Bronze-Girls 01
Bronze-Girls 01
Bronze-Girls 01
Girl Guidelines
Welcome to the Girl Scout Bronze Award, a leadership adventure for you and more than half a million other Girl Scout Juniors across the country and around the world. Imagine what you can accomplish when you team up with others and use your special skills and interests to take action and make a difference in the world! As you can tell, this Girl Scout Bronze Award adventure is bigin fact, this award is the highest honor a Girl Scout Junior can achieve. As you and your team plan and complete your project, youll develop more confidence, meet new people, and have the kind of fun that happens when you work with other Girl Scouts to make a difference. Here are the steps youll take to earn your Girl Scout Bronze Award: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Go on a Girl Scout Junior Journey. Build your Girl Scout Junior team. Explore your community. Choose your Girl Scout Bronze Award project. Make a plan. Put your plan in motion. Spread the word.
When you go for the Bronze Award, you represent what Girl Scouts can achieve in their communities. And, of course, you want to do that in a way thats fun for you and for everyone else involved, too! Earning the Girl Scout Bronze Award involves the time to complete a Journey, and then a suggested minimum of 20 hours building your team, exploring your community, choosing your project, planning it, putting your plan in motion, and spreading the word about your project. The suggested hours help you think about your commitment to doing your very best with each step. Thats different for every Girl Scout, so these hours arent a rule, just a friendly reminder. Youre a Girl Scout, which means you will earn your award with courage, confidence, and character and make a difference in the world around you!
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Girl Guidelines
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The following Observation List is a great way to keep track of your observations. Write your observations in the left-hand column, and then write your possible solutions in the right-hand column. A few examples are listed to get you started. After you have filled in your chart, circle the three ideas that matter most to you. But dont worry if you dont have many Maybe We Could ideas yet. The important thing is to identify what you care about and want to take action on.
Maybe We Could
Our Girl Scout meeting space isnt very green, and wed also like to make the space more fun for younger Girl Scouts.
Add fun decorations that are also green, and figure out how much energy we use during our meetings.
Find out how people prepare for floods; think of ways to share what we learned.
Add your own . . . what else do you observe in the course of a day in your life?
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Here are a couple of examples to show how an observation led to a Take Action project (Steps 46 will give you more tips about how to do the same thing yourself): Example #1 Lucia and her Junior team were going after their Girl Scout Bronze Award, so they all agreed to be extra observant of everything going on around them. Heres what Lucia observed and how it turned into their Take Action project: 1. 2. 3. 4. First, Lucia noticed that cars whizzed down the street near their school. This happened a few days in a rowit seemed to be a real problem. Then, she heard on the news that in the last year there had actually been several accidents in that same area. The Junior team asked their troop/group volunteer to help them find out how people in their community decided where stop signs were needed. After a visit to both the police station and a local government office, heres what the Juniors did: They wrote a petition asking for a new stop sign on the road near their school, got local residents to sign it, and then presented it to their local government officials. Result: A new stop sign, slower traffic, fewer accidents, and safer kids! Plus, a stop sign is a permanent solution!
Example #2 Tanya and her Junior team also decided to be extra observant for a week or two. When they got together to share what they observed, Tanya asked her friends, Have you ever noticed how hard it is for older people or people with disabilities to get around the grocery store? The team agreed that this was a problem that no one seemed to be addressing. It seemed like a good challenge for their team! Heres what they did: 1. 2. 3. First, they decided to visit the store together and just watch as people shopped. This convinced them that some people could use a little extra help. Then they met as a team and brainstormed how they could help and how they could explain their project idea to the store manager. Next, they met with the store manager. Heres what happened next: The girls got permission to team up during the peak holiday season and offer their assistance to shoppers. Sometimes they would take a persons grocery list and go up and down the aisles to get products. Other times, they would walk around the store with people and help them fill their baskets. In both cases, they helped people get through the checkout line and out to their cars. To keep this project going, they wrote a tip sheet about how other youth and volunteer groups can do the same thing.
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To really understand a problem, you need to get information from many placestalking to different people, reading newspaper and magazine articles, and doing research at the library and on the Internet. (Remember to first sign the Girl Scout Internet Safety Pledge in the Badges section of your Girls Guide.) This may seem like a lot of work, but dont worry, you can share the jobsafter all, thats what teams are for! One person can go online to read newspaper articles, someone else can volunteer to check out books from the library, and so on. B rainstorm with your team and your troop/group volunteer about where to get more information. You can also visit the library and talk to the librarian. Thats a great way to get suggestions of who to talk toand get ideas for a great project. It can be hard to talk to adults, especially if you dont already know them! Talk about your ideas with your teachers and neighbors first youll start to feel more confident about asking questions of other adults. And remember that youll be with other members of your team as you talk to adults, and that always helps! Take notes about what you learn as you do your research. A blank Project Idea Chart is included at the end of this guide for you to write down who you talked to, what you learned, and your ideas for the kind of project you can create. Here are a few project ideas take a look, and then add your own in the blank Project Idea Chart at the end of this guide!
