Cowboy wrote:I have seen this subject come up before and I always have to ask: If SMC is not pass/fail (which is is NOT) and a BoR is not pass/fail, where is the adult oversight on advancement? Just having things checked off in the book does not mean that the boy is ready for advancement. Who signs the book in the Troop? Many Troops have SPL or ASPL signing requirements. SMC can not be P/F, but to turn the BoR into a rubber stamp is wrong.
Okay. You hit a serious hot button for me that's been a real pain lately. I was ready to say it's not for some adult just back from his proctology exam to judge whether an 11 year old boy fulfills the philosophical essence of a tenderfoot scout (or other rank). Then, I decided I better make sure I'm right before I vent. So, I re-read the "Advancement Committee Policies and Procedures". Grrrr..... ACPP is just clear as mud on this. No wonder I'm always surprised how well educated and well trained scouters view and implement the advancement program so differently.
The conflict is in the ACPP indicating no retesting but that we should "determine the Scout’s attitude and his acceptance of Scouting’s ideals." Other scouting documents indicate a scout controls his own advancement and earns advancement. Well, if the scoutmaster signed off on the scout spirit, isn't it done? Doing otherwise re-tests scout spirit? If all the requirements are done, doesn't the scout deserve to advance because he earned it? I'd hate to see some scout denied advancement because joe schmoe BOR member saw the scout inadequately lash two pieces of wood together at the last camporee. Ooops. Your rain fly is not taut. Sorry, two more weeks as tenderfoot. Whoops. Sorry. I’m ranting.
Generally, I have no problem telling a non-communicative, oppositional or non-participating scout to come back to continue the BOR when he is ready. The BOR is a two sided process and a requirement that the scout completes it. But the BOR members don't know the scout personally (not family and not SM/ASM leaders), so how do you judge the merits of the scout.
From what I can glimmer form the ACPP, having requirements signed off in the book DOES mean that the scout is ready for advancement. That's the definition. The scout controls and earns his own advancement by having completed the rank requirements. (inappropriate comments removed). I'm always concerned that we need to be careful so that someone 20+ years removed from being a youth does not impose their own views on the scout. Someone with authority has tested the scout and judged the rank requirement done. It's not the BOR's place to step in after the fact and correct the scout. Correct the person who signed off? Sure, but not the scout himself. (and if you have SPL/ASPL sign off on individual requirements ... it's done ... they are approving the requirement ... focus on training the SPL/ASPL better and thus improving the troop program)
The BOR is NOT rubber stamping the scout because that's not the primary purpose of the BOR. The BOR is to make sure things are complete, encourage the scout and help improve the troops program. Very little of the BOR is judging the scouts's character.
Sorry for the rant. It’s a hot button topic.
cballman wrote:We also have the kids do a BOR for merit badges.
We just ask the scout what he thought of the counselor and the badge both when the blue card is handed in and during the rank BOR. Glad it works for you. I've seen other troops with other "procedures" and "policies" for advancement and I cringe. No wonder it's so hard for scouters to move between troops. Troops have implemented very different advancement programs.