Girl Scout Gold Award. Troop/Group Volunteer Guide and Project Advisor Guide



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Girl Scout Gold Award Troop/Group Volunteer Guide and Project Advisor Guide

The Girl Scout Gold Award is the highest award Girl Scout Seniors and Ambassadors can earn. Your role, whether you re a troop/group volunteer or a project advisor, is to encourage Girl Scout Seniors and Ambassadors to think critically, be open to multiple perspectives, investigate thoroughly, work cooperatively, and identify resources within and beyond the local community. You are supporting girls as they develop into leaders for today and tomorrow. This guide is intended to be used with the Guidelines for Girl Scout Seniors and Ambassadors which can be found at gswise.org. The Girl Scout Gold Award is designed to be completed by an individual girl. To earn the award, each girl needs to 1) attend the mandatory Girl Scout Gold Award training And the Other s Gold, and 2) complete two Girl Scout Senior or Ambassador Journeys -or- complete one Girl Scout Senior or Ambassador Journey and have earned the Girl Scout Silver Award. After completing these requirements, a minimum of 80 hours is suggested to complete the steps to earn the Girl Scout Gold Award. Once a girl has attended training and completed the prerequisite requirements as described above, here are the steps that Girl Scout Seniors and Ambassadors will complete to earn the Girl Scout Gold Award: 2 1. Identify an issue. 2. Investigate. 3. Get help and build your team. 4. Create a plan. 5. Present your plan and get feedback. Submit your Girl Scout Project Proposal to the council to schedule your first interview with the Girl Scout Gold Award Mentor Committee. 6. Put your plan into motion. 7. Educate and inspire others. 8. Submit your Girl Scout Gold Award Final Report to the council to schedule your final interview with the Girl Scout Gold Award Mentor Committee.

Tips for the Troop/Group Volunteer At this level, Girl Scouts are on their honor to uphold the Standards of Excellence. These standards respect the skills and talents that Girl Scouts bring to making a difference in the world and provide a challenge that inspires girls to learn what they can accomplish by doing their very best. For more specific examples about meeting the Standards of Excellence and to ensure girls projects meet the requirements throughout each of the seven steps of their project, see also the Standards of Excellence Rubric supplement. Steps Standards of Excellence Coaching Tips 1. Identify an issue: Use your values and skills to identify a community issue you care about. Live the Girl Scout Promise and Law. Demonstrate civic responsibility. Project must address issue outside of Girl Scouting. Provide a listening ear. Give constructive feedback. 2. Investigate: Research everything you can about the issue. Use a variety of sources: interview people, read books and articles, find professional organizations online. Remember to evaluate each source s reliability and accuracy. Demonstrate courage as you investigate your issue, knowing that what you learn may challenge your own and others beliefs. Identify national and/or global links to your community issue. Before the online investigation starts, suggest taking the Girl Scout Internet Safety Pledge at girlscouts.org/en/help/help/internet-safetypledge.html. Recommend ways to expand the project beyond the local community. For example, talking to and involving people from organizations that offer help to people on a national and global level (such as the Red Cross and Doctors without Borders). 3. Get help and build your team: Invite others to support and take action with you. 4. Create a plan: Create a project plan that achieves sustainable and measurable impact. Seek out and recognize the value of the skills and strengths of others. Respect different points of view and ways of working. Build a team and recruit a project advisor who will bring special skills to your Girl Scout Gold Award project. Lead the planning of your Girl Scout Gold Award project. Work collaboratively to develop a plan for your project that creates lasting change. Working with a team will help make a bigger impact and cover more ground. Although this is an individual project, other Girl Scouts, neighbors, classmates, and friends can help. Make sure that either you or a family member is aware of times and places and who the interview subjects are. A network is a great thing. Share pointers on how to create an effective network. Provide guidance on project sustainability. Here are suggestions: education and raising awareness, holding workshops and hands-on learning sessions, collaborating with community groups to ensure the project lasts. Suggest using creative ways to support the project. If money is required to complete the project, please adhere to money-earning guidelines in Connections and Volunteer Essentials (both available at gswise.org). 3

Tips for the Troop/Group Volunteer continued Steps Standards of Excellence Coaching Tips 5. Present your plan and get feedback: Sum up your project plan for your Girl Scout council. 6. Put your plan into action: Take the lead to carry out your plan. 7. Educate and inspire others: Share what you have experienced with others. Submit a Girl Scout Gold Award Project Proposal to your council that is concise, comprehensive, and clear. You will be assigned a Girl Scout Gold Award Mentor Committee member liaison who will help you prepare for your first interview. Describe your plan, including the Girl Scout Leadership Outcomes you want to achieve and the impact you plan to make on yourself and the community. Articulate your issue clearly and explain why it matters to you. Accept constructive suggestions that will help refine your project. Get project approval from your council before you proceed. Take action to address the root cause of an issue, so that your solution has measurable and sustainable impact. Actively seek partnerships to achieve greater community participation and impact for your Girl Scout Gold Award project. Challenge yourself to try different ways to solve problems. Use resources wisely. Speak out and act on behalf of yourself and others. Reflect on what you have learned when you present your Girl Scout Gold Award Final Report to your council and in your final interview with the Girl Scout Gold Award Mentor Committee. Summarize the effectiveness of your project and the impact it has had on you and your community. Share the project beyond your local community and inspire others to take action in their own communities. Suggest using the tools and tips in the toolkit in preparing the Project Proposal. Provide constructive suggestions. Project Proposals are submitted to councils. The council s Girl Scout Gold Award Mentor Committee approves the project. Conducting interviews on the chosen issue is an important part of this step. Play the interviewee to help synchronize the timing and the flow of the interviews. Be available for any questions that might arise during sharing or reflection. Suggest using the tools and tips in the toolkit to prepare the Girl Scout Gold Award Final Report. 4

