Requirements:
- Earn One Venturing Bronze Award.
- Earn the Venturing Gold Award.
- Emergency Preparedness
- Become certified in Standard First Aid or equivalent course.
If you choose the American Red Cross Standard First Aid version
of the course, the curriculum includes how to recognize an emergency
and overcome the reluctance to react; how to recognize and care for
breathing and cardiac emergencies in adults (training to care for infants
and children is optional); and how to identify and care for life-threatening
bleeding, sudden illness, and injury. The course is approximately 6½
hours. Your Standard First Aid certification will expire three years
from the date of issue. Your CPR certification will expire one year
from the date of issue.
If you hold an unexpired certification in this or a higher course, you
can receive credit for this requirement. However, you must be currently
certified at the time of your Silver Award crew review. You are encouraged
to get certified as soon as possible and stay certified. For
this requirement, you are not required to seek a higher certification,
but you are encouraged to get certifications in higher-level course
such as Wilderness First Aid or Emergency Response.
You will be even more prepared.
Note:
If you need help finding an American Red Cross
instructor in your area, call your local Red Cross chapter. For literature,
call toll-free 1-800-667-2968).
- Become certified in CPR. You can take a stand-alone
CPR course or take it as part of another course such as Standard First
Aid. Please remember that CPR certification lasts for only one year,
at which time you will need a refresher course. Like Standard First
Aid,. it is good to always be current in your CPR certification. You
most likely will get an opportunity to use your skill in saving a life.
- Complete the BSA Safe Swim Defense training course.
In this course, you will learn how each of the eight points
of the Safe Swim program affects safe crew swimming activities. You
will learn that qualified supervision and discipline are the two most
important points, upon which the other points rely. You will also learn
how to set up a safe swim area. Any BSA aquatics resource person,
your crew Advisors, or other council-authorized individual can provide
the training course for you. Use Safe Swim Defense, No. 34370, and Safe
Swim Defense Training Outline, No. 19-417.
- Either lead or participate in a group swim using BSA Safe
Swim Defense. Swimming can be a great way for you and your
crew members to stay fit and to just have fun. To ensure that you and
your friends will continue to do just that, always insist you use Safe
Swim Defense.
- Leadership
- Successfully complete the Venturing Leadership Skills Course.
- Successfully serve for at least six months in an elected
or appointed crew, district, or council leadership position.
Since leadership is a form of service to others, don't be afraid
to ask your followers, those you serve, how you are doing. If you don't
have an occasional assessment of your progress, you might not improve.
Learn to value the opinion of others. Service as a den Chief
qualifies for this requirement. This must be in addition
to the leadership requirement in the Venturing Gold Award.
- Ethics in Action
- Participate in at least two Ethical Controversies Activities
from chapter 9 of the Venturing Leader Manual. These
activities are scenarios that will put you and those who do the activities
with you into challenging, problem-solving situations. In a constructive
way, these activities will help you develop the following personal skills:
- Promoting productive conflict resolution
- Polite disagreement
- Listening to new ideas
- Understanding other people's perspectives
- Working toward a solution that the group involved will support
and implement
- Either organize and lead, or help to organize and lead,
an Ethics Forum for your crew, another crew, school class, or other
youth group. An Ethics Forum is simply another, more formal,
way of gathering information about ethics. You will invite two or more
adults to form a panel for your crew or group to ask questions about
ethics in their personal or professional lives. You can even invite
adults related to your crew's specialty; if you are in a sports crew,
you could invite a sports doctor, a coach, and a professional athlete.
You can even invite guests such as family members and friends to join
you. You can even use the information gathered from the Ethics Forum
to develop your own Ethical Controversies activities.
- Silver Award Review
After completing all requirements, the candidate should prepare evidence
of completion of work. It should be submitted to the crew Advisor along
with the completed and personally signed Silver Award Progress Record and
Application. The crew president, in conjunction with the crew Advisor, should
then appoint a review committee of four to six people including Venturers
and adults. The review committee should review the candidate's written documentation
and interview the candidate to determine whether the candidate complete
all work and grew as a result of the pursuit of the Silver Award. The application
is then approved by the crew Advisor and crew committee chairman and submitted
to your council service center.
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