Title: Make yourself comfortable. We will start soon.
1Welcome
- Make yourself comfortable.We will start soon.
2- Reminder to instructors Check the notes pages
of this presentation for the text of the
Commissioner Basic Training Manual - This is a hidden slide and will not show in the
presentation.
3Commissioner Basic Training
Instructors Insert names here
4Session 1
5Opening
6Opening Ceremony
- The Cub Scout Promise
- I, (name), promise to do my best to do my duty to
God and my country, to help other people, and to
obey the Law of the Pack.
7Opening Ceremony
- The Scout Oath
- On my honor I will do my best to do my duty to
God and my country and to obey the Scout Law to
help other people at all times to keep myself
physically strong, mentally awake, and morally
straight.
8Opening Ceremony
- The Venturing Oath
- As a Venturer, I promise to do my duty to God and
help strengthen America, to help others, and to
seek truth, fairness, and adventure in our world.
9Introductions
- Name
- Present job in Scouting
- Previous positions held
- Tenure
- Awards earned
10Learning Objectives
- State the purpose of the Boy Scouts of America.
- State the mission of the council and district.
- Explain the four-function concept of council and
district operation. - Describe the commissioner unit service role and
its relationship to supporting a unit in a
quality program. - State the methods and steps of good unit program
planning. - State Commissioner Priorities.
- Describe Effective Commissioner Leadership.
11Purpose, Aims Methods of Scouting
12Purpose of Scouting
- To promote, through cooperation with other
agencies, the ability of youth to do things for
themselves and others, and to teach youth
patriotism, courage, self-reliance, and kindred
virtues
13Aims of Scouting
- Character development
- Citizenship training
- Personal fitness
14Methods of Scouting
Cub Scouting (Boys grades 1-5) Ideals Den Advancement Family involvement Activities Home and neighborhood centered Uniform Boy Scouting (Boys ages 11-17) Ideals Patrol Advancement Adult association Outdoors Personal growth Leadership Uniform Venturing (Youth ages 14-20) Ideals Group activities Recognition Adult association High adventure Teaching others Leadership
15Council Mission
- Voluntary association of citizens chartered
organization representatives - Promotes Scouting within a geographical area
- Guides supports districts to
- Make Scouting available to youth
- Provide adequate funds
- Maintain standards and policies
- Serve organizations using the Scouting programs
16District Mission
- Ensures growth success of Scouting units within
the district's territory - Works through chartered organizations and
community groups to organize and support
successful units
17Four-Function Plan
- Membership/Relationships
- Finance
- Program
- Unit service
18Commissioner Service Role
19The Commissioner Concept
- The commissioner is the liaison between the local
council and Scouting units. - The commissioner's mission is to
- Keep units operating at maximum efficiency,
- Maintain regular contact with unit leaders,
- Counsel leaders on where to find assistance,
- Note weaknesses in programs,
- And suggest remedies.
- The commissioner is successful when units
effectively deliver the ideals of Scouting to
their members.
20Unit Commissioner Responsibility Card
- Report to the district commissioner or assistant
district commissioner as assigned - Help each unit earn the Quality Unit Award
- Use the annual commissioner service plan, with
its scheduled opportunities for commissioner
contact with units - Know each phase of Scouting and its literature.