Tips for the Project Advisor A Girl Scout Gold Award project advisor is chosen by a Girl Scout Senior or Ambassador to help plan and implement her project and is an expert about their issue (this person cannot be a troop/ group volunteer or parent). The project advisor provides guidance, experience, and expertise to the girl as she works to complete her Girl Scout Gold Award project. Primary responsibilities include: Following the guidelines set by Girl Scouts of the USA and Girl Scouts of Wisconsin Southeast, complete a Volunteer Application and background check at gswise.org/ Volunteers/Volunteer-Applications.aspx Partnering with a girl to support her in completing her Girl Scout Gold Award project Understanding the steps to the Girl Scout Gold Award and the Standards of Excellence required for each step Girls will start working on their project by: searching for issues that they care about investigating how they can narrow the focus of the issue that they have chosen enlisting the help of others in the community working collaboratively to create and implement their plan. Before girls can start working on their project, they need to submit a Girl Scout Gold Award Project Proposal to their council and attend an interview with the Girl Scout Gold Award Mentor Committee for project approval. Girls will seek her project advisor s expertise in developing and implementing the project ideas. Girl Scout Gold Award projects require the following: Makes a lasting difference in the local community, region, or beyond Puts the Girl Scout Promise and Law into action Includes provisions to ensure sustainability Identifies national and/global links to the girl s selected issue Inspires others For additional assistance at any time during the award process, contact the Girl Scout office at 800-565-4475 or gswise.org / Contact Us. They will provide project advisors with background information about Girl Scouts including policies, and information about any learning opportunities. 5

Project tips for girls Ensure girls Girl Scout memberships remain current while they are working on all steps of the Girl Scout Gold Award. Inform the council before seeking attention from the media and press releases. 6 Consult Girl Scout Safety Activity Checkpoints and Volunteer Essentials (both are available at gswise.org) for potential safety issues and program standards regarding every aspect of the project including, but not limited to: adult/child ratios, first aid or CPR-certified adults, and money earning. All money-earning projects or solicited monetary donations need to have Girl Scouts of Wisconsin Southeast approval. For council money-earning guidelines, refer to gswise.org. For approval, complete the Money Earning Application form, available at gswise.org, Forms section. Don t forget to take pictures throughout your project and submit completed Photo Release forms, available at gswise.org, Forms section. Only the CEO or designee can sign agreements or contracts on behalf of Girl Scouts of Wisconsin Southeast. You must purchase Plan 2 Insurance for non-registered Girl Scouts involved in your project. Complete the Mutual of Omaha Plan 2 Enrollment Form and submit with payment at least two weeks prior to your event or activity, available at gswise.org, Forms section. Submit a Girl Scout Gold Award Project Proposal to obtain council approval for your project. Upon project completion, complete a Girl Scout Gold Award Final Report. Forms can be found at gswise.org. Final Reports need to be received by February 1 to be recognized at that spring s Girl Scout Recognition Event. After that date, girls will be recognized the following spring.

The Girl Scout Leadership Experience In Girl Scouting, Discover + Connect + Take Action = Leadership. The entire Girl Scout program, regardless of the exact topic, is designed to lead to leadership outcomes (or benefits) that stem from these three keys. Discover: Girls will understand themselves and their values and use their knowledge and skills to explore the world. Connect: Girls care about, inspire, and team with others locally and globally. Take Action: Girls act to make the world a better place. It s not only about the activities girls do, however, but the processes they use to do them that builds leadership. The Girl Scout processes promote the fun and friendship that have always been so integral to Girl Scouting. Girl-led: Girls play an active part in figuring out the what, where, when, how, and why of their activities. Learning by doing: Girls use a hands-on learning process that engages them in continuous cycles of action and reflection that result in deeper understanding of concepts and mastery of practical skills. Cooperative learning: Through cooperative learning, girls work together toward goals that can be accomplished only with the help of others, in an atmosphere of respect and collaboration. When Discover, Connect, and Take Action activities are girl-led and involve learning by doing and cooperative learning, girls achieve the desired and expected short-term outcomes. This ultimately results in Girl Scouting achieving its mission: Girls Scouting builds girls of courage, confidence, and character, who make the world a better place. Through the Girl Scout Leadership Experience, girls gain specific knowledge, skills, attitudes, behaviors, and values in Girl Scouting. Girls reflect on the impact they have had and how the experience has helped to strengthen their leadership skills. 7

The following are the fifteen outcomes of the Girl Scout Leadership Experience: Discover outcomes: Girls develop a strong sense of self. Girls develop positive values. Girls gain practical life skills. Girls seek challenges in the world. Girls develop critical thinking. Connect outcomes: Girls develop healthy relationships. Girls promote cooperation and teambuilding. Girls can resolve conflicts. Girls advance diversity in a multicultural world. Girls feel connected to their community, locally and globally. Take Action outcomes: Girls can identify community needs. Girls are resourceful problem solvers. Girls advocate for themselves and others, locally and globally. Girls educate and inspire others to act. Girls feel empowered to make a difference in the world. For more information about the Girl Scout Leadership Experience, go to girlscouts.org/en/our-program/our-program.html. 8 Mailing Address: Girl Scouts of Wisconsin Southeast P.O. Box 14999 Milwaukee, WI 53214-0999 800-565-4475 gswise.org