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discussion.ScoutingWikipedia:WikiProject ScoutingTemplate:WikiProject ScoutingScouting articles
Rank articles...the rank articles should be separate (and renamed, see Language section). This means
List_of_BSA_rank_requirements should be deleted. Each rank having its own article allows more flexible, specificity, and shorter articles.
Rlevse17:43, 13 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I was fiddling with it. I do like the blue, but the FdL has a white box around it. May need a SVG version with a transparent background to clean that up. Play with it as you like. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)20:09, 13 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Separate articles
I know it's attractive to have a series of articles with a spiffy series box, but why do we really need separate articles for every rank? I think they might do better as sections of a main article. --
Smack (
talk)
21:00, 13 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I think the pattern used in the "History of ..." articles works pretty well for history, because the subject of history is broad and deep, and easily allows for a summary article linking out to narrower articles on specific periods. However, I don't think that any part of Scouting rank advancement has the necessary depth to make this structure work. --
Smack (
talk)
19:23, 15 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Another option is to have separate articles for Cubs, Scouts, Venturers for recognition; as I think one article containing all three could be huge.
Rlevse19:47, 17 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Apologies for the belated objection. I consider the rank structure an organic whole, which won't do well if divided into pieces. For instance, if we had them all together, we wouldn't have to duplicate the paragraph about the Star/Life switcheroo. Right now,
First Class Scout rank (Boy Scouts of America) is the most complete one besides Eagle, and it looks torn out of context - a bit like getting one chapter of a book without the ones before and after it. That said, I'm willing to sit tight for a while and see how this division works out. --
Smack (
talk)
05:49, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
Let's see how Gadget's current effort goes, with a parent article and one each for pack/troop/crew. I think this is quite workable and it turns out to kind of be a compromise.
Rlevse11:02, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
Council, District, Troop articles
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.
Would Scouting Wikipedians entertain the idea of having the Councils-by-state sections recategorized to "Scouting in Arizona", "Scouting in Washington", and so on, rather than a list of every council and district? The reason I would like this considered is
1) no other country's Scouting articles are divided into such minute details (except for
The Scout Association of Hong Kong, and really, is that much minutiae important or interesting to the reader?)
2) many councils that a reader may choose to look up, like the Fitchburg Area Council of Massachusetts or the Vigilante Area Council of Montana, went extinct 30+ years ago, yet may be of interest in a more state-based article
3) many states like Alaska share a communal Scout history, only fairly recently being broken into smaller councils, others like North Dakota had several merged into one, and some Scouting histories are better told encompassing an entire state. The fact that Scouts in California prior to the charter of the BSA were the youth arm of the California Highway Patrol, or the fact that Connecticut, while having only eight counties, has had 22 councils over the course of its history, would be well-included in a statewide article
Chris22:57, 13 January 2006 (UTC)reply
It seems to me that many of these facts and whatnot might be better suited to a standalone "History of the BSA" article. When certain topics/regions/whatever there grow big enough, those can also be broken out into articles dealing with regional histories and whatnot. --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
19:44, 20 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I agree that we should be careful about how many councils/districts get articles, the ones perceived to be non-notable will wind up on VfD. Regions probably won't be that big a deal, there's only a few of them (local region office is in my hometown). How much coverage do we want to give these? The Council I "came up" in no longer exists - DuPage Area Council merged with Two Rivers Council in the early 1990s and is now known as the Three Fires Council. The old DAC offices in
Wheaton, Illinois were closed, and TFC is in
Saint Charles, Illinois. --
JohnDBuell01:39, 19 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I favor the idea of having articles for states, regions, or some other large grouping, rather than for individual councils. However, I'm not sure how to accomplish this. The obvious solution is to redirect from the councils to the regions that contain them, but I wouldn't be very happy with that. --
Smack (
talk)
17:47, 20 January 2006 (UTC)reply
The large grouping I would favor would be by state, reason being, most folks are inclined to look for that in specific, and Councils so frequently merge and split, and often when they do, it is along state lines. Therefore, the Rhode Island article would include Narragansett Council, but the Moby Dick Council that merged into it would be first part of the Massachusetts article. My 237 lira.
