Posts: 35
Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2009 11:23 am
Growing Venturers and Rovers: A Vision
In my head the key for growth of our movement, both in terms of numbers and in terms of building public recognition, is two things:
1. Meaningful leadership development across all sections.
2. Increased support and attention placed on Venturers and Rovers, especially:
2 a. the transition/inclusion of these youth to/in leadership teams for other sections, and
2 b. stronger programming support and options for these two sections.
Here in Northern Lights we're working on #1 with the five course plan (Golden Arrow, SIT, etc. see my post in the Youth Leadership Section), but #2, as much as it is an important part of #1, still needs work.
Here are my thoughts and vision about how to make this happen...
(Please prepare for a mild rant. It's not directed at anyone, just an expression of frustration over what has become our collective unconsciousness as an organization)
Venturers and Rovers are the only sections that can save us as a Scouting Organization. Without them we are lost. We'll have a program, it just won't be a Scouting program in anything but the name.
Let me explain.
If I look around the world at other Scouting Organizations, especially those outside North America, I see a shocking difference in how they market themselves and who they present their membership as including. In brief, Scouting in other countries starts at 14, here in Canada it ends at 14.
Go ask people on the street when someone is too old to be in Scouts anymore. I guarantee that the overall response will reflect this.
"So what? The vast majority of our youth are not in Venturers and Rovers! We need to build from Beavers on up. John, this is crazy."
No. Think of it this way. The largest Beaver Colony in the world isn't going to inspire anyone to stay in Scouting and become a Scout for the rest of their lives. And I mean "Scout" in the sense that someone identifies themselves as being a part of Scouting such that they would freely declare it and do so with pride.
We can't keep trying to push young people through Scouting by having big Beaver and Cub programs and think they're going to stay or that we're making a difference in their lives. We need to pull them forward through the program. (I can't help but think of the wisdom shown in the skit where the kid keeps pulling a rope along the ground until asked why. The response? "Have you ever tried to push a rope?"). This type of gravitational effect can only come from positive and effective role models.
What do I mean by positive and effective role models? I mean other young people having a great time doing challenging activities and acting as leaders for other youth. You want people to stay in Scouting? Put two TRAINED Venturers or Rovers in every section leadership team and make sure that the Venturer and Rover programs they are involved in beyond being leaders are FAN-FREAKING-TASTIC. There aren't enough sticks in our Canadian forests (what's left of them anyway) to beat back the tide of youth that will be clamoring to be a part of Scouting.
The young kids will stay (and come in droves) because they want to be with, be like, and eventually BE the Venturers and Rovers. The Venturers and Rovers will stay because they are having a great time making a difference in the world AND leaving a legacy of future world changers.
An added bonus to strong Venturer and Rover programs that are woven back into leading other sections is that youth Leadership on this scale will solve many challenges about finding and training leaders. I don't care how much training you give a parent, they'll never quite be on par with someone who has come up through the program. Besides this, the leader that came up through the program isn't going to disappear in a few years when their kid leaves because Scouting stops in Canada at 14. A Venturer or Rover who has been incorporated into a section leadership team in a meaningful way may leave to start a family or a new job, but they'll be back.
How do we get these Venturers and Rovers now? We start by asking. Then we train them. Then we showcase them. Then we do it again. Through all this we keep ramping up their program with more meaningful challenges and broader support. To quote a WOSM video Scouting is, "Fun with a purpose." We need to give them both the fun and the purpose. International aid trips, helping with a geographical survey, recording wildlife sightings to aid in research while on a hike in a remote area, (re)building a local shelter, joining their city's emergency response plan. These are the sorts of adventures that 14-26 year-olds would love to do. All the more so if they can do it with friends. We need to train both our Youth and our Leaders to think on these grand scales AND give them the support to make such ideas possible.
But getting them isn't the problem, it's keeping them. Until we see Venturers and Rovers as something more than "Beavers with drivers licenses" we're sunk; we won't trust them to be leaders and we won't offer them anything more than a Beaver program on steroids. Worse still, they'll continually meet our expectations by simply being Beavers with drivers licenses and that doesn't help them or the image of Scouting. Changing the minds and habits of our current leaders is going to be the biggest challenge that we face.
If you've made it this far, perhaps you'd be willing to go a little further. I'd really like to hear your thoughts on this issue. For, against, or completely tangential.
I can't understand the complexities of the issue if I only see the world through my own eyes.
-John