Be able to describe how each works. - Visit meetings of assigned packs/troops/teams/crew
s regularly, usually once a month
21Unit Commissioner Responsibility Card
- Visit regularly with the unit leader
- Be aware of unit leader concerns and challenges
- Serve as the unit leaders coach and counselor
- Build a strong, friendly relationship
- Using the literature and profile sheet, help the
leader see opportunities for improvement - Encourage unit participation in district and
council events
22Unit Commissioner Responsibility Card
- Work to ensure effective unit committees
- Visit with the unit committee periodically
- Observe the committee, offer suggestions for
improvement, and work to solve problems - See that adult leaders have adequate training
- Make certain that proper techniques are used to
select and recruit unit leaders
23Unit Commissioner Responsibility Card
- Facilitate on-time charter renewal of all units
- Help the unit conduct a membership inventory of
youth and adults - Help the unit committee chairman conduct the
charter renewal meeting - See that a completed charter renewal application
is returned to the council service center - Make arrangements to present annually each unit
charter at a meeting of the chartered organization
24Unit Commissioner Responsibility Card
- Attend all meetings of the commissioner staff
- Become trained
- Initial orientation and basic training
- Arrowhead Honor and Scouters Key
- Annual council commissioners conference
- Know the resources available to the unit in the
neighborhood, district, and council
25Unit Commissioner Responsibility Card
- Set the example
- Adopt an attitude of helpfulness
- Keep promises
- Be concerned about proper uniforming
- Be diplomatic
- Be a model of Scouting ideals
- Conduct own Self-Evaluation on page 55 of the
Commissioner Fieldbook
26Commissioner Quiz The unit commissioner (true /
false)
- 1. Reports to the district executive.
- 2. Must be an expert in training adults and
youth. - 3. Is only concerned with reregistering a unit
on time. - 4. Should be familiar with the official
literature used by units for program. - 5. Visits the unit committee only, on a regular
basis.
27Commissioner Quiz (continued)
- 6. Must know the unit program planning process.
- 7. "Sells" the unit leader on district and
council functions, as a primary
responsibility. - 8. Periodically communicates with the
chartered organization representative to offer
help. - 9. Regularly attends Roundtables.
- 10. Guides the unit through the annual service
plan.
28Commissioner Quiz (continued)
- 11. Should earn the Commissioners Key.
- 12. Attends monthly meetings of the district
committee. - 13. Is not involved in the presentation of the
unit charter. - 14. Must be familiar with the monthly program
themes. - 15. Encourages assigned packs, troops, teams,
and crews to earn the Centennial Quality Unit
Award.
29Unit Commissioner Video
- AV-06DVD08
- Helping Units Succeed
30Commissioners Roles
- Friend
- Teacher
- Unit Paramedic
- Problem Solver
- Resource Person
31Supporting the Unit
32Supporting the Unit
- Topic Indicators of unit health
- Method Buzz groups
33Indicators of Unit Health Pack
- -Leadership -Family attendance
- -Webelos dens -Den participation
- -Advancement -Meeting operation
- -Youth attendance -Den chiefs
- -Membership -Tiger Cub dens
34Indicators of Unit Health Troop
- -Meeting operation -Boy leadership
- -Attendance -Patrol activity
- -Budget Plan -Outdoor program
- -Membership -Adult assistance
- -Skills instruction presentation
- -Skills instruction levels
35Indicators of Unit Health Crew
- -Adult Advisors -Membership
- -Elected officers -Meeting operation
- -Planned program -Service projects
- -Adult assistance -Program capability
inventory
36Commissioner Worksheet
37Sample
38Evaluation Tool
- Commissioner Worksheets
pack, troop, crew, post - Do unit leaders resist evaluation?
- Do you understand the profile?
- What are your resources?
39Unit Program Planning
40Cub Scout Program Planning
- Unit commissioners should understand process and
tools - Program Helps and Pack Planning Chart
- Cub Scout Leader Program Notebook
- Council calendar
- Chartered organization needs
- Annual program planning conference
- Monthly pack leaders meeting
- Den Chief Den Leader meeting
41Boy Scout Program Planning
- Tools
- Troop Program Features 4 volumes
- Program Planning Chart
- Boy Scout Leader Program Notebook
- Planning steps
- Homework (get ready)
- Find out what Scouts want (patrol leaders)
- PLC annual planning, SPL presiding
- Secure troop committee support
- Pass the word. Publicize.
