Educational Work of the Boy Scouts
BULLETIN, 1921, No. 41
DIRECTOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA
WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1921
ADDITIONAL COPIES OF THIS PUBLICATION MAY BE PROCURED FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON, D. C. AT 5 CENTS PER COPY
By Lorne W. Barclay. Director of the Department of Education, Boy Scouts of America.
Contents.—Scouting and the schools—Scouting and citizenship—The pioneer scout—Seascouting, a branch of the Boy Scouts of America—National Councils endeavor to discover vital facts in regard to the boyhood of the Nation—International aspects of scouting—Scout handbooks, organs, and other literature—Motion pictures for boys.
Scouting continues to enjoy the cordial indorsement of school men everywhere all over the country. More and more those interested are coming to see the enormous possibilities of cooperation between the scout movement and the schools. Many schools now give credit for scout work done outside of the schools. Many more are in hearty sympathy with the program as an extraschool activity.
In 1919 there were organized in connection with public schools 1,942 troops and 170 in connection with private schools. The records also show that for the same year 1,623 scoutmasters were also school-teachers. Many troops have their meetings in the school buildings and in turn render good service by taking charge of fire drills, first aid and safety first instruction, yard clean ups, flag drills, etc.
Scout leaders take the utmost pains to see that scout activities do not in any way interfere with school duties, and troop meetings are regularly held on Friday evening for that reason. The best results have been obtained not by formalizing scouting, but by supplementing and vitalizing the book work by the practical activities of the scout program. Through scouting many a boy's healthy curiosity to know has been whetted, so that he comes for perhaps the first time in his life to see sense in books. As one school man has said, Scouting has done what no other system yet devised has done—made the boy want to learn .
Lorne W. Barclay
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EDUCATIONAL WORK OF THE BOY SCOUTS
LORNE W. BARCLAY
EDUCATIONAL WORK OF THE BOY SCOUTS.
SCOUTING AND THE SCHOOLS.
SCOUTING AND CITIZENSHIP.
THE PIONEER SCOUT.
SCOUTING AND AMERICANIZATION.
SEA SCOUTING—A BRANCH OF THE BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA.
NATIONAL COUNCIL'S ENDEAVOR TO DISCOVER VITAL FACTS IN REGARD TO THE BOYHOOD OF THE NATION.
INTERNATIONAL ASPECTS OF SCOUTING.
SCOUT HANDBOOKS, ORGANS, AND OTHER LITERATURE.
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