This appears like it is a ripe topic for discussion based on comments regarding it in another thread.
First Class Emphasis (sometimes misidentified as First Class, First Year, which is the name of a recognition certificate) is a program planning tool that goes hand in hand with the use of the BSA's recommended troop structure where three distinct Patrol types are used. That being New Scout Patrols, Regular or Experienced Patrols, and Venture Patrols.
First Class Emphasis is a focused program plan used in the New Scout Patrol, that gives an active scout the opportunity to Learn, Test, be Reviewed, and be recognized for the ranks leading to and including First Class within the first approximately 14-months of his Boy Scout membership.
It's purpose is to give the scout the basic skills needed to integrate into the regular program of the troop, and to give the scout the activity, confidence, experience and self-esteem to keep more scouts in the troop for that all imortant first year. Troops that use NSP and First Class Emphasis have a higher retention rate not only for the first year, but for the first three years of scouting, than units that do not use it.
Can it be a low quality advancement? That would depend like all ther advancement, on the quality and abilities of the unit leaders for that scout's specific unit.
First Class Emphasis has been a part of theBSA's troop program for nearly twenty years, and is taught as part of Scoutmaster Leader Specifc Training as it has been in all troop leader training courses that have proceeded it.
