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Archive for the ‘1. PRAVESH’ Category

PRAYER SONG

Scouts & guides Prayer Song

FLAG SONG

FLAG SONG

NATIONAL ANTHEM

The National Anthem

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GOOD TURN DIARY FORMAT

 

S.NO DATE GOOD TURN DONE TO WHOM SIGNATURE OF THE BENEFICIAY
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SIGNATURE OF THE SCOUT/ GUIDE : ……………………………

SIGNATURE OF THE SCOUTMASTER: …………………………….

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GOOD TURN DIARY FORMATS

GOOD TURN DIARY FORMAT

GOOD TURN DIARY FORMAT

GOOD TURN DIARY

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GOOD TURN

What Is a Good Turn?

A Good Turn is a volunteered kind act of good deed.  Boys must be encouraged to watch for things that need to be done, and then do them without being asked.  More, boys must be trained and educated into the Good Turn Habit.  They must be helped to see that doing a job which they are already supposed to do, even cheerfully , ought not be classed as doing a Good Turn. 

Performing the regular routine duties about the home is not a Good Turn.  The Good Turn is a bigger finer thing–the Good Turn is really a philosophy of living, of which Service to others becomes the key.  A good Turn is a volunteered kind act or deed.  If you can  stimulate a boy so that such actions become habitual, then you have made the Good Turn Philosophy work in his life. 

Such a process is a process of education, and will not be accomplished except by careful planning and by presenting the matter again and again under all sort of circumstances, and by yourself setting up and keeping in operation certain sorts of activities which will help the boy catch the idea and experience the thrill of the real Good Turn.

Kinds of Good Turns

Good Turns may be classed under different headings.  Complying with the regulations and rules of the school and school grounds is doing one’s duty, and not a Good Turn.  On the other hand the Scout who watches for things that need to be done, and volunteers his services to the janitor, teacher or principal, has rendered a real Good Turn.

Community Good Turns include picking up banana peels from sidewalks; removing broken glass and nails, etc., from streets; removing papers and boxes from sidewalks and highways; reporting street lamps not burning; garbage nuisances, etc., on streets is but doing one’s duty. and not a Good Turn.

Troop Good Turns mean going out of your way to help another Scout with his work, or helping him to live up to his Scout obligations.  Going to another Patrol or Troop to help with signaling, first aid instruction or other Scout work, or the Scoutmaster with outside work regularly assigned, constitutes a fine Good Turn.

There are Church Good Turns, and Good Turns to Animals and National Good Turns and unlimited numbers of Individual Good Turns.  Most boys do not wish to speak of their individual Good Turns.  In this they should be encouraged.

Good Turns vary with every situation.  We shall try to list and classify suggestions which may be helpful for your Troop. The important thing is to keep forever the Good Turn idea in all of your own thinking and planning, giving it definite place and time. Otherwise it will soon drift into a mere superficiality and do more harm than good. Avoid any reward for Good Turns. Say to your boys:

“Just do something to help the other fellow, and the joy of the service well done will be its own reward.”

So you see the Good Turn habit has no end of avenues down which it may go.  There is scarcely a day or an hour, an event or a situation where there is not an opportunity to do a Good Turn.  The point is that boys must be trained to see these opportunities and to take real joy in making the most of the opportunity.

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 The Bharat Scouts and Guides Flag shall be in dark blue color, the emblem in yellow colour shall be in the center of the flag with Ashoka Chakra in blue color. The size of the flag shall be 180 cms. In length and 120 cms. in width, the emblem will be 45 cms by 39 cms. The size of the Group Flag, which is the same as above, shall be 180 cms X 120 cms. with proportionate emblem. The name of the group shall be written in a yellow color below the emblem in straight line. The Fleur-de-lis the International emblem of Scouting and Ashoka Chakra is meant to emphasize the all-India character of the Movement. The super imposed trefoil represents the guide wing of the B.S.&G.

bharat scouts and guides flag

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Milestones of World Scouting

