advancement for scouts with special needs and disabilities

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Advancement for Scouts with Special Needs and disAbilities

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Advancement for Scouts with Special Needs and disAbilities. Patriots’ Path Council Advancement Committee. Guide to Advancement Section 10 Advancement for Members with Special Needs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Advancement for Scouts

with Special Needs and disAbilities

Page 2: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Patriots’ Path Council Advancement Committee

Page 3: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Guide to AdvancementSection 10

Advancement for Members with Special Needs

Page 4: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

• All youth with or without special needs and disAbilities are welcome to join Scouting. A youth with special needs is not always classified as disAbled.

• Accommodations exist to help with Advancement and will be discussed in this presentation.

• Traditional Units, as well as Units specifically designed for members with special needs exist in our Council.

Page 5: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

10.1.0.0

“Registering members beyond the age of eligibility”

What does this mean?

• Cub Scout- 11 or older• Boy or Varsity Scout- 18 or older

• Venturing or Sea Scout- 21 or older Note: This request is for an infinite amount of time,

not alternate requirements

Page 6: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

10.1.0.1

Possible Criteria for registering beyond the age of eligibility

• Autism spectrum disorder

• Blind or sight impaired• Deaf or hard of hearing• Cognitive disability• Developmental delay

• Downs syndrome• Emotional/ behavioral

disorder• Physical disability• Traumatic brain injury• Multiple coexisting disabilities

Disabilities can be invisible

Page 7: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

10.1.0.2

How to register a member beyond the age of eligibility

1. Letter from parent or guardian2. Complete youth membership application or proof of membership3. Completed and signed BSA Medical Record (Parts A & C)4. Signed statement from a qualified health professional5. Letter from the unit leader supporting the registration6. Other supporting documentation (IEP, strengths and weaknesses)

Page 8: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

All paperwork is submitted to the Council Advancement Committee

Committee reviews and may request more information

Upon approval or disapproval, the parent/ guardian and the unit leader is sent a letter; copy is retained in the registration file

Scout is registered as a youth with a disability until registration lapses or he/ she registers as an adult or the required level ofseverity no longer exists

10.1..0.2

Page 9: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

10.2.0.0

Advancement Flexibility Allowed(with or without RBAA)

Cub Scouts- Has he done his best? Pack Committee determines what is appropriate with parents assistance

Boy Scouts- Must meet current requirements as written, unless alternate requirements are approved by the Council AdvancementCommittee.

Page 10: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

10.2.2.2

How to apply for Alternative Boy Scout Requirements

• Members must complete as many requirements as possible before applying

• Unit leader submits a written request, to the Council Advancement Committee, stating what has been completed and suggestions for the requirements the Scout cannot do

• Supporting letters from another unit leader, parent/ guardian and the Scout

• Another statement from a health professional should include Scouts capabilities, disability, limitations, prognosis and specific requirements that cannot be completed

• Info is forwarded to the Council Advancement Committee for approval• Note: This is a request to change requirements, not to extend time.

Page 11: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Alternate Merit Badges for Eagle Scout

10.2.2.3

• Requirements for merit badges cannot be modified or substituted• Substitute is one entire badge for another• Can be used with or without RBAA• Must provide a similar challenge• Use application for alternate Eagle Scout rank merit badges• Need letters from the same group as alternate requirements• First sent to District Advancement Committee, then to Council

Advancement Committee• Committee may wish to interview the Scout with his parent & leader• Committee returns an answer to the same via the approved/ disapproved

form• Form must be attached to Eagle rank application when submitted

Page 12: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

The form can be found at:

http://www.scouting.org/forms.aspx

or at our own PPC websiteppbsa.org/advancement

Page 13: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Approval for Special Needs Eagle Candidates over age 18

• Must be RBAA approved• Need letter from the Advancement Committee or Scout Executive• If not RBAA approved, but should be, procedures from RBAA Section 10.1.0.0 should be followed and approval secured• If cannot meet RBAA criteria, a Scout may be able to qualify for an extension of time- See Time extensions 9.0.4.0

10.2.2.4

Page 14: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Time Extensions

9.0.4.0

• If a Scout foresees that, due to no fault or choice of his own, he will be unable to complete the Eagle Scout rank before age 18, he may apply for a limited time extension.