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Girl Guidelines
Project Idea Chart
Observation
Our Girl Scout meeting space isnt very green, and wed also like to make the space more fun for younger Girl Scouts.
Who We Talked To
Other Girl Scouts and their families, including younger Girl Scouts The owner of a local hardware store
What We Learned
We can turn down the air conditioner and add plants to make our space greener. Younger Girl Scouts would like to help decorate our space. Everyones interested in seeing what girls in other countries look like.
Maybe We Could...
Have a family workday when everyone can come together to clean and paint. Post photos of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts from around the world. Turn down the air conditioner or use fans. Work with younger Girl Scouts to create a colorful paper mural.
An emergency medical technician (EMT) A firefighter A Red Cross official Families who had damaged homes
Many families arent prepared for disasters such as floods, hurricanes, and tornados. Everyone should be aware of the steps to take in order to stay safe.
Do presentations on disaster preparedness at school and places of worship. Include a simple first-aid-skills session and a discussion about the impact of natural disasters around the world. Hand out flyers that list what families should include in home emergency kits.
Use the Project Idea Chart at the back of this guide to explore your top ideas. Once the chart is complete, its time to choose your project. Look at how much youve already learned! Now your Girl Scout Junior team can start narrowing your three ideas to one. Before you decide, answer these all-important questions about each of your ideas: Why does this idea matter? Who will this idea help? What can we do to make a difference? Is that realistic?
Write down your nal choice here: _____________________________________________________ As a Girl Scout, youre a member of the worldwide community. Once your team has chosen a project idea, take some time to talk about how people in other parts of the world might address the same problem. This doesnt mean that you have to solve a worldwide problem! However, when youve finished your project, you may want to think of ways to tell your story to people in other places so they can learn about what you did.
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Girl Guidelines
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Once you have some idea of your plan, ask yourselves if theres anything you can add or adjust that will help make a difference even after your project ends. For example, if your project helps your school, maybe a teacher, principal, or PTA member would agree to do it again next year. Heres an example of how a team made sure their project lasted: Alina and her team wanted to make new students feel more at home at her school, so they organized a Get to Know You day. It was a success, but it wont help students who came to the school after Get to Know You day. To make their plan last longer, Alina and her team decided to start a student-run What a Pal! buddy program for new students. They ran the program until they graduated, and then they asked the principal to continue the program after they left the school. That way, new students will always have a friend, no matter when they move to the school. Now that youve answered these questions, take a step back. Does it sound like you have a good plan? How do you know? Dont worry, youll have plenty of help. Your troop/group volunteer is always there to help you and answer questions. Tip: You and your team may want to sit down with your troop/group volunteer and go over your plan one last time before you begin, just to make sure your plan is realistic. You may need to adjust it slightly before you start. That will make reaching your goal a little smoother.
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Before you move on to the next step, fill in the following sentences. This will help you talk about your project to other people as you start putting your plan into motion. We will make a difference by______________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________. We hope our project will help _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________. When were done, well know we made a difference because __________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________.
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Planning Chart
What Is the Task? How Will the Task Be Done? When Should This Task Be Finished?
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Use research to make a list of what should be in the kit; get donations from families or the local hardware store.
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Girl Guidelines
When your list is complete, its time to get started. Talk as a team about your progress. You might have to be flexible and switch assignments around or add more tasksthats good teamwork. Keep a record of what youre doing! Take photos, shoot video, or draw pictures along the way. These will help you share your story when youre done.
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Be creative in the way you tell your story! Make a photo collage, put together a scrapbook, create a short film, or write a play about what you did and what you learned. Think about who you can inspire to make a differencemaybe younger Girl Scouts, students at your school, or other girls around the world. Then decide how you want to tell your story. Maybe you can post your collage or film online with the help of your troop/ group volunteer. Perhaps you could present your project at the community meeting, perform your play at school, or donate your team scrapbook to the local library.
Finally, be sure to celebrate what youve done. Not only have you had a great adventure, but youve helped create a better world!
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Girl Guidelines
Planning Chart
What Is the Task? How Will the Task Be Done? When Should This Task Be Finished? Which Team Member(s) Will Complete the Task?
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