42Venturing Crew Program Planning
- Crew plans program
- Program capability inventory (adult resources)
- Adult hobbies, interests, skills, careers, and
Ideas from PCI to program planning forms - Venturing activity interest survey
- Planning steps
- Brainstorm activities
- Discuss and evaluate each idea
- Select activities and calendarize
- Plan details each month in advance
43Summary
- Opening
- Purpose, Aims and Methods of Scouting
- Commissioner Service Role
- Supporting the Unit
- Unit Program Planning
44Break!
45Commissioner Basic Training
46Commissioner Priorities
47Distractions
- Unit service
- Do not fall into the trap of doing everything
except your appointed job - Principal Scouting obligation must be with
commissioner responsibilities - Do not register as a unit leader
48Unit Focus
- Priority units receive most careful attention
- Do not give most attention to healthiest active
units - Prioritize unit needs
49Effective Commissioner Leadership
50Leadership Tasks
- Evaluate and improve your own performance
- Maintain a positive and enthusiastic attitude
- Work successfully with adults
- Guide unit leaders in working successfully with
boys - Set a good example for the boys and other adults
- Continue learning and growing in leadership
skills - Practice good communication
51 52Summary
- The Aims and Methods of Scouting
- The Commissioner Service Role
- Supporting the Unit
- Unit Program Planning
- Commissioner Priorities
- Effective Commissioner Leadership
53Session 2
- Units The Commissioners
- Top Priority
54Learning Objectives
- Make meaningful visits to a unit.
- Explain how unit committees are organized to
support the unit leaders. - State the role of the commissioner in youth
protection. - Recognize the standards for quality unit
operation. - Evaluate unit operation.
55Unit Visitation Basics
56Unit Visit Basics
- Commissioners visit each unit at least monthly
- Visits may be to unit meeting, unit committee
meeting, or unit leader - Visits provide knowledge of how to help a unit
improve its program - Visits allow you to find out about problems
before the unit fails, weakens or members leave.
57The First Unit Visit
- Make appointment to visit an assigned unit
- Go with your observer-coach
- Worksheet will be filled out later
- Take your resource kit
- Observe for the entire meeting
- Do not participate beyond introductions
- Both new commissioner and coach fill out
independent worksheets - Wear your complete Field Uniform
58Second Unit Visit
- Second visit unit meeting
- Go by yourself
- Stay only 15 minutes (drop-in)
- Take your resource kit
- Make worksheet changes
- Wear your complete Field Uniform
59Third Unit Visit
- Third visit committee meeting
- Visit chartered organization representative
- Take your resource kit
- Be prepared with ways to help
- Give everyone your phone and address
- Wear your complete Field Uniform
60Unit Condition
- Know the condition of the unit at all times
- Is the program fun challenging for the youth
- Do leaders find the program rewarding
- Is there a membership growth plan
- Will the unit register on time.
61Unit Committee Functions
62Pack and Troop Committee Functions
- Fast Start for a good start
63Pack Committee
- Advancement
- Finance
- Outings
- Training
- Membership reregistration
- Record keeping correspondence
- Public relations
- Friends of Scouting
64Troop Committee
- Advancement
- Finance
- Equipment
- Outdoor program
- Transportation
- Leadership selection
- Membership reregistration
- Friends of Scouting
65Crew Committee
- Membership
- Finance
- Training
- Camping Outdoor
- Activities Civic Service
- Advancement Recognition
- Service
66Introduction to Youth Protection
67Commissioner and Youth Protection
- Annual Youth Protection visit in the fall
- Encourage proper leader selection procedures
- Coach unit people if child abuse occurs
68Commissioner and Youth Protection
- Promote the youth videos
- It Happened to Me
- A Time to Tell
- Personal Safety Awareness
- Explain how to use Youth Protection inserts
- Complete Youth Protection Training yourself
69CentennialQuality Unit Operation
70Centennial Quality Unit Award
- Six mandatory items
- Trained leadership
- Youth Retention, Recharter and Recruiting
- National Parent Initiative
- Advancement
- Outdoor Experience or Group Activities
- Quality Program
71Centennial Quality Unit Award
- Items not required to Qualify
- Unit Commissioner Visitation
- Participate in FOS and Annual Product Sales
72Summary
- Unit Visitation Basics
- Unit Committee Functions
- Introduction to Youth Protection
- Quality Unit Operations
73Break!
