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Girl Scouts of Greater Chicago and Northwest Indiana Girl Scout Silver Award. What is the Girl Scout Silver Award?. Community Service based achievement. Highest award a Girl Scout in grades 6-8 or ages 11-14 can earn. Designed to help girls set and reach goals.
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Girl Scouts of Greater Chicago and Northwest Indiana Girl Scout Silver Award
What is the Girl Scout Silver Award? • Community Service based achievement. • Highest award a Girl Scout in grades 6-8 or ages 11-14 can earn. • Designed to help girls set and reach goals. • Encourages girls to practice leadership and make lasting changes in their community. • Takes about 1-2 years to complete.
Girl Scout Silver Award Process • Prerequisite - One Cadette Journey. • Develop a community Take Action Project using the Guidelines to the Girl Scout Silver Award. • Work as an individual or with a team of 3 – 4 girls from your troop. • A minimum of 50 hours is suggested for completion.
Community Take Action Project • A Take Action Project : • Makes a lasting difference in the local neighborhood or community (outside of Girl Scouting). • Puts the Promise and Law into action. • Demonstrate an understanding of sustainability in the project plan and implementation.
Guidelines to the Girl Scout Silver Award • The Girl Guidelines contain: • step by step instructions to complete your award. • support tools to help guide you through the process every step of the way. • The Girl Guidelines Booklet and other support materials are located on the council website - search “Silver Award”
Step One • Complete a Cadette Girl Scout Journey. • Each Journey concentrates on a different sets of skills for you to choose to personally develop. • ( A Journey is completed when the award(s) within the Journey have been earned.)
Points to Remember • This award is completed as an individual or with a group of 3 - 4 girls. • The award suggests a girl completes 50 hours from the start of step one to the end of her project. • The Take Action Project focuses on the community (outside of Girl Scouting). • The Take Action Project is reviewed and approved by the troop leader. • The prospective award recipient must demonstrate an understanding of sustainability in the project plan and implementation.
Step Two: Identify an Issue • Decision-Making Tips • What matters to you? • What connections can you make between the issue that concerns you and what is happening in your community? • What would benefit the community immediately and long-term? • How do you want to make a difference? • Refer to page 2 - 3 of the Guidelines booklet
Step Three: Build a Team • As an individual or small group find people who: • Are committed to your issue/project idea. • Work together well with others. • Accept constructive criticism. • Respect other points of view. • Will accept direction from you. • Refer to pages 3 – 4 in the Guidelines booklet
Step Four: Explore Your Community • Look around your community for people and/or groups that are drawn to your issue. • Seek out people who can help you establish contact/find experts in the field addressed by your project (networking). • Seek out the skills and strengths of others. • Respect different points of view and ways of working. • Build a team and recruit a Project Advisor who brings special skills related to the issue your Take Action Project addresses. • Refer to pages 4-7 in the Guidelines booklet
Step Five: Create a Plan • Review all your data. • Identify the root cause. • Determine the skills you will need. • Look for a new way to solve the problem. • Think about how you will live the Promise and the Law through the course of your project. • Refer to pages 7 – 8 in the Guidelines Booklet
Step Six: Develop Your Project • Work with your team to: • Develop your plan. • Include the goals the group wants to attain. • Create a plan to get others involved. • Decide what supplies will be needed and how you will get them. • Create a budget and a money earning plan to cover expenses – remember no fund raising for another organization. • Develop an understanding of sustainability in the project plan and implementation • Refer to pages 8 – 11 in the Guidelines Booklet
Step Seven: Make a Plan, and Put it into Motion • Develop a timeline and budget. • Delegate the work to members of your team. • Put your plan into motion. • Keep a record of all you have done – letters, photos, video, journaling, scrapbooking. • Refer to pages 11 – 13 in the Guidelines Booklet
Step Eight: Reflect, and Share your Story • What did your project accomplish? • What did you learn about yourself? • What did you learn from the others on your team? • What skills did you gain? • What was the impact on your community? • How will you share what you learned with others? • Refer to pages 12 – 13 in the Guidelines Booklet
Celebrate! • Turn in your Final Report to the council office. • Hold a ceremony at a troop meeting or in your community. • Invite family and friends, your team members, and the people or organizations who were helped by your project. • Set up a display so that others will learn more about your project and its impact on your community. • Encourage others to continue the work you have started .
Contact Deanna McMillan 312-912-6377 dmcmillan@girlscoutsgcnwi.org QUESTIONS???? Call Out Example
Girl Scouts of Greater Chicago and Northwest Indiana Girl Scout Silver Award