10 July 2009

New Boy Scout Rank Requirements

Posted by admin under: policies .

ScoutingNews.org is reporting from the national website that the 12th Edition of the Boy Scout Handbook will have changes to rank advancement requirements.

Here are the requirement changes, remember they take effect on January 1, 2010:

Tenderfoot
- A Scout must teach another person how to tie a square knot using the EDGE model (explain, demonstrate, guide, and enable).
- He must also be able to discuss four specific examples of how he lived the points of the Scout Law in his daily life.

Second Class
A Scout must discuss the principles of Leave No Trace and explain the factors to consider when choosing a patrol site and where to pitch a tent.
He must explain what respect is due the flag of the United States.
He must again discuss four examples of how he lived four different points of the Scout Law in his daily life.
He must earn an amount of money agreed upon by the Scout and his parents and save at least 50 percent of it.

First Class
An additional requirement to the 10 separate troop/patrol activities states he must demonstrate the principles of Leave No Trace on these outings.
He must discuss four more examples of how he lived the remaining four points of the Scout Law in his daily life.

Life
A Scout must use the EDGE model to teach a younger Scout a specified skill.

Star, Life, and Eagle
Troop Webmaster and Leave No Trace trainer are two new leadership positions.

Sounds like it’s time to start a troop web page if don’t have one so your young men have an additional opportunity for leadership. I’m still trying to get a Bugler in our troop. Apparently, it’s hard.

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9 Comments so far...

Scouter Steve Says:

10 July 2009 at 3:51 pm.

I think that having Troop Webmaster as an official leadership position is an excellent opportunity for our Scouts. I hope that the requirements for the position are well defined so the new webmasters don’t run afoul of any Internet gotchas. I am also concerned that this might step on the toes of many adult leaders who already run troop websites. They often pour considerable amounts of effort into providing webmaster services for their units, and take great pride in their work. In those cases, I think that existing adult-run troop websites should be re-designated as the Troop Committee website, and the Scout webmaster should run a Patrol Leaders Council or Scouts website serving the unit’s scouts. Does that approach make sense to any of the other Scouters out there?

YIS,
Scouter Steve
Unit Commissioner and Host of Reverent Scout Radio
http://ReverentScout.com

Randy C Says:

10 July 2009 at 6:36 pm.

Good Idea Steve. We have a Web Site, that our adult Webmaster has difficulty maintaining so this is great. Now, can we have a training module to assist leaders in potentially teaching a youth how to do this, but more importantly to help us help our youth avaoid the gotches you alluded to.

As a Roundtable Commissioner and Scoutmaster this would make some great ongoing roundtable special features this year. Ongoing reinforcement training modulesl for the Leave No Trace stuff, (which we have actually been doing since I was a Scout in the 60’s) and some of the other recent advancement changes as well would be helpful.

YIS

New York OA Trader | Shared Items From Around The Web – July 11, 2009 Says:

11 July 2009 at 9:00 am.

[...] New Boy Scout Rank Requirements [...]

Eleanor Says:

21 July 2009 at 8:06 pm.

As a long time scouter and having been a scout parent, I think the requirement for the second class scout that says a scout should earn a set amount of money and save half of it……how as a middle schooler (most likely) is he going to do this? job? (too young); allowance? (are you kidding? in these times?). This will have to entail a lot of work on the parent(s), which sometimes is not feasible, especially single parent families. This requirement is all well and good and is an early learning of how income/saving/expenses work. But I suppose if the boy saves his birthday, Christmas, etc. money he may be able to complete this requirement.

Leave No Trace on the EDGE of your Next Rank « JohnScout 2.0 Says:

22 July 2009 at 11:53 pm.

[...] July 22, 2009 The next round of BSA requirement changes for Boy Scouts are making the rounds on the [...]

Neil Says:

11 August 2009 at 10:53 am.

Eleanor: the purpose is not to complete a requirement. earning money to pay ones own way is a basic life skill. how does a scout think his summer camp fees get paid? Most troops I know of maintain scout accounts the boys can contribute/save to through the year.
- save cans and cash them in at the recycler (this sustains many homeless)
- sell popcorn (and it promotes citizenship supporting your council)
- organize or participate in a troop car wash (or any myriad of fundraisers you troop does)
- shovel snow/rake leaves/mow lawns (any physically able 7th grader should know how)
The requirement does not specify the amount. Just that it is agreed ahead (plan) and not all spent (a scout is thrifty). What’s the lesson if mom or dad just “writes a check.”

Dave Baer Says:

3 September 2009 at 11:08 pm.

Has anyone found a good job description for the new leadership position of Troop Webmaster? I’ve searched on line and found a few examples from other Troops, but I was wondering whether anyone else has anything they could share…?

Thanks!

Mary Says:

15 September 2009 at 10:38 pm.

The description of the scout webmaster is the key. Until we are given a clear description :) I was thinking that there could be a few different ways that a scout could serve as webmaster. 1) blog (link it to main troop website) 2) twitter or facebook… I think national bsa is hooked up with twitter & facebook. I’m not personally on it but I think it can be time consuming to keep up with.. perfect for those scouts who already uses these services. 3) scout takes over troop website… In many cases they might actually do a better job than the adults. 4) scout uses a free service like the google sites that have easy templates and the scouts could build these mini sites for preparing for special events like High Adventure trips or the National Jamboree… things like this… and then link to your main troop website. And of course, it all depends on the age of the scout and what the scout, troopmaster, and parents are comfortable with. It’s an interesting topic and I look forward to see a better description for it.

Carol Fredrickson Says:

22 February 2010 at 10:41 am.

Does anyone have any information on the new troop leadership positions? I remember there was a Webmaster and a Leave No Trace, was there something else?

The boys are having their leadership elections soon and I can’t find this info.

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