Dear
Andy,
I’m a
Sea Scout leader, and it was with great excitement that I heard that
National Youth Leadership Training (NYLT) will now be open to females.
For years, there have been all these great opportunities in Scouting,
but because they only accepted boys, I didn’t feel that I could send any
of my ship’s female members, even though some of my best youth leaders
have been girls.
But now
I’m wondering if my female youth will find themselves out of place in
the new course. Leadership training is great, but if everything is
phrased in Boy Scout terms I’m afraid that my girls will be turned off
to the whole thing.
Also,
I’ve seen references made to the need for outdoor skills. Just how
serious is the need for advanced camping skills? Are we talking the
ability to pitch a tent and heat up a can of beans, or are we talking
about orienteering at night through dense woods along the edge of a
cliff? What exactly is needed here? (Name & Council Withheld)
Yes,
NYLT is very rigorous. Not only is the knowledge of how to pitch and
ditch a tent required, but your distaff Sea Scouts will need to know how
to construct monkey bridges from cat hair macramé, use twigs and
branches to build smoke shifters, master the use of left-handed monkey
wrenches, and, in the area of camp cooking, design bacon stretchers from
wire coat-hangers. In addition, knowledge of reverse compass
orientation (now more politically correctly called Asiantation) will be
necessary, including how to distinguish between compasses that register
magnetic North compared to those that register true North. Plus, there
will be the usual in-camp hygienic requirements for changing pants
daily: Mary changes with Beth, Beth with Tiffany, Tiffany with Jessica,
and so forth.
For more details, be sure
to go to
http://www.happyaprilfirst.com.
Thanks
for asking – You've made my day!
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In all
seriousness, don't sweat it. Maybe buy a Boy Scout Handbook, and
share a few pages, but this is no biggie— honest! What IS important is
to understand the idea of The Patrol Method--that is, small groups
working together for a common purpose and all pulling in the same
direction. Just like on board a seagoing vessel!
Happy Scouting!
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(April 1, 2010 – Copyright © Andy McCommish 2010) |
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