BartHumphries Posted August 28, 2012 Author Share Posted August 28, 2012 NCS training actually seems to be fairly uncommon among adults, which is why I posted it here; I thought most people wouldn't know about it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eagle92 Posted August 28, 2012 Share Posted August 28, 2012 Anyone who serves as a director at most summer camps are required to go to NCS. Some Director spots require NCS certified folks, i.e. COPE, Swiming, Shooting Sports, etc and some do not, i.e. Chaplain, Camp Commissioner, etc. I had both times at NCS, COPE and CSDC. Just wondering where I can get another Cub Scout NCS patch. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shortridge Posted August 28, 2012 Share Posted August 28, 2012 I did NCS for Outdoor Skills Directors, at Hawk Mountain, Pa., in 1998. With one or two exceptions, everyone in the program could have taught the bulk of the course. I did pick up a few neat skills and tricks, but the real value came from the informal conversations with my counterparts about their camps, program offerings, etc. The time - a solid week - and cost really make it impractical for use as a unit leader skills program. I think most councils would be well served running a series of Saturday workshops on different skills throughout the year. That way a Coast Guard lieutenant commander doesn't have to waste his time "learning" knots, for example. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eagle69 Posted August 28, 2012 Share Posted August 28, 2012 " I think most councils would be well served running a series of Saturday workshops on different skills throughout the year" Long time ago there used to be something like this called Show An Do or "Showando" as I heard it pronounced once. It was a day long event where people demonstrated Scout Skills for adults then the adults got a chance to actually practice the skill. I can't remember when it stopped, maybe back in the 90's. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BartHumphries Posted August 28, 2012 Author Share Posted August 28, 2012 You know, I bet there'd be some interest in having various modules taught at Roundtable. I'll bring that up at my local Roundtable on the 6th. There wouldn't be any additional certification that people could earn, but people might be interested in getting more practice in knots, splicing, etc. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
UCEagle72 Posted August 28, 2012 Share Posted August 28, 2012 I could have sworn that if you needed T-2-1 skills (pioneering, knife/ax, lashing, knots, etc.) those were skills specifically addressed in IOLS (Introduction to Outdoor Leader Skills) - a local course - required for Scoutmasters, Assistant Scoutmasters, Varsity Coaches and Assistants. We also taught most of these in the old Scoutmaster Fundamentals class (which was one course, covering both classroom and campout). Honestly, I have told many new ASM to get a copy of an old BS Handbook (late 60s, early 70s) and "work" the requirements for T-2-1 - and get a copy of the Fieldbook from the same era. Just takes a little practice to learn the same skills. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BartHumphries Posted September 23, 2012 Author Share Posted September 23, 2012 They are addressed in IOLS. IOLS is only a weekend, though, and some people are looking for a week-long outdoor skills session like the original Wood Badge. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
berliner Posted September 10, 2013 Share Posted September 10, 2013 I got BSALT, IOLS and NCS/NDCS (National Day Camp School) Range-, Program- and Camp Director. Looking for BASIC skills at NCS is wrong. How to set up a pack/troop camp site you should learn at IOLS (if you didnt learn it as a youth in scouts ...) NCS is for DIRECTORS, so advanced and not basic. I learned a lot for camps and programms for more than 100 or 200 scouts. It is not the job of the Program Director to actually teach anything but to organize the teachers and curriculum. Of course you should know the backpacking and cooking 101 that you expected others to teach, so if need be you can show the Merit Badge Counselors or whatever. You need to know the requierments for the badges and the adults who have the skills to pass them on. The NCS folder we got is the size of a big city phone book, no kidding. Talking about BSA regulations and stuff. I can only advise anyone willing to take it one step further to go to NCS. Well worth the time (and I spent more on travel to "camp" than the actual course cost). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Austinole Posted September 10, 2013 Share Posted September 10, 2013 What about powder horn. That seems like a skills course. http://www.powderhorn-bsa.org/dates.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
