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Central Florida Council |
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Advancement |
Click here for the official
Advancement Rules and Regulations
of the B.S.A.
From "Advancement Committee
Policies and Procedures"
#33088C
What is Advancement?
Advancement is the process by which youth
members of the Boy Scouts of America progress from rank to rank in the Scouting
program. Advancement is simply a means to an end, not an end in itself.
Everything done to advance and earn these ranks, from joining until leaving the
program, should be designed to help the young person have an exciting and
meaningful experience.
Education and fun are functions of the
Scouting movement, and they must be the basis of the
advancement program.
A fundamental principle of advancement in Cub
Scouting, Boy Scouting, Varsity Scouting, and Venturing is the growth a young
person achieves as a result of his/her participation in unit program.
Advancement Principles
Council and district advancement committees implement procedures that help
achieve the following advancement principles.
Personal growth is the prime consideration in the advancement program.
Scouting skills—what a young person knows
how to do—are important, but they are not the most important aspect of
advancement. Scouting’s concern is the total growth of youth. This growth may be
measured by how youth live the Scouting ideals, and how they do their part in
their daily lives.
Learning by doing. A
Cub Scout, Boy Scout, or Venturer may
read about fire building or good citizenship. He/she may hear it discussed, and
watch others in action, but he/she has not learned first aid until he/she has
done it.
Each youth progresses at his or her own rate.
Advancement is not a competition among
individual young people, but is an expression of their interest and
participation in the program. Youth must be encouraged to advance steadily and
set their own goals with guidance from their parents, guardians, or leaders.
A badge is recognition of what a young person is able to do, not merely a reward
for what he or she has done. The badge is proof of certain abilities,
and is not just a reward for the completion of a task.
Advancement encourages Scouting ideals.
Scouting teaches a young person how to care for himself/herself and help
others. Advancement should reflect the desire to live the Cub Scout, Boy Scout,
or Venturing Oath in his/her daily life.
No council, district, unit, or individual has the
authority to add to or subtract from advancement requirements. (For the policies
concerning youth members with special needs,
Click here)
Suggestions for changes in
requirements should be sent to the Cub Scout, Boy Scout, or Venturing committee,
Boy Scouts of America, 1325 West Walnut Hill Lane, P.O. Box 1 52079, Irving, TX
7501 5-2079.
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