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Prairie Lakes District

Prairie Lakes District. Eagle Scout Process. Eagle Scout Process. Scout achieves rank of Life. Finish Eagle requirements as noted in the Boy Scout Handbook. When Scout is within about 2 months of SM conference, send request for references. Plan and carry out the Eagle Project.

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Prairie Lakes District

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  1. Prairie Lakes District Eagle Scout Process

  2. Eagle Scout Process • Scout achieves rank of Life. • Finish Eagle requirements as noted in the Boy Scout Handbook. • When Scout is within about 2 months of SM conference, send request for references. • Plan and carry out the Eagle Project. • After SM conference, SM submits forms and project workbook to Council for validation (takes about 2 weeks). • Packet is received by District Advancement Chair to schedule BOR • After BOR approval, application is sent to National (takes up to 6 weeks). • Scout, parents, and Troop plan Court of Honor

  3. Eagle Scout Requirement 5 While a Life Scout, plan, develop, and give leadership to others in a service project helpful to any religious institution, any school, or your community. (The project must benefit an organization other than Boy Scouting.) A project proposal must be approved by the organization benefiting from the effort, your unit leader and unit committee, and the council or district before you start. You must use the Eagle Scout Service Project Workbook, No. 512-927, in meeting this requirement.

  4. Project Purpose In addition to providing service and fulfilling the part of the Scout Oath, “to help other people at all times,” one of the primary purposes of the Eagle Scout service project is to demonstrate or hone, or to learn and develop, leadership skills. Related to this are important lessons in project management and taking responsibility for a significant accomplishment.

  5. Restrictions • There are no required minimum hours for a project. • Routine labor is not appropriate for a project. • Projects may not be of a commercial nature or for a business. • Projects may not be a fundraiser as the primary effort. • No more than one Eagle candidate may receive credit for a project. • Project may not be performed for the BSA, its councils, its districts, units, or their properties.

  6. Eagle Project Ideas • Schools • City and County Parks • State Parks • American Red Cross • Churches • Other charities

  7. Eagle Projects • General timeline to follow • Call for verbal OK to plan the project • Expect up to two months from verbal OK to formal approval and signature from District • Project Reviews are typically done prior to Roundtable meeting on 2nd Tuesday of the month September through May. • Project Reviews by appointment during Summer months.

  8. Eagle Projects • Verbal approval • Ensures project concept is acceptable as an Eagle project • Complete by phone (not email) and takes about 10 minutes • Who to call: • Troy Billings (651-423-2070) • Andrew McDermid (612-804-4135) • Call between 4 PM and 9 PM. Leave a message if needed. Remember to leave your phone #. • Be professional.

  9. Eagle Projects - Planning • Use Eagle Scout Service Project workbook dated 2010 OR the new workbook available soon. • For the 2010 workbook, district project reviews use a checklist to ensure all parts are addressed. • The new form covers the same general parts with a new process. This form will be required as of 1/1/2012.

  10. Eagle Projects – Do’s • Do provide as much detail as possible. This is your first impression to the Board of Review. • Do plan out materials and tools required • Do get costs of materials to be purchased or rented • Do plan out who will be contacted for donations • Do use an hour-by-hour Time schedule (it’s easier to follow) • Do get Sponsor, SM, and CM signatures before coming to District • Do plan for the dates available for District review • Do check your plan against the Review Checklist

  11. Eagle Projects – Don’ts • Don’t begin work on project until District signature is given (includes actually requesting and getting donations) • Don’t expect quick turn around from District volunteers (usually takes a day or two to respond to phone messages and email) • Don’t wait until two months before your 18th birthday • Don’t expect things to move fast during the summer when volunteers are on vacation or at camp with their units

  12. Highlights of the new Workbook • The Project Proposal – this is the part that gets signed off. • The Final Plan – this is where the detail comes in. Don’t skip this part. • The Fundraising Application – if needed, this must be approved through the district. • The Project Report – done after the project is completed.

  13. How projects are reviewed with the new workbook • A revised checklist is being developed. • The proposal passes the following tests: • It provides sufficient opportunity to meet Requirement #5. • It appears to be feasible. • Safety issues will be addressed. • Action steps for further detailed planning are included. • The scout is on the right track with a reasonable chance for a positive experience.

  14. Eagle Scout Service Project Coaches • It is strongly recommended that scouts use a Coach from the unit or district. • Greatest value is in the advice provided after approval of the proposal as detailed planning continues. • If a plan is not sufficiently developed, projects can fail. • Coaches help evaluate a plan’s strengths, weaknesses, and risks. • Coaches shall NOT dictate changes, withdraw approval, or take any other directive action.

  15. The new workbook

  16. For Parents and Leaders • The project is the Scout’s to lead. Encourage and guide, but let him lead. • The Scout should be making the calls – not parents. • Do NOT wait for all of the reference letters before sending the packet to the Council.

  17. Eagle Process – After the Project • Write up the Project changes and get signatures • Be sure to use the current version of the Eagle Rank Application from the Northern Star Council website (dated 2010 printing) • Send requests for reference letters while project planning is in progress. Teachers are hard to contact after school is out. • Once paperwork is sent to Council, Registrar validates • District Advancement Chair schedules the Board of Review

  18. Eagle Process – Resources • Eagle Scout Service Project Planning Guide - http://www.northernstarbsa.org/Forms/Eagle/ServiceProjectPlanningGuide9-05.pdf • Eagle Scout Service Project Checklist & Tips - http://www.northernstarbsa.org/Forms/Eagle/ServiceProjectChecklistTips.pdf • Eagle Scout Leadership Service Project Workbook - http://www.scouting.org/filestore/pdf/512-927.pdf

  19. Eagle Process – Resources • Prairie Lakes District Resources - http://prairielakes.nsbsa.org/District/Resources.aspx • EagleScout.org - http://www.eaglescout.org/ • Selecting an Eagle Project - http://www.eaglescout.org/project/select.html • Google “Eagle Scout projects”

  20. Eagle Process - FAQ • When should candidate contact District? • Who should contact the District? • When is project ready for District Review? • When are District Reviews scheduled? • Is it possible to approve via email? • After approval, does a Scout need to contact the District for any reason? • Are there funding issues to keep in mind?

  21. Eagle Process • Questions?

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