Chris02:01, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I'm getting the feeling that to do this would be by state. But I'm not sure how to tie into Councils and Lodges (I see no reason to have articles smaller than that).
Rlevse11:49, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
call for immediate consensus let's get this agreed upon, in light of recent Afds, and I will begin to add merge tags to sub-state articles and start on renames and opening paragraphs.
Chris20:52, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Chris has been doing a bang-up job setting up the US scouting by state pages. I have two things I want to bring up about it, though. First, it seemed the consensus of this group that Districts were inherently non-notable, so I'm not sure why every district in each state is listed. Also, many councils reside in one state and have a camp or camps in another state (Both Three Fires Council's Camp Freeland-Leslie and Chicago Area Council's Owasippe Scout Reservation come to mind, and I'm sure there are others). It makes sense to me to include at least a mention of these out-of-state camps on the pages for the states in which the camps lie, but I'd like to get a better consensus for this. --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
05:37, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
The reason they are lists now is because they were lists to begin with in when created in 2002, and I am converting as best I can, but don't know what to do without losing that information.
Chris05:48, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
Personally, I would not be sad to see the lists of districts go. I would like to see under each council's section: a blurb about the council itself (including history and any mergers), at least a mention of the camp(s) owned by the council, and a mention or subsection on the council's OA lodge. --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
10:25, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
I wanted to point out that whenever you make a page, such as Scouting in Alabama, that you need to also make redirects using possible searc terms. I went ahead and did it for the Alabama article using Alabama scouting, scouting in alabama.
Will23:10, 13 April 2006 (UTC)reply
I agree, I've left a note on that user's talk page and asked him to join the project and follow the guides. The info needs to be saved as it could seed our larger goal, but the articles should not be around very long. The info could be saved by pasting into a file for future use or put into an article that meets our goals.
Rlevse11:18, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
call for immediate consensus let's get this agreed upon, in light of recent Afds, and I will begin to add merge tags to sub-state articles and start on renames and opening paragraphs.
Chris20:51, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I have gone ahead and done three test articles, for anyone to improve, as right now they are just adds-back-in of other articles. I used Alabama 1) as alphabetically first; 2) as it had no links so no one would complain if I moved it; and 3) as a scarcely-visited article, we can test and modify as seems appropriate to us. (As to the clip I borrowed from the controversy page, some states just don't yet have a lot of unique things I know about them, and for that my apologies). I then tried to set an example merging my own Colorado and Hawaii articles into new state pages.
Chris03:37, 27 January 2006 (UTC)reply
If the info should be saved, perhaps putting it all on a User subpage for now would be the best way to keep it around and wiki-formatted until its decided whether or not we need it. --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
21:34, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I liked your Colorado and Hawaii articles Chris. I like the box at the bottom with all of the links to the other states. I think each state should have a picture at the very top with an image of the state showing how it is divided by the councils in the state, or at least at the beginning of the Boy Scout Section, and if other types of scouting are included then a similar image should be at the beginning of each of these sections as well. I also think that each council and lodge should have an image of its patch/flap. The pictures of camp patches are useless in my opinion. While the list of districts may not be necessary, all of the camps and properties owned by the council should be present, and if the camp is in a neighboring state/council it should say so, otherwise it should just have the location. But maybe a list of the districts would give enough room for an image of the council patch and an image of the section of the state it occupies. As for the OA lodges I think they should be grouped by Section, in seperate articles. I do think that they should remain as part of each state article with the article stating the name, number, current lodge flap, totem, meaning, language of the totem, and anything else that is relevent.
Could someone please point me to where the standard is for the notbaility standard of a camp or scout reservation? I object to the wholesale lumping of camp articles in the council's description. Many camps are notablale in their own right.
Here we say,
The Scouting WikiProject endeavors to have state-related articles rather than 400+ council articles. Articles on lodges, camps and districts will immediately be suggested to merge into the proper state or council article. If your council camp crosses state boundaries, choose the state the main council office is located in.
The discussion above was vague on the notability of the camps and the difference between a camp and a reservation. Where was this developed?
