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kwildman wrote:i still dont get how you can just bypass a rule. I have seen scouts stuck at second class because they cant pass the swimmers test.
Fred Johnson wrote:I understand the BSA program pretty well. And, I fully buy into not adding requirements; supporting the scout; and the Scout earns his advancement (in contrast to being judged and awarded recognition).
The problem recently for me is as a “Citizen of the Nation” merit badge counselor. With the great education our local scouts get in schools, this badge has always been pretty simple. Usually, the scouts have already explicitly talked about the topics in multiple grade levels and even taken the tours.
Well, a recent experience with one of our best scouts really started me thinking.
It was his last badge to earn Eagle. His project was done. He just needed the C.O.N. badge. He had received his blue card a year or two earlier the scoutmaster. He talked with me briefly at that time. Then, I didn't hear anything other than an occasional sentence from him that he'll be talking to me about it. This spring, he had a civics course in school. It allowed him to answer all the questions and he used the speech they discussed in class (Gettysburg Address). Also, he said he watched the news every day for the last week and normally watches the news anyway. He talked about the gulf oil spill. I trust him. If he said he did it, I'm betting he did. This is a very up-right scout. Also, the requirements don't say show proof that you watched the news or read the paper. Just explain.
So when I look back at the badge and the effort, the additional effort to complete BSA requirements was about 15 minutes for the letter and about 40 minutes to talk with me (two conversations, 10 minutes 1st time and 30 minutes 2nd time). Otherwise, everything else was already done through school or normal family life. The BSA requirements didn’t introduce him to anything new. Where's the challenge? Where's the growth?
Did I do something wrong? Should I have looked for more even though he explicitly fulfilled the BSA published requirements? Merit badges introduce subjects and are not to develop expertise or mastery of the subjects. This kid knew the C.O.N. stuff just fine. So, he did the requirements.
It just seems that a BSA Eagle required badge took little effort. It was almost an automatic badge. Worse yet, he learned little from the merit badge other than the experience of our talking. If he did learn anything, he learned how to plan things in sequence to minimize effort and maximize return. That itself is a valuable lesson that I keep re-learning. The last time was when my Woodbadge patrol mate finished his beads in three weeks and it took me the full 18 months. As the old Crusade knight said in Indiana Jones, "You choose poorly."
Is it just a matter that this scout choose (aka planned) wisely?
wagionvigil wrote:One of the easist requirements
Lynda J wrote:We actually had a MBC that refused to accept any thing done on a badge that was done at school. That person is no longer a MBC. If I am working with a boy on a badge and they do part of the requirements at school all I do is have him discuss what was done with me. I normally take less than 10 minutes for this exchange and give him credit.
Many times if you talk to teachers many of them are willing to become MBC's. Out Band Director is more than happy to work with boys on music.
smtroop168 wrote:Lynda J wrote:We actually had a MBC that refused to accept any thing done on a badge that was done at school. That person is no longer a MBC. If I am working with a boy on a badge and they do part of the requirements at school all I do is have him discuss what was done with me. I normally take less than 10 minutes for this exchange and give him credit.
Many times if you talk to teachers many of them are willing to become MBC's. Out Band Director is more than happy to work with boys on music.
The Band Director is not Wagion is it.![]()
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