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Scoutcraft Games and ProjectsSee also: Scout Games Baden-Powell says: "The training of Boy Scouts is mainly by means of games practices and competitions such as interest them . . ." At the Troop meeting this training takes the form of Scoutcraft games and competitions in Scoutcraft projects, with the Patrols the teams throughout. The distinction between a Scoutcraft game and a project is this: A Scoutcraft game may be considered playing at a skill for further practice, while a project is doing the real thing, or a reasonable facsimile, for the sake of determining the Patrols' ability. If, for instance, the Scouts of each Patrol run up, one after the other, to tie eight clove hitches around a post in Knot Relay, they are playing a game. If the same Scouts use the same clove hitches for making a trestle for a bridge, they are carrying out a project. If the Scouts run up, relay style, to put bandages on a victim, they are playing a game. If they use the bandages to solve a first aid problem, they are working out a project. The project becomes a competition when all the Patrols take part at the same time, each patrol trying to do a quicker and better job than the others.
See: Recreational Games |
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DVDs for Junior Leader Training Weekends! |
Additional Titles: Scout Books Trading Post |
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