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Scouts Australia offers a diverse range of activities for boys and girls across a wide range of ages.

Joey Scouts (age 6 – 7.5) are introduced to the world of friendship, problem solving and adventure through stories, games and activities.

Cubs Scouts (age 7.5 – 10.5) learn new skills while spending time participating in a variety of learning activities and outings. They collect special badges to demonstrate their skills and achievements.

Scouts (age 10.5 – 14.5) develop confidence and learn to work as part of a team. They learn essential outdoor safety skills as well as participate in a variety of physical and intellectual challenges.

Venturers Scouts (age 14.5 – 17.5) have the opportunity to create their own Venturer Unit and be involved in adventurous outdoor activities, and performing community service initiatives.

Rovers (age 17.5 – 26) operate Crews that plan and run their own programs, allowing them to develop their personal abilities while also making lifelong friends. A key focus is service to others and their community.

Leaders (age 18+) are dedicated volunteers who care about the guidance, development and safety of the young people in their Section as well as the community in which they live.

Parents of Scout Members are encouraged to get involved as helpers, supporters or Leaders.

We support the integration of young people with physical and mental disabilities into regular Scout Groups so there are many Groups with additional support, infrastructure and training for these young people.

Last Updated (Wednesday, 01 July 2009 15:59)

 

 

What is Scouting?

Scouting is a worldwide movement that has shaped the development of youth and adults for over 100 years. Scouts are in every part of our community, and Scouts is the biggest and most successful youth organisation in Australia. More than 16,000 thousand boys, girls, and adults in Victoria from wide cultural or religious backgrounds or with an intellectual or physical disability enjoy an almost unlimited range of activities.

The aim of Scouting is to encourage the physical, intellectual, social, and spiritual development of young people so they may play a constructive role in society as responsible citizens and as members of their local and international communities. This aim is achieved through a strong and active program that inspires young people to do their best and to always be prepared.

Why Scouts?
Scouting is fun!
Scouting is definitely fun, and it also prepares young people for life in the adult world by teaching responsibility for their own actions and progress.

These achievements lay a solid foundation for the success of our future Australian leaders. But don’t tell the kids they’re learning… they think they’re just having fun!

No matter the age of the participant, Scouts provides fun and exciting programs that promote active learning. Whether the young boys and girls are canoeing, camping, visiting museums or helping their local community, the activity is sure to teach them about themselves and the world around them.

Scouting is Adventurous!
Each year, all sections of Scouts learn to share responsibilities and to live with each other through adventures set in the outdoors. Camping, abseiling, caving, horseback riding, fishing, rock climbing and diving are just a few of the exciting experiences that a Scout may have achieved in his or her time as a youth member.

Scouting is Challenging!
Scouts challenge their minds as well as their bodies. Not everyone looks for the outdoor buzz all the time, so Scouts have challenging activities linked with the internet and amateur radio, performance arts such as singing, dancing, and acting and awards linked to citizenship, community service and personal spiritual development.

Scouting is Commitment!
Scouting makes a direct and positive impact on the community by teaching positive values and leadership skills to youth. Every year, Scouts and their leaders contribute thousands of volunteer hours to their local communities. Sharing time with the aged in the local community, helping with Clean Up Australia Day, Harmony Day and planting trees to help with the Murray-Darling River Rescue are just a few examples of the commitment Scouts make to their communities.

Scouting is Inclusive!
We encourage the integration of children with special needs – physical and mental disabilities or medical conditions - into regular Scout Groups. We also have many Scout Groups that have formed within existing religious or cultural communities in Victoria Scouting really is for everyone!

Scouting in Global!
There are over 28 million Scouts in 155 countries – and joining Scouts Australia NSW connects you to them all. International opportunities include joining the Jamboree of the Air (JOTA), the Jamboree of the Internet (JOTI), making a Pen-Pal, attending a World Jamboree or a World Scout Association event.

