The Boy-Let Troop - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Boy-Let Troop

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The Boy-Led Troop David Mitchko Mercer Area District Commissioner Why is it Important? Signs that your Troop is Boy-Led Youth Leaders and NO ADULTS telling other boys ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Boy-Let Troop


1
The Boy-Led Troop
David Mitchko Mercer Area District Commissioner
2
Why is it Important?
  • Empowers boys to be leaders
  • Boys plan and participate in the activities that
    they want to do
  • Keeps the older boys interested in the program
  • Integrates 5 of the 7 methods of the BSA Patrol
    Method, Association with Adults, Advancement,
    Personal Growth and Leadership
  • Support Scoutings Mission To prepare young
    people to make ethical choices over their
    lifetimes by instilling in them the values of the
    Scout Oath and Law
  • The more choices you allow a boy to make, in
    scoutings safe environment, the more he will
    learn how to make the right ones.

3
Signs that your Troop is Boy-Led
  • Youth Leaders and NO ADULTS telling other boys
    what to do
  • Meetings and Activities planned and run by the
    SPL
  • Youth leaders know who is in what position of
    responsibility
  • Scoutmaster or his assistants giving advice and
    direction to the Youth Leaders only no other
    adults giving directions.
  • Boys are fast-start trained by their Scoutmaster
    when they first receive their position of
    responsibility
  • New Youth Leaders receive timely TLT from their
    SM
  • Every boy has access to a written description for
    each position
  • Troop has monthly PLC meetings run by the SPL
  • All activities on the troop calendar are decided
    by the PLC

4
The Scoutmasters Role
  • Training the Youth Leaders a never ending job
  • What their job is
  • What is expected of them
  • What type of leaders the BSA expects them to be
  • Evaluate the skills, abilities and morale level
    of the PLC members
  • Provide a level of direction, coaching and
    support based on this evaluation, mainly with the
    SPL/ASPL
  • On-the-job training the teachable moment
  • Provide positive reinforcement of leadership
    behavior
  • Encourage the PLC to hold Reflections
  • What went well?
  • What can we improve on?
  • Hold non-advancement Scoutmasters Conferences
    with Youth Leaders as needed to discuss their
    performance as leaders

5
Scoutmasters Pitfalls
  • Taking over when things are not going well
  • Not training the Youth Leaders
  • Not providing direction, coaching nor support
  • Not letting the boys know that they are in
    charge
  • Not communicating with the scout in charge
  • Not allowing the Youth Leaders to fail and see
    the consequences of their failure
  • Being too emotionally involved with the program
  • Not understanding why the scouting program exists
  • Measuring success by how organized his troop is

6
What Can the Other Adults Do?
  • The Troop Committee Supports the Program
  • Conduct Boards of Review and Courts of Honor
  • Process advancement paperwork and keep records
  • Make reservations for campsites and other
    activities
  • Organize fundraisers
  • Purchase troop equipment and supplies
  • Parents provide drivers, support for activities,
    adult supervision at campouts, etc.
  • Adults can do skills instruction, make
    announcements or lead an activity in a Boy-Led
    Troop.
  • The Scoutmaster sometimes has to run interference
    to keep the other adults from doing the boys job.

7
How Boy-Led Can Go Wrong
  • Scouts elect an SPL or Patrol Leader who does not
    perform, even after much training, coaching and
    direction from the Scoutmaster
  • An SPL gives a boy a position of responsibility
    which he does not what or cannot do.
  • The PLC picks an activity and date which none of
    them intends to participate in.
  • The PLC makes plans for a meeting and the boys
    assigned to run the activities dont attend or
    show up unprepared
  • If the youth leaders poor performance if
    affecting the program, the Scoutmaster must take
    action not by taking over for the boys, but by
    working with them.

8
Failure is an Option
  • A Scoutmasters biggest challenge is to learn to
    deal with the failure of the youth leaders
  • Always insist that the boys have a backup plan
    and that they should always be prepared to switch
    to it
  • The backup plan does not have to be perfect
  • The Youth Leaders will learn how to manage risk
    and who they can rely on
  • The Scoutmaster must strike a careful balance
    between allowing the youth leaders to learn from
    their failures and running a good program.
  • Steer the scouts away from the big mistakes that
    can spoil the fun
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