make a profound difference in their lives.
Personal Growth
As Boy Scouts plan their activities and progress toward their goals,
they experience personal growth. The Good Turn concept is a major part of the
personal growth method of Boy Scouting. Boys grow as they participate in
community service projects and do Good Turns for others. Probably no device is
as successful in developing a basis for personal growth as the daily Good Turn.
The religious emblems program also is a large part of the personal growth
method. Frequent personal conferences with his Scoutmaster help each Boy Scout
to determine his growth toward Scouting's aims.
Leadership Development
The Boy Scout program encourages boys to learn and practice leadership
skills. Every Boy Scout has the opportunity to participate in both shared and
totalleadership situations. Understanding the concepts of leadership helps a boy
accept the leadership role of others and guides him toward the citizenship aim
of Scouting.
Uniform
The uniform makes the Boy Scout troop visible as a force for good and
creates a positive youth image in the community. Boy Scouting is an action
program, and wearing the uniform is an action that shows each Boy Scout's
commitment to the aims and purposes of Scouting. The uniform gives the Boy Scout
identity in a world brotherhood of youth who believe in the same ideals. The
uniform is practical attire for Boy Scout activities and provides a way for Boy
Scouts to wear the badges that show what they have accomplished.
Outdoor Activities
Local councils operate and maintain Scout camps. The National Council
operates high-adventure areas at Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico, the
Northern Tier National High Adventure Program in Minnesota and Canada, and the
Florida National High Adventure Sea Base in the Florida Keys. About 70 councils
also operate high-adventure programs.
The BSA conducts a national Scout jamboree every four years and participates
in world Scout jamborees (also held at four-year intervals). Fort A.P. Hill,
Virginia, was the site of the 1997 National Scout Jamboree.
The Beginning of Scouting
Scouting, as known to millions of youth and adults, evolved during the early
1900s through the efforts of several men dedicated to bettering youth. These
pioneers of the program conceived outdoor activities that developed skills in
young boys and gave them a sense of enjoyment, fellowship, and a code of conduct
for everyday living.
In this country and abroad at the turn of the century, it was thought that
children needed certain kinds of education that the schools couldn't or didn't
provide. This led to the formation of a variety of youth groups, many with the
word "Scout" in their names. For example, Ernest Thompson Seton, an American
naturalist, artist, writer, and lecturer, originated a group called the
Woodcraft Indians and in 1902 wrote a guidebook for boys in his organization
called the Birch Bark Roll. Meanwhile in Britain, Robert Baden-Powell, after
returning to his country a hero following military service in Africa, found boys
reading the manual he had written for his regiment on stalking and survival in
the wild. Gathering ideas from Seton, America's Daniel Carter Beard, and other
Scoutcraft experts, Baden-Powell rewrote his manual as a nonmilitary skill book,
which he titled Scouting for Boys. The book rapidly gained a wide readership in
England and soon became popular in the United States. In 1907, when Baden-Powell
held the first campout for Scouts on Brownsea Island off the coast of England,
troops were spontaneously springing up in America.
William D. Boyce, a Chicago publisher, incorporated the Boy Scouts of America
in 1910 after meeting with Baden-Powell. (Boyce was inspired to meet with the
British founder by an unknown Scout who led him out of a dense London fog and
refused to take a tip for doing a Good Turn.) Immediately after its
incorporation, the BSA was assisted by officers of the YMCA in organizing a task
force to help community organizations start and maintain a high-quality Scouting
program. Those efforts climaxed in the organization of the nation's first Scout
camp at Lake George, New York, directed by Ernest Thompson Seton. Beard, who had
established another youth group, the Sons of Daniel Boone (which he later merged
with the BSA), provided assistance. Also on hand for this historic event was
James E. West, a lawyer and an advocate of children's rights, who later would
become the first professional Chief Scout Executive of the Boy Scouts of
America. Seton became the first volunteer national Chief Scout, and Beard, the
first national Scout Commissioner.
Publication s
The BSA publishes the Boy Scout Handbook (more than 35 million copies of
which have been printed); the Junior Leader Handbook, which offers information
relevant to boy leadership; the Scoutmaster Handbook; more than 100 merit badge
pamphlets dealing with hobbies, vocations, and advanced Scoutcraft; and program
features and various kinds of training, administrative, and organizational
manuals for adult volunteer leaders and Boy Scouts. In addition, the BSA
publishes Boys' Life magazine, the national magazine for all boys (magazine
circulation is more than 1.3 million) and Scouting magazine for volunteers,
which has a circulation of 900,000.
Conservation
Conservation activities supplement the program of Boy Scout advancement,
summer camp, and outdoor activities and teaches young people to better
understand their interdependence with the environment.
To learn more about Boy Scouting, or to find out how to start, join, or
support a troop, contact the Texas Trails Council.
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