 
1857 February 22, Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell born in Paddington, London England.
1889 February 22, Olave St. Clair Soames was born. She married Baden-Powell in 1912.
1907 Baden-Powell’s experimental camp, Brownsea Island, England, August 1-9.
1908 “Scouting for Boys” published. Boy Scouts office opened in london.
1916 Cub section started. “Wolf Cub’s Handbook” published.
1919 Gilwell Park acquired. Start of leaders’ training courses.
1920 1st World Jamboree, Olympia, London, England, 8,000 participants.
Baden-Powell acclaimed Chief Scout of the World.
1st International Scout Conference; 33 national Scout organizations represented.
Boy Scouts International Bureau founded, London, England.
1921 International magazine “Jamboree” first published (title changed to “World Scouting” in 1955,
and now is World Scouting News).
1922 1st International Committee elected (at 2nd International Conference, Paris, France). 30 national
Scout organizations represented.
First world census: 1,019,205 members in 31 countries.
Venture Scouts started (Rovers).
1924 2nd World Jamboree, Copenhagen, Denmark, 4,549 participants.
3rd World Scout Conference, Copenhagen Denmark. 34 national Scout organizations represented.
1925 International Scout Chalet opened, Kandersteg, Switzerland. (Now known as the Kandersteg
International Scout Centre)
1926 4th World Scout Conference, Kandersteg, Switzerland. 29 national Scout organizations represented.
1929 3rd World Jamboree, Birkenhead, England. 50,000 participants.
5th World Scout Conference, Birkenhead, England. 33 national Scout organizations represented.
Baden-Powell given peerage; takes title Lord Baden-Powell of Gilwell.
1931 6th World Scout Conference, Vienna-Baden, Austria. 44 national Scout organizations represented.
1933 4th World Jamboree, Gödöllö, Hungary. 25,793 participants.
7th World Scout Conference, Gödöllö, Hungary. 31 national Scout organizations represented.
1935 8th World Scout Conference, Stockholm, Sweden. 28 national Scout organizations represented.
1937 5th World Jamboree, Vogelenzang-Bloemendaal, Netherlands. 28,750 participants.
9th World Scout Conference, The Hague, Netherlands. 34 national Scout organizations represented.
1939 10th World Scout Conference, Edinburgh, Scotland. 27 national Scout organizations represented.
1941 Death of Baden-Powell, January 8.
1946 1st Inter-American Conference, Bogota, Colombia.
1947 6th World Jamboree (Jamboree of Peace), Moisson, France. 24,152 participants.
11th World Scout Conference, Château de Rosny, France. 32 national Scout organizations represented.
1949 1st Agoon (International camp for handicapped Scouts) Lunteren, Netherlands.
12th World Scout Conference, Elvesaeter, Norway. 25 national Scout organizations represented.

 

 

 

