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Our Troop also has 3 BOR's/COH's per year. The dates are published at the beginning of the school year. It is (or should be) on the Scout to plan to have his requirements done before the BOR. Learning to plan around deadlines is part of growing up to be a responsible adult, which is the ultimate goal of the program.
fritz1255 wrote:Learning to plan around deadlines is part of growing up to be a responsible adult, which is the ultimate goal of the program.
fritz1255 wrote:Sorry if I offend the "rules weenies", but 3 BOR's and COH's per year is what we will continue to do, at least until a new leadership team comes on board at some point in the future. The Scouts will continue to plan around that schedule. And to anticipate the next question, no we have not ever had any 14-year-old Eagle Scouts, nor do we think that is necessarily a good thing.
fritz1255 wrote:Oh my gosh, you folks are absolutely right! By only having three BOR's a year, we are scarring these boys for life. They will grow up to be nothing but mindless schedule-driven robots, totally incapable of functioning within normal society. We will disband the Troop Committee immediately and bring in another set of parents who I'm sure are chomping at the bit to take over. One question - will BSA insurance cover us from the inevitable lawsuits for the damage we have caused? Or did we miss the boat on that by failing to file a Tour Permit for every Committee Meeting?
fritz1255 wrote:Oh my gosh, you folks are absolutely right! By only having three BOR's a year, we are scarring these boys for life. They will grow up to be nothing but mindless schedule-driven robots, totally incapable of functioning within normal society. We will disband the Troop Committee immediately and bring in another set of parents who I'm sure are chomping at the bit to take over. One question - will BSA insurance cover us from the inevitable lawsuits for the damage we have caused? Or did we miss the boat on that by failing to file a Tour Permit for every Committee Meeting?
jr56 wrote:It always amazes me how some people can get all bent out of shape when you try to point out how the scouting program is supposed to be run (set up by the BSA, not me). Then claim how they are going to run things their way, even once they have been informed that it is incorrect. The purpose of this forum is to educate scouters on things they may be missing. If you are going to insist on not following BSA procedure, once you have been politely informed of the error of your ways, why are you even participating in an educational forum if you have no desire to achieve education.
FrankJ wrote:The problem with looking at just one thing, is that it is the intangibles that are important. When teaching Webeloes to scout transitions we teach that you need to look at the whole troop. A troop rule like this would be a red flag, but the troop could have other redeeming benefits. On the other hand some people or looking at a highly regimented program.
If we only held boards every four months, it would have to be on a Sat. because it would take all day.
evmori wrote:fritz1255 wrote:Oh my gosh, you folks are absolutely right! By only having three BOR's a year, we are scarring these boys for life. They will grow up to be nothing but mindless schedule-driven robots, totally incapable of functioning within normal society. We will disband the Troop Committee immediately and bring in another set of parents who I'm sure are chomping at the bit to take over. One question - will BSA insurance cover us from the inevitable lawsuits for the damage we have caused? Or did we miss the boat on that by failing to file a Tour Permit for every Committee Meeting?
Could be the best thing that happens to your unit. Currently it appears to be adult run when it should be boy run.
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