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Responsbilities
The
following section is intended for your parent(s)/ or
guardian(s):
Troop
Outings,
including camping and outdoor activities, are the heart of
Boy Scouting.
There
are dangers on outings - fires, stoves, knives, sticks,
insects, animals, streams, weather, falls, other Scouts -
but while adults accompany the Scouts on outings, the adult
leaders' role is to assure the safe guidance of the outing
experience without smothering the Scouts.
Scouts will make mistakes and may not always be
happy, but the Scouts are there to develop and learn, and
part of that experience is learning from those mistakes.
In
general, we encourage Scouts to camp with their patrol in a
patrol site separate from the other patrols. Patrols
plan their own menus, and cook and eat together as a
team. Adults do not eat or camp with a Scout patrol.
Adults
do not interfere with the functioning of boy leaders, even
if they make mistakes, unless it is a matter of safety or if
the mistake will be immediately costly.
Adults
do not usually do anything for a boy that he can do
himself. They let him make decisions without adult
interference, and let him make non-costly mistakes.
Boy Scout camping activities center on the patrol,
where boys learn teamwork, leadership, and most camping
skills. It is important that adults not be in the
middle of patrol activities such as site selection, tent
pitching, meal preparation, and anything else where boys get
to practice decision-making.
The
responsible person for a Boy Scout patrol is the boy Patrol
Leader. This
isn't token leadership. A Patrol Leader has real
authority and genuine responsibilities.
Much of the success, safety, and happiness of the
other boys depends directly on him.
Boy
Scouting teaches leadership. And boys mainly learn
leadership by practicing it, not by watching adults lead.
While
Scout skills are an important part of the Scout program,
what ultimately matters when our Scouts become adults is not
whether they can use a map & compass, but whether they
can offer leadership to others in tough situations; and can
live by a code that centers on honest, honorable, and
ethical behavior.
At
all outings there will be trained adult leaders, and
sometimes partly-trained and untrained parents/guardians.
So what do we adults do, now that we've surrendered
so much direct authority to boys?
Adults
always tent separately from boys, and generally cook and eat
separately from the Scouts.
We will be safely nearby, but not smotheringly close.
We
do that by ensuring adequately trained adults are present at
the outing, (including training in basic first aid) and by
following the BSA
Guide to Safe Scouting.
Among other things it requires a minimum of 4 people
on any outing, 2-deep adult leadership (i.e. no boy will be
alone with a single adult) and an enforced Scout buddy
system (i.e. outside the campground boys must always have a
buddy along with them).
When swimming is involved, a BSA-trained life-guard
will be present.
Parents/Guardians
As
parents or guardians, you have as great a role, or even
greater, in the success of your Scout as the Troop's adult
and boy leaders. Scouts
is a program for boys to gain experience in many
different walks of life, learn self reliance, and learn to
become leaders or team-players as appropriate.
Scout outings are not cheap daycare.
The following is a list of responsibilities that you
can contribute to help your Scout enjoy and develop from
successful Scout Outings:
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Please
help your Scout understand the meaning of the Scout Law
- A Scout is trustworthy, loyal,
helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful,
thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent. On an
Outing, it is important that the Scout knows how to
behave and participate properly with respect for other
Scouts and their leaders.
-
Please
try to include in your home an environment where these
Boy Scout principles are already lived so Outings will
be no different.
-
Please
take time to learn about the Scout program yourself -
read your scout's books and understand his goals and
desires in terms of rank advancement and merit badges.
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Please
equip your Scout appropriately, within your budget.
Many of our young Scouts weigh less than 70 lbs
so should not be carrying more than 20 lbs on an Outing
- a target of 15 lbs is achievable even for those on a
tight budget. The
Troop operates an equipment exchange program, so there
may be used equipment available for your Scout.
It is unfair to your Scout, and potentially
unsafe to overload him.
It is also unfair to other Scouts and adult
leaders who often have to share the load of an
overloaded Scout. Click
here for advice if you are unsure what is appropriate
and not.
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Please
ensure that Scout leaders know of any medical conditions
that your Scout has, and provide any necessary
medications and dosage instructions.
-
Please
do not send your Scout on an Outing if he is
unwell
-
Please
ask the adult leaders if there is any way you can help -
there may be vacant leadership positions you would be
willing to fill, or just incidental assistance that you
may be able to offer
-
If
you don't agree with an adult leader, then, unless they
are putting a boy or group in danger, please
privately discuss your other options with them, but
ultimately let them do their job and make the decision.
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