Program
Venturing is a youth development
program of the Boy Scouts of America for young men and women who are
14 (and have completed the eighth grade through 20 years of age.
Venturing's purpose is to provide
positive experiences to help young people mature and to prepare them
to become responsible and caring adults.
Venturing is based on a unique and
dynamic relationship between youth, adult leaders, and organizations
in their communities. Local community organizations establish a
Venturing crew by matching their people and program resources to the
interests of young people in the community. The result is a program
of exciting and meaninful activities that helps youth pursue their
special interests, grow, develop leadership skills, and become good
citizens.
Goals
Young adults involved in Venturing
will:
- learn to make ethical choices
over their lifetimes by instilling the values of the Venturing
Oath and Code,
- experience a program that is fun
and full of challenge and adventure,
- become a skilled training and
program resource for Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts, and other groups,
- acquire skills in the areas of
high adventure, sports, arts and hobbies, youth ministries, or
Sea Scouting,
- experience positive leadership
from adult and youth leaders and gain the opportunity to take on
leadership roles, and
- have a chance to learn and grow
in a supportive, caring, and fun environment.
Methods
The methods of Venturing have been
carefully chosen to meet the needs of young adults:
- Leadership: all Venturers are
given opportunities to learn and apply proven leadership
skills. A Venturing Crew is led by elected crew officers. The
Venturing Leadership Skills Course is designed for all Venturers
are helps teach in an active way to effectively lead.
- Group Activities: Venturing
activities are interdependent group experiences in which success
is dependent on the cooperation of all. Learning by doing in a
group setting provides opportunities for developing new skills.
- Adult Association: the youth
officers lead the crew. The officers and activity chairs work
closely with adult Advisors and other adult leaders in a spirit
of partnership. The adults serve in a shadow leader capacity.
- Recognition: recognition comes
through the Venturing advancement program and through the
acknowledgement of a youth's competence and ability by peers and
adults.
- The Ideals: Venturers are
expected to know and live by the Venturing Oath and Code. They
promise to be faithful in religious duties, treasure their
American heritage, to help others and to seek truth and
fairness.
- High Adventure: Venturing's
emphasis on high adventure helps provide team-building
opportunities, new meaningful experiences, practical leadership
application, and life-long memories to young adults.
- Teaching Others: All of the
Venturing Awards require Venturers to teach what they have
learned to others. When they teach others often, Venturers are
better able to retain the skill or knowledge they taught, they
gain confidence in their abilities to speak and relate to others
and they acquire skills that can benefit them for the rest of
their lives as a hobby or occupation.
Ethics In Action
An important goal of Venturing is to
help young adults be responsible and caring people, both now and in
the future. Venturing uses ethical controversies to help young
adults develop the ability to make responsible choices that reflect
their concern for what is a risk and how it will effect others
involved.
Because an ethical controversy is a
problem-solving situation, leaders expect young adults to employ
empathy, invention, and selection when they thing through their
position and work toward a solution to an ethical controversy.
Crew Activities
What a Venturing crew does is limited
only by the imagination and involvement of the adult and youth
leaders and members of the crew -- sail the Caribbean, produce a
play, climb a mountain, teach disabled people to swim, or attend the
Olympics. All of these adventures and more are being done today by
Venturing crews and ships across the country. All that is needed are
concerned adults who are willing to share a little bit of themselves
with today's youth -- tomorrow's leaders.
Starting a New
Venturing Crew
Organizing a new Venturing Crew is
easy. Just follow these steps:
- A survey is conducted annually
in community high schools to determine students' recreational,
hobby, and avocation interests.
- A meeting is called of key
people within an organization, with a Scouting representative in
attendance. The representative explains the Venturing program,
describes the key volunteer leader positions, and plans the
recruiting of adult leaders.
- The crew committee and Advisors
are recruited and meet with the Scouting representative.
Responsibilities of adult leaders are explained. The Scouting
representative also discusses program ideas and helps develop a
one-year program. The crew's one-year program is reviewed and
adopted.
- The organization's top executive
writes a personal letter to each young adult selected from the
survey, or identified through other recruitment efforts, and
invites the youth and their parents to attend an organizational
meeting. This letter is followed by a personal phone invitation
from a member of the organization to each prospective youth.
- The first meeting is held,
involving young adults, the adult committee, and selected
consultants. Adult Advisors share the program plans with the new
Venturers (youth) and discuss member involvement and leadership
roles through the election of youth officers.
What Youth Want
Research has revealed these major
points:
- High school students have many
vocational and avocational interests.
- Teenagers want a broader
experience that provides practical hands-on experience and is
tailored to their cultural backgrounds.
- Teenagers want to belong to a
group that provides a safe haven from which to address the youth
development issues that affect them.
- These issues include
experimentation; moving on from dependence to interdependence,
social relationships, psychological changes and sexual maturity,
and a reevaluation of values.
Program Support
The Venturing Division has designed
literature, audiovisual materials, training, activities, and awards
to support Venturing Crews and Ships.
- Literature and Audiovisual
Materials: a variety of books, pamphlets, and videos have been
developed to assist with organization program, leadership, and
activities. In particular, the Venturing Leader Manual will
support leadership and planning.
- Training: Venturing Leader
Specific Training (for adults), Venturing Leadership Skills
Course (for youth), and monthly roundtables will be available to
improve and enrich Venturing crew programs. A weeklong
high-adventure skills course for Venturing Advisors called
Powder Horn is available annually. The weeklong Nature of
Leadership High Adventure Treks program is available from host
councils across the country to teach experience-based leadership
skills.
- Advancement Awards: A variety of
awards are available to Venturers who accomplish specific
advancement achievements:
- Venturing Bronze Awards,
- Venturing Gold Awards,
- Venturing Silver Awards,
- Venturing Ranger Awards, and
- Sea Scouting Quartermaster
Awards.
- Recognition Awards: those awards
that are designed to provide recognition for youth and adults
include:
- Venturing
Leadership Awards, and
- Venturing Advisor
Awards of Merit.
- Uniforms: the BSA Supply
Division offers the traditional spruce-green uniform shirt for
Venturers. It is recommended that crews adopt a charcoal gray
casual pant and/or backpacking-style short for their uniform.
However, each crew may determine what, if any, specific uniform
pants or short they will wear based on crew activities.
- B.S.A. Councils: Venturing crews
and ships are supported by local BSA councils, which provide
staff and volunteer support, operate service centers and camps,
and conduct training and activities.
- Liability Insurance: The Boy
Scouts of America has liability insurance that covers leaders
and organizations to which Venturing crews and shops are
chartered. Accident and medical coverage are not included but
are available through local BSA councils at a modest cost.
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