 
1950 World membership reached 5 million in 50 countries.
1951 7th World Jamboree, Bad Ischl, Austria. 12,884 participants.
13th World Scout Conference, Salzburg, Austria. 34 national Scout organizations represented.
1952 1st Caribbean Jamboree, Kingston, Jamaica.
14th World Scout Conference, Vaduz, Liechtenstein. 35 national Scout organizations represented.
1954 1st Arab Jamboree, Zabadani, Syria.
1955 8th World Jamboree, Niagara-on-the-Lake, Canada. 11,139 participants.
15th World Scout Conference, Niagara Falls, Canada. 44 national Scout organizations represented.
1957 9th World Jamboree (Jubilee, 50th Anniversary of Scouting), Birmingham, England. 30,000 participants.
16th World Scout Conference, Cambridge, England. 52 national Scout organizations represented.
World Scout Bureau moved to Ottawa, Canada.
1958 1st Far East Regional Conference, Baguio, Philippines.
1st Jamboree-on-the-Air (JOTA)
1959 10th World Jamboree, Mt. Makiling, Philippines. 12,203 participants.
17th World Scout Conference, New Delhi, India. 35 national Scout organizations represented.
1960 1st European Regional Conference, Altenberg, Germany.
1961 18th World Scout Conference, Lisbon, Portugal. 50 national Scout organizations represented.
1963 11th World Jamboree, Marathon, Greece. 14,000 participants.
19th World Scout Conference, Rhodes, Greece. 52 national Scout organizations represented.
1965 1st Pan-American Jamboree, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
20th World Scout Conference, Mexico City, Mexico. 59 national Scout organizations represented.
1967 12th World Jamboree, Farragut State Park, Idaho, U.S.A. 12,011 participants.
21st World Scout Conference, Seattle, Washington, U.S.A. 70 national organizations represented.
1968 World Scout Bureau headquarters moved to Geneva, Switzerland.
1969 World membership reached 12 million.
22nd World Scout Conference, Otaniemi, Finland. 60 national Scout organizations represented.
1970 1st Africa Conference, Dakar, Senegal.
1971 13th World Jamboree, Asagiri Heights, Japan. 23,758 participants.
23rd World Scout Conference, Tokyo, Japan. 71 national Scout organizations represented.
World Organization membership passes 100 member countries.
1972 1st International Community Development Seminar, Cotonou, Dahomey (now Benin).
1973 1st Environment Conservation seminar, Sweden.
24th World Scout Conference, Nairobi, Kenya.
77 national Scout organizations represented.
1975 14th World Jamboree (Nordjamb ’75), Lillehammer, Norway. 17,259 participants.
25th World Scout Conference, Lundtofte, Denmark. 87 national Scout organizations represented.
1977 26th World Scout Conference, Montreal, Canada. 81 national Scout organizations represented.
Death of Lady Olave Baden-Powell, June 25.
1979 World Jamboree Year: Join-in-Jamboree around the world.
27th World Scout Conference, Birmingham, England. 81 national Scout organizations represented.
1981 UNESCO Prize for Peace Education presented to WOSM.
28th World Scout Conference, Dakar, Senegal. 74 national Scout organizations represented.
1982 Rotary International honours Scout Movement.
1982-3 Year of the Scout – 75th Anniversary of Scouting.
1983 15th World Jamboree, Calgary, Alberta, Canada. 14,752 participants.
29th World Scout Conference, Dearborn, Michigan, U.S.A. 90 national organizations represented.
1984 Rotary Award for World Understanding.
The International Association of Lions Clubs honours Scouting.
1985 UN International Youth Year (1st worldwide programme to be implemented with the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts).
30th World Scout Conference, Munich Germany. 90 national Scout organizations represented.
1986-7 A child health programme entitled “help children grow” introduced with the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts and UNICEF.
Membership in World Organization reaches 120 countries.
1988 16th World Jamboree, New South Wales, Australia. 13,434 participants.
Scouting is honoured by United Nations Environment Programme in recognition of the Movement’s outstanding environment achievements.
31st World Scout Conference, Melbourne, Australia. 77 national Scout organizations represented. Implementation of the resolution on “Towards a Strategy for Scouting”.
Emphasis on Scouting with the handicapped. Several seminars took place all over the world for the promotion of health and handicapped.

Dr. Jacques Moreillon, Switzerland, becomes Secretary General of the World Organization of the Scout Movement. (1 November)

1989 Special Peace Week: Scout activities related to education for peace.
7th Africa Scout Conference in Lomé, Togo.
Scouting makes celebrations to mark the adoption of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and encourage its ratification by national governments.
1990 32nd World Scout Conference, Paris, France. 1,000 participants representing 100 member countries and guests from seven other countries.
Opening of an Information Centre in Moscow.
Formal agreement, the Kigali Charter, between 23 Scout and Girl Guide associations for the promotion of programmes of cooperation in the form of twining projects.
Memberhsip in World Organization reaches 131 countries
“Operation of Solidarity” to enable 1,235 children irradiated by the Chernobyl disaster to be the guests of Scouts and Girl Guides in 15 European countries, in collaboration with UNESCO, the Soviet Children’s Fund and the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts.
1990-1 World Scout Environment Year.
8th World Moot, near Melbourne, Australia. 1,000 young adult Scouts from 36 countries. A feature of the Moot was the World Youth Forum.

 

 

 

 

 