How does it work?
Scouting achieves its aim through a system of progressive self education, known as the Scout Method, the principal elements of which are:

Voluntary membership of a uniformed group which, guided by adults, and is increasingly self governed in its successive age groups.
Commitment to a code of living as expressed in the Scout Promise and Scout Law, the meaning of which is expanded as the members grow towards maturity.
The provision of a wide range of fun, constructive and challenging activities, including opportunities for adventure and exploration both indoors and outdoors.
The provision of opportunities for leadership and responsibility.

Learning by doing.
Encouragement of activity in small groups.
An award scheme which encourages participation in its full range of activities and provides recognition of individual achievements.
A commitment to helping youth from the adult Leaders.

Last Updated (Wednesday, 08 July 2009 13:12)

 


All parents are concerned about the safety of their children - and we are too. Safety and security have a very high priority at Scouts Australia

Adult Leaders

Background ‘Police’ checks are conducted on all prospective Leaders.

All adults over 18 years of age need to have a current Working With Children Check done by the Department of Justice.

References are sought and checked
All adult Leaders receive comprehensive and ongoing training in dealing with children.
Our desire is to have at least two Leaders present during all activities.

Medical safety

For all Scouting activities, we cater for medical, physical and dietary requirements by obtaining all the necessary information to allow Leaders and other helpers to take appropriate action.

At least one person trained in first aid attends all major events. 

Last Updated (Wednesday, 08 July 2009 13:12)

 

Scouting is a dynamic and enjoyable self-development, educational program that can involve the whole family. It offers a variety of challenging adventures based on personal achievement, teamwork and leadership.

Self-development and Educational Outcomes
Children will learn life skills such as independent thinking, leadership and problem solving skills, social interaction and responsibility.

They will experience weekly physically and intellectually challenging activities in the Scout hall, outdoor activities such as bushwalking and water sports, and large-scale events such as Jamborees, where Scouts from around Australia and the World come together.

If you have been involved with Scouts in the past, you will find that some activities have changed and are more modern. However, the essence of Scouting remains on having fun, outdoor adventure and a strong sense of community.

For the whole family
Scouting is an ideal activity for the whole family. Sons and daughters can be involved and parents are encouraged to join in with activities and become helpers, supporters or Leaders.

Scouting can be an amazing experience for parents. Join your child’s Scout Group on outdoor activities, family camps and outings - and learn new skills like abseiling and canoeing.

Local community
Scouting can help you gain a strong sense of belonging to your local community, and through your active involvement, you make a direct and worthwhile contribution.

Also, you will enjoy a wider social life and an established peer network with other parents, carers and adults involved with Scouting in your area.  It creates an extended family.

Parent responsibilities
Being a Scout parent comes with important responsibilities too.

  • Show your interest and encourage your child’s Scouting participation.
  • Provide transport for meetings and outdoor activities.
  • Help to raise money for your child’s Scout Group.
  • Give your time to participate in Scouting activities and events.


Leadership training
Many parents participate in leadership training that widens their personal and professional opportunities.

Last Updated (Wednesday, 08 July 2009 13:14)

 


Scouting’s origins date back to the start of the twentieth century. They have survived the two World Wars, sweeping social events and the challenges of other influences, to become stronger than ever. It does this by placing the needs of young people first -- in a program that can adapt to change.

The Founder of Scouting, Lord Baden-Powell of Gilwell, was born in England in 1857. He lived a busy and adventurous life and, as a boy, spent much of his spare time in open-air pursuits, hunting in the woods, and joining his brothers in expeditions by land and in their boats. Thus he developed his powers of observation and resourcefulness, which helped him to acquire many useful skills.


His family was not wealthy, his father having died when Baden-Powell was young. His only chance for higher education was to obtain a scholarship. This gave him entry into the Army. He was sent to India, where he served for many years. He tried out his ideas of training soldiers in "scouting," and taught them how to develop experience in stalking and how to fend for themselves, as well as being observant of all signs that would give them advantages as soldiers.

