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BOY SCOUTING
Boy Scouting, one of the traditional membership divisions of the BSA, is
available to boys who have earned the Arrow of Light Award and are at least 10
years old or have completed the fifth grade and are at least 10, or who are 11,
but not yet 18 years old. The program achieves the BSA's objectives of
developing character, citizenship, and personal fitness.

Phoenix District
Gold Star Award
2007
2008
2009
2010
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Life to Eagle
Leadership Service Projects
How to Start
You have earned the Life
Scout rank and are ready to begin your Eagle Scout leadership service project.
This workbook will help you plan and record your progress and complete and
submit a final report.
The Requirement
As stated in the
Boy Scout Handbook: While a Life Scout, plan, develop, and give leadership
to others in a service project helpful to your religious institution, school, or
your community. (The project should benefit an organization other than the BSA.)
The project idea must be approved by the organization benefiting from the
effort, your unit leader (Scoutmaster, Varsity Scout Coach, Venturing crew
Advisor), unit committee, and by the council or district advancement committee
before you start. You must use this Eagle Scout Leadership Service Project
Workbook, No. 18-927D, in meeting this requirement.
Originality
Does the leadership service project
for Eagle have to be original, perhaps something you dream up that has never
been done before? The answer: No, but it certainly could be. You may pick a
project that has been done before, but you must accept responsibility for
planning, directing, and following through to its successful completion.
Limitations
Routine labor (a job or service
normally rendered) should not be considered. Work involving council property or
other BSA activity is not permitted. The project also may not be performed for a
business or an individual, be of a commercial nature, or be a fund-raiser.
(Fund-raising is permitted only for securing materials or supplies needed to
carry out your project.)
Size
How big a project is required? There
are no specific requirements, as long as the project is helpful to a religious
institution, school, or community. The amount of time spent by you in planning
your project and the actual working time spent in carrying out the project
should be as much as is necessary for you to demonstrate your leadership of
others.
Examples
A look at some
projects other Scouts have done for their Eagle Scout Award illustrates that
your project can be to construct something or can be to render a service. Scouts
have
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Made trays to fasten
to wheelchairs for veterans with disabilities at a Veterans Administration
hospital. |
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Collected used books
and distributed them to people in the community who wanted and needed, but
could not afford, books. |
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Built a sturdy
footbridge across a brook to make a safe shortcut for children between their
homes and school. |
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Collected and
repaired used toys and gave them to a home for children with disabilities.
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Organized and
operated a bicycle safety campaign. This involved a written safety test,
equipment safety check, and a skills contest in a bike rodeo. |
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Surveyed the remains
of an old Spanish mission and prepared an accurate map relating it to the
present church. |
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Built a "tot lot" in
a big city neighborhood and set up a schedule for Boy Scouts to help run it.
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Set up a community
study center for children who needed a place to do schoolwork. |
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Trained fellow
students as audiovisual aides for their school. Arranged for more than 200
hours of audiovisual work. |
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Prepared plans for a
footbridge on a trail in a national forest. Worked with rangers to learn the
skills necessary to build the structure, gathered materials and tools, and
then directed a Scout work group to do the construction. |
Approvals
Before You Start
Your project plan must
be approved by your unit leader, unit committee, and council or district
advancement committee before the project is started. The following questions
must be answered before giving this approval:
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Who will benefit
from the project? |
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How will they
benefit? |
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What official from
the group benefiting from the project will be contacted for guidance in
planning the project? |
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How many people will
be recruited to help carry out the project? |
After Completion
Although your project
was approved by your unit leader, unit committee, and council or district
advancement committee before it was begun, the Eagle Scout board of review must
approve the manner in which it was carried out. The following must be answered:
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In what ways did you
demonstrate leadership of others? |
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Give examples of how
you directed the project rather than doing the work yourself. |
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In what way did the
religious institution, school, or community group benefit from the project?
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Did the project
follow the plan? |
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If changes to the
plan were made, explain why the changes were necessary. |
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