74Commissioner Basic Training
75Session 3
76Learning Objectives
- Use counseling fundamentals to encourage the unit
leader and to lead him to self-sufficiency. - State the resource and support available to help
make the unit successful. - State methods of membership management.
- Use the unit charter renewal process in
rechartering a unit. - Explain the annual commissioner service plan.
- Use commissioner lifesaving techniques to resolve
unit life-threatening problems.
77Counseling
78Counseling Defined
- The ability to listen to someone in such a way
that they will solve their own problems."
79Fundamentals
- Time and place with no interruptions
- Understand what the leader is saying
- Let the leader know you hear and understand
- Do not give advice!
- Guide the discussion through questions
- Leader solves their own problem
- If they don't solve their own problem
- Give information
- Propose possible alternatives
- Let leader pick best solution
80Fundamentals Continued
- Summarize from time to time to keep on track
- Support thinking with information
- Know the difference between information and
advice - Resources
- Commissioner Fieldbook, Counseling
81District Committee
82District Committee
- Four function organization
- Membership
- Finance
- Program
- Unit service
83Membership Functions
- Gather information
- Cultivate relationships with community
organizations - Organize new units
- Help youth join existing units
84Finance Functions
- Obtain the districts share of funds for the
council budget - Carry out FOS in the district
- Meet goals by target dates
- Implement finance policies
- Conduct project selling
- Assist with endowment development
- Stimulate United Way relationships
- Recognize donors
85Program Functions
- Training
- Camping and Outdoor
- Activities and Civic Service
- Advancement and Recognition
86Training
- Determine who needs training
- Build annual training program
- Develop plans for specific courses
- Promote courses
- Provide training recognition
87Camping Outdoor
- Promote resident camping for all packs, troops,
and teams - Develop and promote Cub Scout day camps
- Promote year-round camping by all units
- Provide guidance on health and safety
- Use camperships
- Guide the Order of the Arrow
88Activities Civic Service
- Recruit teams to carry out district activities
- Involve the district in community service
projects - Promote and help with council events
89Advancement Recognition
- Help unit leaders with advancement procedures
- Monitor unit advancement progress
- Recruit merit badge counselors
- Approve Eagle Scout service project plans
- Recommend youths and adults for special awards
90Unit Service Function
- Regularly visit all units
- Demonstrate BSA concern for unit leaders
- Facilitate on-time charter renewals
- Appraise and help units improve their program
- Help units earn the Quality Unit Award
- Help units benefit from council resources
- Conduct monthly roundtables
- Guide the unit leader selection process
91Membership Management
92Membership Management
- Buzz groups for 10 minutes
- Topics
- Unit with mostly older boys
- Inventories of active boys
- Year-round recruiting
- Preventing dropped units
- 1 minute reports
93Membership Management
- Unit with mostly older boys
- Recruit
- Inventories of active boys
- Committee Involvement for inactive boys
- Program or Administrative issue
94Help Units Grow
- Year-round recruiting
- Birthday greetings
- Phone Invitations
- Personal Invitations
- Webelos-Scout transition
- Preventing dropped units
- Assigned to unit
- Assigned while organizing new units
95Unit Charter Renewal Process
96Charter Renewal
- "If commissioners are providing regular
visitation and doing their job as in the Annual
Service Plan, then rechartering becomes a minor
paperwork exercise." - George Crowl, 1982
97Objectives
- Reregister unit
- On time
- Maximum membership
- Two deep trained leadership
98The Plan
99Charter Renewal Plan
- 90 days before
- District executive visit head of chartered
