|
Centennial Quality Awards for 100th Anniversary of
Scouting Beginning in 2007
and continuing through 2010, the Centennial Quality
Awards program, named in celebration of the 100th
anniversary of the Boy Scouts of America, will replace
the traditional Quality Awards program for units,
districts, and councils. By focusing on unit
leaders working closely with commissioners to set
specific goals and then monitoring progress toward them,
the new award is designed to have a greater impact on
improving the quality of the program in every pack,
troop, team, and crew in the BSA.
As the first step in achieving the
Centennial Quality Award, every unit, district, and
council will establish annual goals in key areas of
program delivery. The process began early in 2007 when
unit leadership meets with an assigned unit commissioner
or a district-level volunteer in consultation with the
district executive to complete a commitment form.
On the commitment form, unit leaders
agree to goals that will indicate sufficient progress in
areas such as: percentage of leaders completing Fast
Start and Basic Leader Training, number of new youth
members and active parents recruited and percentage of
youth members retained from the previous year unit,
rechartering on time percentage of youth advancing in
rank, having an outdoor experience or monthly activity,
conducting a program planning session, and carrying out
adequate money-earning activities to support that
program.
During the year, the unit leader and
committee chairman will get together with the unit
commissioner for an action planning meeting to evaluate
progress toward the commitment form goals. Using a
unit self-assessment process, they will review successes
as well as areas needing improvement and determine how
the remaining goals can be accomplished and if
additional goals need to be added in other areas.
Each October, the unit
leader, committee chairmen, and unit commissioner can
review the total progress made toward each goal and
determine if the unit qualifies for Centennial Quality
status.
For each year of the award, a
recognition patch is available in a different color:
2007, red; 2008, white; 2009, blue; and 2010, red,
white, and blue.
Individual members of qualifying
Centennial Quality Units wear the appropriate patch in
position three on the right sleeve of their uniform (for
packs and troops, below the den or patrol emblem).
Unit awards include a unit ribbon, lapel pins for
leaders, and a plaque for each year qualifying.
More information is available
BSA's web site for the Centennial Quality Award. |