 
1991 Creation of the World Scout Parliamentary Union, Korea at its constituent assembly gathering 60 parliamentarians and Scouting officials from 22 countries on 5 continents.
17th World Scout Jamboree, Mount Sorak National Park, Republic of Korea. 20,000 participants representing 135 countries and territories. Introduction of the Global Development Village.
1992 9th World Moot, Kandersteg International Scout Centre, Switzerland. 1,400 participants from 52 countries.
35th JOTA: at the invitation of the World Federation of Great Towers, Scouts and Guides had the opportunity to communicate from the tops of 13 towers around the world using the newest communication systems including videophone and television as well as amateur radio.
For the first time all five Regional Scout Conferences met in the same year and all will now meet on a triennial basis in the year preceding World Scout Conferences.
Creation of Scout Resources International (SCORE), the official Scout Shop of the World Organization.
1993 33rd World Scout Conference, Bangkok, Thailand, with more than 1,000 participants from 99 member countries.
Opening of a World Scout organization office in Yalta-Gurzuf in Crimea covering the CIS and related countries.
1994 International symposium on “Scouting: Youth without Borders, Partnership and Solidarity”, Marrakech, Morocco. 440 participants representing 118 Scout associations from 94 countries. Adoption of the Marrakech Charter to enhance partnership.
Signature of an agreement with UNICEF on Oral Rehydration Therapy, Geneva, Switzerland.
The International Public Relations Association bestowed its annual President’s Award on to WOSM for “outstanding contribution to better world understanding”.
1995 18th World Scout Jamboree, Netherlands. 28,960 Scouts, leaders and staff attended from 166 countries and territories. Operation Flevoland pemitted Scouts from 50 countries to participate.
Signing of an agreement of co-operation between the World Scout Organization and United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
Celebrations of the 50th Anniversary of the UN. Youth Forum held by the UN in Geneva, Switzerland; approximately 2/3rd of delegates were or had been Scouts or Girl Guides.
1996 6th World Youth Forum, Moss, Norway.
34th World Scout Conference, Oslo, Norway, with more than 1,000 participants from 108 member countries.
10th World Scout Moot, Sweden.
1st Mongolian Jamboree. 1,200 participants.
Membership in World Organization reaches 140 countries.
1997 90th Anniversary of Scouting.
Creation of the Eurasia World Scout Region, serving the 12 countries of the C.I.S.
1st official Jamboree on the Internet (JOTI).
Signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between the World Health Organization, AHM (Leprosy Relief Organization) and WOSM to eliminate leprosy.
Opening of an Operations Centre in Dakar, Senegal to serve French Speaking associations in West Africa.
2nd World Scout Parliamentary Union General Assembly, Manila, Philippines.
WOSM and four other youth Organizations launch programme to promote the value of non-formal education.
1998 New “World Scout Pin” launched.
19th World Scout Jamboree held in Picarquin, Chile.
1999 WOSM member countries reach 152.
7th World Scout Youth Forum, South Africa
35th World Scout Conference, Durban South Africa, with nearly 1,000 people from 116 countries.

Peace Cruise in the Eastern Mediterranean

2000 11th World Scout Moot, Mexico. 5,000 participants, 71 countries

3rd World Scout Parliamentary Union General Assembly, Warsaw, Poland.

2002 WOSM member countries: 154

8th World Scout Youth Forum, Greece
36th World Scout Conference, Thessaloniki, Greece, with 1,225 people from 125 countries.

20th World Scout Jamboree, Sattahip, Thailand. 24,000 participants from 147 countries and territories.

2003 4th World Scout Parliamentary Union General Assembly, Cairo, Egypt. (December)

The first World Scout Interreligious Symposium held in Valencia, Spain with representatives of 12 religions and 33 national Scout organizations. (December)

2004 Panafrican Youth Forum on AIDS: a matter of education. Organized by WOSM on behalf of the Alliance of Youth CEO’s. Dakar, Senegal. Attended by 300 from 42 countries. (March)

Dr. Eduardo Missoni (Italy) becomes Secretary General of the World Organization of the Scout Movement. (1 April)

2005 World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM) signs a Memorandum of Understanding with the United Nations’ Millennium Campaign.
9th World Scout Youth Forum, Yasmine Hammamet, Tunisia.
37th World Scout Conference, Yasmine Hammamet, Tunisia with 122 Member Countries.
UNICEF and World Scouting sign Memorandum of Understanding.
WOSM member countries: 155
2006 1st Eurasia Jamboree held in Byurakan, Armenia.

New World Scout Brand launched in October.

2007 Centenary of Scouting.

150th Anniversary of B-P’s birth.

21st World Scout Jamboree, Hylands Park, Chelmsford, United Kingdom.

Scouting’s Sunrise 1 August.

Gifts for Peace project presents more than 120 projects.

50th JOTA.

1st World Congress on Education to be held in Geneva.

Mr. Luc Panissod (France) becomes Acting Secretary General of the World Organization of the Scout Movement (November).

2008 Kazakhstan’s National Scout Organization, ‘the Organization of the Scout Movement of Kazakhstan (OSMK)’, becomes an official member of WOSM on 16 January 2008.

1 July 2008: National Association of Cambodian Scouts (NACS); Association of Scouts of Montenegro; Scouts of Syria; National Organization of Scouts of Ukraine (NOSU) joined WOSM. This brings the total number of Member Organizations of WOSM to 160. The admission of Montenegro as a Member Organization changes the status of the National Scout Organization of Serbia, which retains membership in WOSM. They will also receive a new certificate of membership at the Korea Conference.

