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- Newsgroups: rec.scouting
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!bunyip.cc.uq.oz.au!cheops!tuned
- From: tuned@cheops.qld.tne.oz.au (David_Tune)
- Subject: recruiting Rovers
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.235737.2610@cheops.qld.tne.oz.au>
- Organization: Telecom Australia, TNE Computer Support Services
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 23:57:37 GMT
- Lines: 65
-
-
-
- A recent post asked about recruiting Rovers, and how to go about it.
- I've been working with the Rover section in Australia for the last 15 years,
- (both as a Rover and a Leader) and the following points have come to light.
-
- The majority of people join a Rover Crew because they already know
- someone in it. This may seem obvious, but when you look at it from the point of
- view of a person in the section preceeding Rovers, (Venturers in Aust.) it
- underlines the importance of the Rovers having a good relationship with that
- section.
- Some people do join Rovers without knowing anyone in the Crew, but in
- my experience, this is a minority.
- For Rovers to succeed, I think it is important for a core of the Crew
- to have a Scouting background (have been through the younger sections),
- although Rovering can be fantastic for those who have never been Scouts before.
- To this end, Rovers in Queensland (and I believe in other parts of
- the country), run combined camps for Rovers and Venturers that are aimed at
- getting the two sections together to have fun and participate in Rover type
- activities. The important thing with these camps is for the Rover Crew and
- Venturer Unit from the same Group to camp and participate in the activities
- together.
- This may not always happen, but I can recommend the exercise as being
- a great way of encouraging members of the younger section to go up into
- Rovers.
-
- Recruiting people from outside Scouting is a different proposition,
- and it seems to me that if your Crew has a good program that is varied and fun,
- then friends of current Rovers will become interested in what the Crew is
- doing, and eventually want to join in.
- My Crew has a core of about ten who have been in Scouting since Cubs,
- and who are well versed in Scoutcraft etc, and the rest of the Crew (Crew size
- currently around 32) are mainly friends who have come along to have fun
- and liked it so much that they joined.
-
- A final point is that it is very important for the Crew's long term
- viability that you aim at recruiting at least one person of the minimum
- required age (17.5 - 18 in Aust.) each year, preferably from your preceeding
- section. If this doesn't happen, each passing year will make it harder for
- the existing members to communicate with any prospective member of that age,
- and the Crew may well find itself in crisis five or six years down the track.
-
- Rovers need to actively recruit, particularly within the Scout
- Movement, and contact with all the younger sections and good relations with
- the Leaders of those sections can have a very large bearing on how well your
- Crew succeeds in this.
- And what is the ideal Crew size? Well, I've had some long and intense
- discussions on this, and I'm convinced the optimum is around 18 to 20 members,
- big enough to tackle some awesome projects, small enough for everyone to be
- close friends and communicate well. I have seen one Crew go as small as two
- members and survive, (that Crew is now up to twelve), and another reach forty
- members while still being a caring and fun group. With my own Crew, well, with
- some 32 individuals to deal with, life is never dull! :-)
-
- I hope these thoughts are helpful to other Rovers,
-
- David Tune,
- Rover Advisor, Aspley Rover Crew.
-
-
- --
- --
- David Tune tuned@cheops.tne.oz.au | 'To sit upon a mountain top
- Computer Support Services, | and gaze on that below,
- Telecom Network Engineering. | Could there be a better way
-