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wagionvigil wrote:I may have offended a poster and I want the poster to know where I am coming from.
wagionvigil wrote:I am totally against troop rules and the troops that try to enforce them. Can you Loose your charter? Yep but as posted Numbers mean everything. Can the council tell you to stop using your troop rules yes and I hope they do. I have set on hearing for troops and what chenged were their rules and the leadership of the troop rather than pulling a charter.
MisterChris wrote:wagionvigil wrote:I am totally against troop rules and the troops that try to enforce them. Can you Loose your charter? Yep but as posted Numbers mean everything. Can the council tell you to stop using your troop rules yes and I hope they do. I have set on hearing for troops and what chenged were their rules and the leadership of the troop rather than pulling a charter.
Believe it or not,i agree with you inasmuch as troop rules add to or subtract from advancement.
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I stated on another thread that I've helped eliminate several of the troop rules that existed in this troop when I first came on board.![]()
Most scouts may have liked these extra reqs but I knew they were not BSA and that a parent could cause us grief, so I managed to get them removed.![]()
Next I was told that a knot board was required for Eagle. Scouts had to tie all knots and when that was demonstrated to me, they had to make a board with all on it, it was a req for Eagle.![]()
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I told them that I would not req anything that wasn't already in the book but I would review their knots with them when I gave them the BOR.![]()
When I was a scout BORs gave tests. Dunno if that was BSA policy 1969-1978 or not, but it happened in our troop, so I simply went and did what I was used to.![]()
To my knowledge I had been doing absolutely nothing that was against BSA policy. (After I eliminated the 'stuff' listed above.)![]()
It came as a shocker to me that I was,![]()
and as a good scout I've changed our policy
and retests are not going to happen.
I've expressed concern over it
but am certainly willing to comply rather than surruptitiously continue a disallowed practice that could be challenged.
See where I was coming from - I was simply verifying that the scout learned. I had very few scouts that did not pass a BOR, they always knew why, it was ALWAYS blatant unpreparedness (well, ok, except for the knots).
Guess I was a little silly to expect that things had changed little in 15 years.Well, anyway, we'll expect uniforms as well, since we're making sure the scouts have them. But we're going to comply on the 'no retest' policy. We'll review whether the scout learned using the oblique questions suggested.
I can see how we can work within the confines of this to still provide a quality program for little Johnny and his Mom, Dad, and lawyer.
FrankJ wrote:You bring up a goog point Micah. BOR can and should ask general questions about skills the scout has learned. I do not consider that to be "retesting". The BOR should keep in mind what the requrement actually was. Using the bowline example, a scout may not remember exactly how to tie one, but he should at least know in a general sense and what the knot is used for. Unless the scout is clearly unprepared the skills review should be only a part of the BOR. How the scout feels about the program, what the scout is getting out of scouting, scout spirit & leadership in the later ranks are equally important items to cover. If you look at what a BOR is suppose to cover, the recommended 15 minutes is not a lot of time.
The Adv Guide specifically says a BOR is REVIEW, NOT a RETEST.
Scouting179 wrote:If the questions are asking about the skills required for a rank, it's a retest. Read the Adv Guide, the BOR focus is review, goals, how to help the Scout in his Scouting, etc.; not to see if he can do certain skills. That part comes in getting sign offs and the SM Conference.
Scouting179 wrote:If the questions are asking about the skills required for a rank, it's a retest. Read the Adv Guide, the BOR focus is review, goals, how to help the Scout in his Scouting, etc.; not to see if he can do certain skills. That part comes in getting sign offs and the SM Conference.
Scouting179 wrote:OK, let me clarify...asking what they did to complete a requirement is a review and ensuring it was done. Having them do it (like throwing them a rope and tying knots) would be a retest.
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