1 / 19

Troop 774 Junior Leader Training Program

Troop 774 Junior Leader Training Program. T. Chesnutt, Scoutmaster. Being a Troop Leader. Leaders in the Troop are elected. Scouts in the Troop see your leadership potential Fundamentals of trust and respect are already established Who works for who? Leadership is a stewardship.

dai-chan
Download Presentation

Troop 774 Junior Leader Training Program

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Troop 774Junior Leader Training Program T. Chesnutt, Scoutmaster

  2. Being a Troop Leader • Leaders in the Troop are elected. • Scouts in the Troop see your leadership potential • Fundamentals of trust and respect are already established • Who works for who? • Leadership is a stewardship. • The leader is responsible for the welfare of his patrol. • He works for patrol members, not the other way around • Being a leader is a lot of work! • Planning phone calls, resolving conflicts… • Sweating the details.

  3. So What’s in it for me? • WIFM - a favorite radio station? • Leaders get to influence troop decisions. • Leaders get advance information about troop activities. • Learn skills that will last your whole life. • Team building • Conflict resolution • Planning and organization • Delegation

  4. Troop Organization • SPL runs the Troop • He is assisted by his Assistant Sr. Patrol Leaders • Scoutmasters are here to advise and back you up • Patrol method • Divides Troop into manageable units • Distributes leadership-provides leadership opportunities for more boys • Allows diversity to shine through • Other Troop functions • Not all leadership positions are “line” management • Scribe, Historian, Quartermaster, Librarian, Instructor, Chaplains Aide, Bugler

  5. Responsibilities of a Patrol Leader • Appoint Assistant PL • Greenbar • Attend with ideas • Assign a sub when you can’t attend (APL) • Steer patrol identity • Name • Flag • Yell • Plan and run patrol meetings • Plan in advance • Budget meeting time • Get Scouts involved • Keep meeting under control

  6. Responsibilities of a Patrol Leader • Help Scouts advance • Review advancement requirements prior to outing/event • Encourage Scouts to attend campouts, camp, and community service • Encourage merit badge activity • Keep patrol members informed • Make calls when required (outing headcount) • Call guys who are absent and inform them of next weeks activities • Set an example • Wear uniform correctly • Live by the Scout Oath and Law • Lead by example

  7. Leadership Styles • The ‘Big Boss’ style • Useful style in an emergency • More fun to be one than to work for one • Use fear or intimidation to accomplish the task • Shared leadership • Groups get things done, but they need leadership to succeed. • “Leaders are people who help their groups get organized and then encourage them to achieve something.” • Builds an atmosphere of mutual respect

  8. Techniques used in Shared Leadership • The Leader • Asks questions • Resists the temptation to solve the problem for the patrol • Helps his group think through the problem • Encourages teamwork-gets everyone involved. • Lets new ideas emerge • Gives his crew credit for their accomplishments • Uses reflection to help the crew learn from their experience and to get their feedback

  9. Attributes of a Good Leader • Knowledgeable - knows his skills • Good listener - empathy • Has common sense • exercises good judgment • Trustworthy • Responsible • does the right thing • Selfless • not selfish. Does what’s best for the patrol • Good communicator • sets expectations, gives feedback, asks questions.

  10. More Attributes of a Good Leader • Leads by example • Walks the talk. • Treats others fairly • Ensures equal distribution of work. Does not show favoritism. • Capable planner • Knows what needs to be done • Gives advance notice • Avoids surprises • Organized • Keeps good records • Delegates • Knows he can’t do it all • Finds good people to help him

  11. Building Cooperation in the Patrol • Use shared leadership to solve problems • Make everyone in the patrol a part of the solution • Develops a sense of team accomplishment and patrol identity • Delegate • Divide the work. Give everyone a piece to own. • Set expectations. Give feedback. Praise success. • Encourage those who struggle. Help only as a last resort. • Find ways to establish and develop your patrol identity • Patrol yell, flag • Skits at campouts • Make a good showing at uniform inspections, Camporee, community service

  12. Conflict Resolution • Head off conflict before it occurs/gets out of hand • Small problems are easier to solve • Patrol leader must be observant to catch things before they escalate • No bad surprises • Advance planning helps people prepare • Duty roster is an effective tool • Be fair • Distribute work evenly. All scouts get a turn. Even you. • Keep good records. Memories fade.

  13. Conflict Resolution Techniques • Listen • Show empathy • Try to see things from each person’s perspective • Invention • Explore all possible solutions--be creative • Get input from all involved • Look for the win-win solution • Selection • Find the best solution for the most people • As the leader it’s your responsibility to make the call. • Build a consensus if you can

  14. Building Trust • Demonstrate your trustworthiness • Treat your patrol members with respect • Set the expectation that all members of the patrol will follow your example • Always look out for the best interest of your patrol. • Don’t tell them that you are. They will find out. • Don’t screw up! • Once violated, trust takes a long time (if ever) to get re-established.

  15. Patrol Leader Responsibility • Troop Meetings • Roll Call • Patrol meetings • Colors, cleanup • Troop Outings • Campouts • Community Service • Camporee • Activity Planning • Phone calls • Information distribution • Greenbar

  16. Troop Meetings • Roll call • Get your guys lined up in front of the podium • Take attendance; give info to the Scribe • Patrol Meetings • Have an agenda. This is planned at Greenbar. • Write down what you need to accomplish and budget time for each item. • Stick to time budget. • Colors/Cleanup • You’ll know what week you have these tasks from Greenbar. Make assignments the week prior. • Look for advancement opportunities (flag ceremony)

  17. Campouts • Takeoff • Get a headcount - make sure everyone is accounted for. • Inspect the patrol for readiness - no Scout essentials, no campout. • Get patrol gear out of the shed and loaded. • Get Scouts loaded in cars. • At the site • Supervise selection of campsite (advancement for someone. Inspect the camp setup. • Ensure food and crew gear is adequately stowed. • Review the duty roster with patrol • Review safety rules - propane, buddy system

  18. Campouts continued • On a hike • Designate leader and sweep • Ensure rules of safe hiking are obeyed-count-off, “anyone not ready?” • End of outing • Have patrol box inspected by Scoutmaster • Notify QM of any patrol needs • Load gear in trailer • Inspect campsite for cleanliness

  19. Activity Planning • Attend Greenbar • Planning is essential • Lookout for the month ahead • Make calls when necessary • Use call sheet to track who you talked to • Get feedback to the SPL • Information Distribution • Get the word out to your patrol members • Give as much advance notice as possible

More Related