edbloom wrote:Those are all good suggestions.
However, I do not learn well enough that way. I need hands on training and class room time.
So where does one get certified in Pioneer skills (ie Rope Making the BSA way) and walk away with a nationally recognized certification?
I'm a little confused about why you're seeking "certification". This may be a difference in learning styles between individuals, but now that you've had some basics, and you have a number of resources available to you, why not just try it, and allow yourself to "fail" as a tool of learning?
One of the influential mentors in my life had a saying he'd use, "If you want to learn fast, fail fast. Learn to fail gracefully."
This to me is much of what scouting is about. It's a labratory, where we teach via experiences, and failure is one of those experiences. In the patrol method, we are expected to allow the patrol leaders to lead thier patrols, and suffer the consequences of failure if they don't plan well. This is part of the learning experience and we need to be prepared for this. It's the job of the scoutmaster to provide enough guidence so that those failures are "graceful" (i.e. - not dangerous), and to make sure that those failures provide a positive learning experience, rather than act as a negative event.
So as you look to learn new things, put into practice what you will be taching the boys. Allow yourself to "fail" if needed, but don't let that stop you from trying. Go ahead, build a rope making machine from the book, and learn by doing. You don't need a class for that, just some time and effort.
Just my humble opinion, but take your basics, and set an example to your boys by trying, even when you aren't an "expert" at a skill. You might supprose yourself
Yours In Scouting,
Vernon L. Palango
Scoutmaster, Troop 131
The best progress is made in those Troops where power and responsibility are really put into the hands of the Patrol Leaders.
-Lord Baden-Powell, Aids to Scoutmastership