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As a member of a patrol, youth are afforded opportunities that are hard to find anywhere else. Unlike a sports team, a Scout patrol carries out a wide range of tasks that require pooling resources and working together to function successfully in all kinds of circumstances.
For most young people, being in a Scout patrol will be the first time they have to rely upon themselves and other young people to follow an array of necessary steps to satisfy objectives that requires a wide range of life skills.
Like any team, a patrol will function well only as long as all the particular responsibilities for the completion of a task are carried out successfully. Because of its size, this allows every member to participate, and this in itself results in some positive outcomes. Contributing to the patrol’s success provides a welcome sense of belonging, of being appreciated, and a feeling of competency resulting in self-esteem.
As an illustration, let’s take the example of preparing a full-course dinner on a campout. To accomplish this undertaking effectively, under the direction of their patrol leader, all members of the patrol get to plan the menu. One or two get to accomplish the shopping, According to their prepared duty roster, and hinging on how the food will be prepared, one or more can organize getting the water for cooking and cleaning, and prepare the fire or set up the stove(s). Others will be designated to do the actual cooking, lead the blessing, serve the food, and oversee the cleanup. Of course, the whole patrol gets to eat the meal. It’s a patrol enterprise, requiring cooperation, the sharing of responsibilities and leadership, working for the collective good, and putting skills into action. The patrol method models good citizenship and develops servant leadership.
Troop 215 patrols are mix-aged patrols and two same-age patrols. The mix aged patrols are made up of Scouts of all ages and ranks. This approach offers several advantages: Each patrol always has members who need to learn Scouting skills and members who can teach those skills; Each patrol always has experienced leaders and members who need leadership experience; Patrols thus are fairly evenly matched for games and skill competitions, and All members don’t “age out” at the same time. The same-aged patrols are made up of Scouts who have just joined the troop. An older Scout called a troop guide works with the Scouts to help them get acclimated to the troop and reach the rank of First Class. Scouts typically remain in this patrol for their first year in the troop.
Troop 215 South Carolina
413 West Whitner Street, Anderson, South Carolina 29624, United States
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