organization - 60 days before
- ScoutNet available to log on
- Membership inventory
- Recruit to make up loss
- 100 Boy's Life
100Charter Renewal Plan
- 45 days before
- Charter renewal meeting
- Boys and Adults
- Fees
- Approvals
- Plans for the next year (Quality Unit)
- 15 days before
- Submit charter renewal to service center
- 30 days after
- Charter presentation
101Ninety Days Before
- District Executive visits Institution Head
- Friendly visit
- "How can I help"
102Sixty Days Before
- Membership inventory
- Set renewal meeting date
103Online Rechartering
- Available 60 days in advance
- Online Rechartering is easier
- Council furnishes units with ScoutNet data on a
buffered web page - Units make corrections in this data
- When data is correct unit uploads material to
buffer on ScoutNet - Unit prints charter, obtains signatures and turns
in to the council with payment - After turn-in, council accepts data and sends
this data to ScoutNet
104Forty-Five Days Before
- Charter review meeting
- Youth and Adults
- Fees
- Approvals
- Quality Unit status
- Plans
105Fifteen Days Before
- Unit updates buffered ScoutNet data and gets
signatures - Submit to service center
106Some Techniques
- Talk about 100 Boy's Life often
- Committee members do membership follow-up
- Discuss Quality Unit with the whole committee
(several times a year) - Unit people update ScoutNet data
- Charter renewal checklist
107Thirty Days After
- Charter presentation
- Chartered organization head
- COR
- Unit Leader
- Unit Committee Chair
- The unit
- Sample presentation in Commissioner Fieldbook
108Annual Commissioner Service Plan
109Annual Commissioner Service Plan
- Gives specific purpose to regular and supportive
contact with units.
110Annual Plan
- April - Unit leadership inventory
- May - Troop uniform inspection
- August - Unit program planning
- October - Unit uniform inspection
- November - Youth Protection Training
- December - Membership inventory
- 90 days before charter renewal date executive
officer visit - 60 days before charter renewal date Membership
inventory - 45 days before charter renewal date Charter
renewal meeting - 15 days before charter renewal date Submit to
service center - 30 days after charter renewal date Charter
presentation
111- Annual Plan
- coupled with
- regular visitation
- provides good
- commissioner service.
112Lifesaving Commissioner
113Lifesaving Commissioner
114Danger Signals
- Style of leadership
- Leader wants to keep authority
- Lacks faith in boys / leaders
- Leader trains only by mass instruction
- Leader does not grasp possibilities of patrol
method - Unit is not meeting
- Unit is without adult leaders
115Danger Signals
- Unit has no committee
- No new members being added
- Low attendance at meetings
- Weak or poorly organized program
- No advancement
- No participation in day camp or summer camp
- No unit budget
116Vital Signs
117Vital Signs
- Youth dropping out
- No youth recruiting or poor recruiting methods
- No adult leader
- No planned program
- No youth leaders
- No discipline
- Unit stops meeting
- Charter lapses
- Chartered organization leader unhappy
- Only one active adult
- No parents involved
- Adult conflicts / poor communications
118TAKE ACTION FAST
- Consult ADC / DC
- Ask some basic questions
- What are the problems?
- What are possible solutions?
- What do we do first?
- Who do we involve?
- How do we know when unit is saved?
- What is plan B?
- Be enthusiastic
- Apply "first aid
- Apply second aid
- Promote teamwork
119Hurry Cases
- Unit not meeting
- No leader
- No committee
- No new members
- Conflict with chartered organization
- New untrained leader
- Weak leadership
120Lifesaving Team
- Ad hoc, or organized
- Bring appropriate skills to bear on the problem
- Adapt to the individual problems
121Summary
- Counseling
- The District Committee
- Membership Management
- Unit Charter Renewal Process
- Annual Commissioner Service Plan
- The Lifesaving Commissioner
- Open Forum
- Closing
122Open ForumQuestions and Concerns
123Closing