King Ding Dong Posted September 10, 2013 Share Posted September 10, 2013 What about powder horn. That seems like a skills course. http://www.powderhorn-bsa.org/dates.html Seems like an HA overview course to me, not a in depth skills course. It sounds Interesting and fun but $250 is steep. This page has links to more information on the St. Louis one next year. http://www.stlbsa.org/training/Pages/powderhorn.aspx Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Basementdweller Posted September 10, 2013 Share Posted September 10, 2013 What about powder horn. That seems like a skills course. http://www.powderhorn-bsa.org/dates.html Powder horn is to allow Venture crew advisors to learn how to conduct or plan a trip.... You are not taught any skills, but how to find people with skills to do your program. I did powder horn a couple of years ago.....It was scouting without the boys....It was fun, had a good time, met some great people.... Learn anything, not so much..... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
berliner Posted September 25, 2013 Share Posted September 25, 2013 So I went digging thrue storage. Wont copy the entire thing (1,000 pages LOL) but wanted to add some bullets points: a bit out of order, sorry. Any specific questions just ask ^o^ BSA Northeast Region National Camping School Cub Scout Camping -Camp Health and Safety (64 pages) -Day Camp Administration (130 pages) -National Standards for local council precamp and operational accreditation of cub scout/webelos scout day camp (12 pages) -Outdoor Program Guidelines (8+12 pages) -Annual Health and Medical Record -Belt Loops/Pin Certification -Cub Outdoor Activity Award/National Summer Time Pack Award -OA -Campfire Program -Fireguard Plan -Safety Afloat/Safe Swim Defense/Safety Afloat Training Outline -Duty to God -Cub Scout Character Development - age appropriate guidelines for scouting activites -Scouts with Disabilites and Special Needs -OSHA laws that affect camps and conferences -Leave no Trace -Cub Scout Visitation Team Training Guide (administrative guide for local councils) -case study workbook Day Camp Administration -Camp Program Ideas (81 pages) -Guide to Safe Scouting, unit leaders guide for current policies and procedures (80 pages) -Day Camp Staff Training (45 pages) -Camp Program & Property Management (probably 200 pages) -Shooting Sports for Cub Scouts (52 pages) -administrative guide cub camps, (55 pages) -budget sheets, cash receipts, check request, -Unit and Event Log That, in a nutshell, is NCS/NDCS. I think the cost was not much at all, considerung so much paper and all the food was included. Learned a bunch and met a bunch of cool scouters - what more do you want to ask for? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
qwazse Posted September 26, 2013 Share Posted September 26, 2013 So I went digging thrue storage. Wont copy the entire thing (1,000 pages LOL) but wanted to add some bullets points: a bit out of order, sorry. Any specific questions just ask ^o^ BSA Northeast Region National Camping School Cub Scout Camping -Camp Health and Safety (64 pages) -Day Camp Administration (130 pages) -National Standards for local council precamp and operational accreditation of cub scout/webelos scout day camp (12 pages) -Outdoor Program Guidelines (8+12 pages) -Annual Health and Medical Record -Belt Loops/Pin Certification -Cub Outdoor Activity Award/National Summer Time Pack Award -OA -Campfire Program -Fireguard Plan -Safety Afloat/Safe Swim Defense/Safety Afloat Training Outline -Duty to God -Cub Scout Character Development - age appropriate guidelines for scouting activites -Scouts with Disabilites and Special Needs -OSHA laws that affect camps and conferences -Leave no Trace -Cub Scout Visitation Team Training Guide (administrative guide for local councils) -case study workbook Day Camp Administration -Camp Program Ideas (81 pages) -Guide to Safe Scouting, unit leaders guide for current policies and procedures (80 pages) -Day Camp Staff Training (45 pages) -Camp Program & Property Management (probably 200 pages) -Shooting Sports for Cub Scouts (52 pages) -administrative guide cub camps, (55 pages) -budget sheets, cash receipts, check request, -Unit and Event Log That, in a nutshell, is NCS/NDCS. I think the cost was not much at all, considerung so much paper and all the food was included. Learned a bunch and met a bunch of cool scouters - what more do you want to ask for? Yours probably doesn't have the section about how lifeguards shouldn't use whistles. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
