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SR-871
 
21ST CENTURY WOOD BADGE
Wood Badge is leadership
training for all Scout Leaders who are involved in the programs of the Boy
Scouts of America – Cub Scouting, Boy Scouting, Varsity Scouting, and Venturing,
as well as council and district leaders, and professionals. This new
contemporary training program focuses on leadership and “people” skills, and not
Scoutcraft or outdoor skills. Participants will learn techniques to make them
better leaders, and also how to lead groups to achieve objectives. The 21st
Century Wood Badge incorporates the best of nearly a century of Scouting
experience in addition to drawing upon the most current leadership models used
by corporate America, academic circles, and successful outdoor leadership
organizations throughout the country. Skills developed from Wood Badge
training will help a volunteer leader do a better job in any BSA program or at
any level of involvement.
ELIGIBILITY
To attend a Wood Badge Course, Scouters must:
- Be registered members of the Boy Scouts of America (There are no
minimum tenure requirements.)
- If you previously completed a Wood Badge course, agree not to wear
your regalia.
- Have completed the basic training courses for their Scouting
positions.
- Have completed the outdoor skills training programs appropriate
for their Scouting positions.
- Be capable of functioning safely in an outdoor environment.
Successful completion of the BSA Class 3 Physical is required for all
participants.
COURSE FORMAT
The format for the Wood Badge Course is two 3-day weekends; two Fridays,
Saturdays, and Sundays, separated by three weeks. In the Norwela Council, the
couse is scheduled at the Garland Scout Ranch. All meals will be served in the
Dining Hall and participants will be housed in wall tents, however you may bring
our own tent. The second weekend participants will cook their own meals.
Participants will also be required to attend two interim patrol meetings during
the time between the first and second weekends of the course (specific time and
location to be determined by patrol members).
THE COURSE
Course participants begin their
Wood Badge experience as Cub Scouts, then bridge into Boy Scouting and form
patrols for the remainder of the program. Selected staff members interact with
participants in the role of a Venturing Crew. Representing a month in the life
of a Scout unit, Wood Badge participants assume leadership roles to plan and
carry out an extended outdoor experience.
Within this framework, participants take
part in numerous presentations, discussions, and activities that explore and
advance a wide range of leadership philosophies and tools. A key area is the
process of team development, where participants learn to apply appropriate
leadership strategies at varying stages of team development. There are five
central theme’s of the 21st Century Wood Badge course: 1. Living the Values, 2.
Bringing the Vision to Life, 3. Models for Success, 4. Tools of the Trade, and
5. Leading to Make a Difference. The first weekend of the course parallels
three week’s of a Scout units meetings and activities with the three day’s of
the second weekend paralleling the experiences of a scout unit setting out on
the fourth week of a month for an exciting and challenging outdoor experience.
THE TICKET
One of the great traditions of Wood
Badge is the “ticket.” During the course each participant will be asked to
develop a contract or ticket – a list of goals that will allow them to use their
newly-learned leadership skills in ways to strengthen Scouting in their home
units, districts and councils. The ticket will include the participant’s
personal values, roles in Scouting, vision of success, and a mission of five
significant goals that can be attained within 18 months. Overall the ticket
will be meaningful and enable the participant to practice the skills learned in
the course. Troop Guides (Ticket Counselors) will assist participants in
writing their tickets and approve them when complete. The Troop Guide and the
participant will mutually agree when all the items of the ticket have been
fulfilled.
RECOGNITION
Recognition for the successful completion of Wood Badge (including the ticket)
consists of the distinctive Wood Badge neckerchief, woggle, the Wood Badge – two
wooden beads worn on a leather thong around the neck, and the certificate. This
“Regalia” is recognized around the world as a symbol training and leadership
experience.
APPLICATION
An application may be found attached or can be obtained by calling Norwela
Council Office 318-868-2774, or your District Training Chairman. Norwela
Council would like for all Scouters who desire to be able to attend Wood Badge.
Regardless of your circumstances, scholarship monies and grants are available;
please feel free to inquire (confidentially to Director of Program
318-741-1180). Also, with Wood Badge being a premiere leadership course; units,
chartered organizations and a number of employers will partially or completely
underwrite necessary fees for a Scouter to attend.
SR-871 March 7-9
and April 4-6, 2008 (Begins Friday 7:30 a.m. and ends Sunday 5:00 p.m.)
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