10th World Scout Youth Forum, Iskan, Republic of Korea. 7-10 July 2008.
38th World Scout Conference, Jeju Island, Republic of Korea. 14-18 July 2008.

 

 

 

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The Scout Uniform Compulsory:

(i) Shirt: A gray color shirt with half sleeves, two patch packets and shoulder strips. (Olive green or navy blue/jersey may be worn over the shirt.) Sleeves may be turned down in cold weather.

(ii) Shorts: A navy blue shorts or trousers.

(iii) Head dress: A navy blue beret cap with the official badge; a Sikh may wear a turban.

(iv) Belt: Brown leather or khakhi web belt with the official buckle of B.S. & G.

(v) Scarf: A triangular scarf of the group color other than yellow, green and purple) approved by the local or District Association with the two sides not less than 70 cms and not more than 80 cms in length.

(vi) Membership badge: A cloth badge with green background and the Fleur-de-lis in yellow superimposed by the trefoil with Ashoka Chakra in the center, worn on the middle of the left pocket or at the same place on Jersey/Coat.

(vii) Shoulder badge: 8 cms in length and 1.5 cms in width with white background and name of the group in red letters shall be worn on the right shoulder below the seam. 

(viii) Shoulder strips: Two shoulder stripes indicating the name of the patrol each 5 cms x 1.5 cms. Each 2 cms apart at the top of the left sleeve immediately below the seam. 

The Scout Uniform Optional:

(i) Stockings or socks: Black of khaki (if stockings) with green garter tabs 1.5 cms visible.

(ii) Footwear: Brown or black shoes.

(v) Knife: A Scout knife may be carried on the belt.

(vii) Staff: Made of natural wood of such length to be in line with the ear.

(ix) World scout badge: Made of cloth may be worn in the middle of the right pocket when in uniform.

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SCOUTING IS…….

Education for Life

Scouting compliments the school and the family by developing self-knowledge, the need to explore, to discover, to want to know and to learn visual skills.

An experience in leadership

Scouting offers young people a unique opportunity to be trained in leadership and to practice the acquired leadership skills. This is done by focussing on group work (patrols) and progressively allowing young people to take charge of (to lead) their groups.

Based on a system of values

The Scout programme which promotes leadership is based on a system of values such as honesty, loyalty, obedience, cleanliness, trust, helpfulness, brotherhood, courtesy…

International

Scouting has never stopped growing since its founding in 1907. Today there are more than 16 million members in more than 150 countries and territories.

Open to all

Scouting is open to all young men from the age of eight, in accordance with the purpose, principles and method conceived by its founder Robert Baden-Powell.

A challenge to adults

A chance to help young people develop. A way to improve the quality of our future society, while being of service, adult leaders get valuable training and experience, which is invaluable in their personal professional lives.

A method

Making a personal commitment

– to a simple code of living: the Scout Promise and Law.

Learning by doing

– active participation, with others

Working in small groups

– in patrols to develop leadership, group skills, and individual responsibility

Stimulting programmes

– progressive activities based on the interests of young people. Activities in contact with nature, a ruch learning environment where simplicity, creativity and discovery come together to provide adventure and challenge.

A code of living

A spiritual dimension

– A commitment to seek the spiritual value of life beyond the material world.

A social dimension

– participating in the development of society, respecting the dignity of others and the integrity of the natural world.

Promoting local, national and international peace, understanding and co-operation.

A personal dimension

– developing a sense of personal responsibility and stimulating the desire for responsible self-expression

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THE SCOUT SIGN

The Scout sign identifies you as a Scout anywhere in the world. Use it whenever you give the Scout Oath or Scout Law.

The hand is still held palm facing out, and the thumb holding the little finger, but the hand is held at the shoulder

The three upraised fingers stand for the three parts of the Scout Oath. The thumb and little finger together stand for the bond between all Scouts.

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The three-finger salute is used by members of Scout and Guide organizations around the world when greeting other Scouts and in respect of a national flag at ceremonies. In most situations, the salute is made with the palm face out, the thumb holding down the little finger, and with the fingertips on the brow of the head.

Meaning of the three fingers

 

In his book, Scouting for Boys, Robert Baden-Powell chose the three-finger salute for Scouts to represent the three aspects of the Scout Promise:

1. Honour God and the King

2. Help Others

3. Obey the Scout Law

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