berliner Posted September 26, 2013 Share Posted September 26, 2013 So I went digging thrue storage. Wont copy the entire thing (1,000 pages LOL) but wanted to add some bullets points: a bit out of order, sorry. Any specific questions just ask ^o^ BSA Northeast Region National Camping School Cub Scout Camping -Camp Health and Safety (64 pages) -Day Camp Administration (130 pages) -National Standards for local council precamp and operational accreditation of cub scout/webelos scout day camp (12 pages) -Outdoor Program Guidelines (8+12 pages) -Annual Health and Medical Record -Belt Loops/Pin Certification -Cub Outdoor Activity Award/National Summer Time Pack Award -OA -Campfire Program -Fireguard Plan -Safety Afloat/Safe Swim Defense/Safety Afloat Training Outline -Duty to God -Cub Scout Character Development - age appropriate guidelines for scouting activites -Scouts with Disabilites and Special Needs -OSHA laws that affect camps and conferences -Leave no Trace -Cub Scout Visitation Team Training Guide (administrative guide for local councils) -case study workbook Day Camp Administration -Camp Program Ideas (81 pages) -Guide to Safe Scouting, unit leaders guide for current policies and procedures (80 pages) -Day Camp Staff Training (45 pages) -Camp Program & Property Management (probably 200 pages) -Shooting Sports for Cub Scouts (52 pages) -administrative guide cub camps, (55 pages) -budget sheets, cash receipts, check request, -Unit and Event Log That, in a nutshell, is NCS/NDCS. I think the cost was not much at all, considerung so much paper and all the food was included. Learned a bunch and met a bunch of cool scouters - what more do you want to ask for? actually no I just checked again and didnt find that? I now have my whisle landyard rolled into my NZ neckerchief so my BSA whistle is always below my 2 slides (1 BSA & 1NZS) 8-) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
qwazse Posted September 26, 2013 Share Posted September 26, 2013 So I went digging thrue storage. Wont copy the entire thing (1,000 pages LOL) but wanted to add some bullets points: a bit out of order, sorry. Any specific questions just ask ^o^ BSA Northeast Region National Camping School Cub Scout Camping -Camp Health and Safety (64 pages) -Day Camp Administration (130 pages) -National Standards for local council precamp and operational accreditation of cub scout/webelos scout day camp (12 pages) -Outdoor Program Guidelines (8+12 pages) -Annual Health and Medical Record -Belt Loops/Pin Certification -Cub Outdoor Activity Award/National Summer Time Pack Award -OA -Campfire Program -Fireguard Plan -Safety Afloat/Safe Swim Defense/Safety Afloat Training Outline -Duty to God -Cub Scout Character Development - age appropriate guidelines for scouting activites -Scouts with Disabilites and Special Needs -OSHA laws that affect camps and conferences -Leave no Trace -Cub Scout Visitation Team Training Guide (administrative guide for local councils) -case study workbook Day Camp Administration -Camp Program Ideas (81 pages) -Guide to Safe Scouting, unit leaders guide for current policies and procedures (80 pages) -Day Camp Staff Training (45 pages) -Camp Program & Property Management (probably 200 pages) -Shooting Sports for Cub Scouts (52 pages) -administrative guide cub camps, (55 pages) -budget sheets, cash receipts, check request, -Unit and Event Log That, in a nutshell, is NCS/NDCS. I think the cost was not much at all, considerung so much paper and all the food was included. Learned a bunch and met a bunch of cool scouters - what more do you want to ask for? So yours is outdated. Evidently someone took the time to come to conclude against conferring an undue sense of authority on a guard. I spent my guard duty while recertifying twirling a rescue tube on it's strap. A little tougher than a lanyard, but the only way I could think to protest. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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