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Volunteering at Scouts is changing to help us reach more young people

Volunteering is changing to help us reach more young people

Volunteering is changing at Scouts. Read more

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Going for gold

Helping Scouts to understand the Chief Scout’s Gold Award with this fun introduction

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You’ll need

  • Scissors
  • paper and pens (optional)
  • A copy of 'Going for gold' activity statements
Going For Gold activity statements
PDF – 398.9KB

Before you begin

  • Use the safety checklist to help you plan and risk assess your activity. Additional help to carry out your risk assessment, including examples can be found here. Don’t forget to make sure all young people and adults involved in the activity know how to take part safely.
  • Make sure you’ll have enough adult helpers. You may need some parents and carers to help if you’re short on helpers.

Setting up this activity

  • Print out ‘Going for Gold’ activity statements and cut out the award names.
  • Stick or place the award names at different stations around the meeting place before young people arrive.
  • You could also write them out bigger on sheets of paper if needed.

Introducing the activity

  1. Gather everyone together and explain that you’re going to be learning more about the Chief Scouts Gold Award.
  2. Ask if anyone knows what the Chief Scouts Gold Award is and how it can be achieved.

Playing the game

  1. Explain that a statement is going to be read out and everyone should move to the Challenge Award ‘station’ that they feel the statement most corresponds to. If they guess correctly then the person gets a point. The person with the most points at the end could be declared the winner.
  2. To begin, an adult volunteer or young leader should point to where all the Challenge Award ‘stations’ are and say them aloud.
  3. Now, the adult volunteer or young leader should read out the first statement.
  4. Everyone should then move to their chosen Challenge Award ‘station’.
  5. The adult volunteer or young leader should ask some people why they chose the Challenge Award ‘station’ they did.
  6. Now, read out the answer. You could give more information about this Challenge Award, too.
  7. Move on to the next section and repeat until statements are completed.
  8. Ask everyone to add up the points and see how well everyone did.

Thinking about their award

  1. Gather everyone back together.
  2. Ask everyone to think about the different ways they could complete the Award.
  3. For those who’ve already done it, ask what they did and what advice they’d give to other Scouts.
  4. Ask participants to consider what they’ll do for their Award. You could ask young people to record their plans to complete the Top Awards, such as by writing down ideas or talking through with each other or planning the next term programme together.
  5. Get everyone back together in a circle and ask people to share what they’ll do next to start achieving the award.

Top tip: After this meeting, you could plan with the rest of the volunteer leadership team how you could support young people to complete the Awards.

Reflection

This activity has helped us find out more about the Scout Challenge awards needed to achieve the Chief Scouts Gold Award.

What do you think you’ll do to get their different challenge awards? What are you most excited about doing?

What are the challenges you think you’ll face and how will you prepare to overcome them? How will you support each other in gaining the awards?

Safety

All activities must be safely managed. You must complete a thorough risk assessment and take appropriate steps to reduce risk. Use the safety checklist to help you plan and risk assess your activity. Always get approval for the activity, and have suitable supervision and an InTouch process.

Make it accessible

All Scout activities should be inclusive and accessible.