He set down his ideas in the book, "Aids to Scouting," which was used as an army textbook for many years.

After the famous siege of the South African town of Mafeking by the Boers, Baden-Powell, who was in charge of the defending force, was a hero. He was given a great welcome on his return to England. Sir William Smith, leader of the Boys Brigade, encouraged him to set down his views on how he would apply “scouting” to the training of boys. First, Baden-Powell conducted an experimental camp in 1907 on Brownsea Island off the Dorset coast, where, with some twenty boys and suitable adult leaders, he taught the boys what he meant by Scouting. They lived in tents, cooked their own food, and learned many valuable skills through games. The camp was a great success. Baden-Powell wrote of his experiences in a book he called "Scouting for Boys." Published in January 1908 in fortnightly parts, it sold readily to the youth in England, who started to carry out “scouting” as they read the book.

Although the year 1908 marks the official beginning of the Scout Movement, Scouting really commenced with the Brownsea Island Camp in August 1907. Following this camp and the publication of the parts of the book, young boys in the community formed themselves into patrols of six to eight, and then looked around for adult leaders who could help them. Soon there were thousands of Scouts all over the country, and Baden-Powell had to set up an office to look after the new movement that had begun.

Within two years a rally at the Crystal Palace, London, drew together ten thousand young people. The Girl Guides Association was formed in 1910, after which came the Sea Scout Branch in the same year. The Wolf Cub section was formed in 1916, Rover Scouts in 1918, and the Special Test (now "Extension or Handicapped") Department in 1926. The Group System (Cubs, Scouts and Rovers under the leadership of a Group Scoutmaster/Leader) was established in 1927.

Deep Sea Scouts followed in 1928, Air Scouts in 1941, and Senior Scouts in 1946 (now known as Venturer Scouts). Joey Scouts, the latest section to be formed, began in 1990.

Meanwhile, in 1908 Scouting had also spread to Australia, New Zealand and India. Other countries followed shortly after. Chile, in 1909, was the first country outside the then British Empire to start, followed closely by France, with the Scandinavian countries and the United States in 1910. In 1937,

two-and-a-half-million Scouts from nearly fifty countries were affiliated with the International Bureau. The Bureau was set up to safeguard Scouting, and to prevent control drifting into the hands of the purely religious, political or military bodies. Wood Badge Training for leaders commenced in 1919 at Gilwell Park, England, and has, over the years, become established as the method of Leader Training throughout the Scouting World.

General Sir Robert Baden-Powell (as he became) was proclaimed World Chief Scout at the first Jamboree at Olympia in 1920. He was raised to the peerage in 1929, and was awarded the Order of Merit in the Coronation Honours list in 1937. He travelled widely, encouraging Scouting in every country he visited. He came to Australia three times: - in 1912, 1931, and to the first Australian Jamboree in 1934-35.

Meanwhile Scouting had become established as a most successful scheme for the training of boys. In many countries, including Australia, it spread rapidly because it was what the young people wanted to do. Soon a headquarters was set up and leadership provided by recognized members in the community. Many countries showered honours upon the Founder. He retired to Kenya, where he spent several happy years with his family until his death on 8th January 1941.

He was described as "The Piper of Pax" (Peace), because of his tremendous contribution to youth and world peace.

There is now a World Scout Committee, which provides unity amongst the National Associations, with a World Bureau operating from Geneva and independent national organizations in over two hundred and fifty (250) countries and territories. Scout membership is over twenty-five million. Adapting to the general changes in society, Australian Scouting admitted females to its Venturer and Rover Sections in 1973, and to the Cub Scout and Scout Sections in 1988. When the Joey Scout Section commenced in 1990, girls and boys were both admitted.

For each generation of Scouts, the challenge has remained the same: to make a better world and have some fun along the way.

Reference Books: Scouting for Boys, The Wolf that Never Sleeps, Facets of B-P. Search

Last Updated (Wednesday, 01 July 2009 15:54)

 
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