Scout joined or rejoined and there is not enough time to complete ranks.Circumstances came to exist that prevent completion before the deadline.Circumstance is totally beyond the control of the Scout.Circumstance is severe and not part of the Scout’s normal life.Circumstance could not have been planned or anticipated.

Page 15: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Process for submitting & evaluating an Extension Request

9.0.4.1

1. Scout, parent/ guardian, unit leader or unit committee may file the request.2. Request must document the circumstances.3.Two Council Advancement Committee members research the request and prepare a summary.4. Council Advancement Committee prepares a statement and shares with the Scout, his parent/ guardian and his unit leader.5. The Scout then decides to pursue or not the extension with the National Advancement Team.6. Request for Extension of Time to earn Eagle Scout Rank is filed with the National Team; decision usually takes 2-4 weeks.

Page 16: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Advancement for Venturers & Sea Scouts with Special Needs

• The activities must fit within the capabilities of the prospective member

• Crews may offer more flexibility than ships

• Safety concerns onboard a vessel may present barriers that are difficult or impossible to overcome

10.2.3.0

Page 17: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Working toward Venturing Awards & Sea Scout ranks

• The Venturer is expected to meet requirements as stated• Alternate requirements for Bronze, Gold, Silver, Ranger, Quest• and TRUST awards & Sea Scout ranks follow the same procedures as Section 10.2.2.2 “How to apply for Alternate Requirements”• The Advancement Committee must involve an adult with thorough knowledge of Venturing/ Sea Scout advancement and awards in this Decision• Both groups can also apply for RBAA as stated in Section 10.1.0.0

10.2.3.2 & .3

Page 18: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Torch of Gold Certificate

The Torch of Gold certificate, No. 33733, is awarded by local councils. It provides recognition to individuals who, over an extended period of time, have provided exceptional service to Scouting youth with special needs and disAbilities.National approval is not involved

10.2.4.0

Awards for Outstanding Service Benefiting Members with Special Needs

Page 19: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

Resources

• The boy’s parent(s) and teacher(s).• The boy himself.• Your and your unit’s observations of the youth• BSA- http://www.scouting.org/specialneeds.aspx• Individual organization publications.• Individualized Scouting Achievement Plan (ISAP).• 2013 Guide to Advancement scouting.org/publications• Scouting for Youth with Disabilities (#34059)

Page 20: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

A Scout permanently uses a wheelchair. He needs to hike and wants to join his troop for a day hike. Is it considered “hiking” if he is in his wheelchair? Why or why not?

Scenario 1

Page 21: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

A Scout is well on the way to Eagle. He is planning on finishing by the time he is 17 ½ but at 17 is in an automobile accident. He is in the hospital and/or rehab for 6 months and cannot participate in Scouts. Can/should he apply for an extension of time for his Eagle?

Scenario 2

Page 22: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

A Scout is 17 ½ and realizes he will not have enough time to finish Eagle. He has a learning disability and applies for an extension in time. Should this be approved? Why or why not?

Scenario 3

Page 23: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

A Scout who is legally blind claims he has completed astronomy merit badge. You ask him how he identified constellations. He replied, his SM punched holes in a paper plates, held them over his head, outside at night, in the right place for the night sky, and he used his hands to feel and identify the constellations. Should this be acceptable? Why or why not?

Scenario 4

Page 24: Advancement  for Scouts  with Special Needs  and disAbilities

disAbilities = different abilitiesWe all have them.

Youth who have disAbilities want the same personal growth, companionship and FUN opportunities that any youth does and it is our challenge to provide them.