It's a matter of volume, and was developed in February 2006 after we lost 50+ articles to non-notability. Non-Scout Wikipedians are the ones who vote to delete such articles, not us, but as they are the vast number of Wikipedians out there, they call the shots generally. Last night I found several more Scout articles that had been deleted or nominated for afd, because they were counted as non-notable by others. You wouldn't believe the good stuff I had to bring back from the dead, that was deleted wholesale without being properly merged before redirect. Brother, I have nothing against your camp, I wish all camps and lodges and districts could have articles, the cold fact is, most Wikipedians disagree. For that reason, the only logical place for such sub-council articles is within the council article itself.
For the record, I am really tired of having this discussion, with new participants and old alike. It's a common-sense approach to what has been a bad situation for a long time. I hate losing any Scout article to deletion, and this was codified to prevent that. It has nothing to do at all with whether one's camp or lodge is really great, or whether a participant is longstanding or no. At this point I need to call for a vote and get this decided as official policy, once and for all.
Chris17:12, 11 August 2006 (UTC)reply
I'm not saying that every camp needs an article. I do think we need a length standard or something that we can point to that says that the article deserves to be there - we need an objective standard. --
evrik17:48, 11 August 2006 (UTC)reply
OK, this is in a few spots, let's centralize here. I'm not trying to be wishy washy, but....I'm tired of this keeping coming up too. I understand people want articles on "their" camp,etc. But Chris is right too, if we don't keep a lid on it, we lose them. But I also see Evrik's point a more concrete standard would help. First, I think some confusion exists out there about "sub-council". If Council XYZ has camp/reservation that is it's main camp, is that sub-council or council-level?? Second, at what point do we say "this is a full article and can stand on its own with a summary and 'main' fork from the council/state article? I think we all agree stubs should get merged. B-class and above can probably survive. The problem as I see it is the start class. As I see, the Resica article is weak: it's barely more than a stub and nowhere near B-class. Let's move the discussion of what to do with the cat names separate from this one.
Rlevse18:07, 11 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Standards?
Notability
Article Length (more than 1500 characters)
Completeness
Camps versus reservation?
Other projects (is the article tagged with another Wikiproject)
Sometimes the diff in a camp and reservation is in name only. Length should be B-class or above, maybe a strong Start class, complete-cover all major areas.
Rlevse18:13, 11 August 2006 (UTC)reply
I do not support any opening on this, else that door will never be able to be closed to articles of uneven quality written by those who come in future. Consensus on sub-council entities was already reached, as per Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Scouting/RulesStandards, in February, 2006 (above). I have written the bulk of the stubs on here, and I would love to see the national articles expand or find homes. The fact is, right now there is no place to tuck many articles, and we always risk losing several. For those articles that have a place to be, they need to be there. Camps and lodges and such may locally be notable, but outside of
Treasure Island, there are none that are nationally significant to Scouting heritage outside of another, larger article. That's why local garage bands get deleted all the time. There should only be camp articles on national camps like
Philmont, plus Treasure Island because of its notability to national Scouting, and that's it. All others, even if good articles, are sub-council entities, and as already agreed upon, need to be subsumed or expanded into Council articles. I have to stand by that, and do not support any leeway. Those not of our project see _all_ of our work as non-notable. Sub-council articles need council or state homes. 90+ percent of the Project members are BSA, there really needs to be a hard-and-fast mandate.
Chris19:18, 12 August 2006 (UTC)reply
I have to go with Chris on this one, let's stick to the RulesStandards as is instead of constantly fighting the battle of people protecting their own sugar bowl article.
Rlevse16:39, 14 August 2006 (UTC)reply
I still have to disagree. First, camps were never explicityly covered in the previous discussion, Second, I think we need to come up with an objective standard for quality and length and stick with it. I think that by, as a rule, tucking them into the state and council articles we risk making those articles, large, difsue and unwieldy. The biggest reason we lose articles is that we don't have enough volunteers who come to the rescue and 'vote' to save articles. --
evrik17:14, 14 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Local Cubmaster roundtables and OA chapters were never explicitly covered in the previous discussion, either, yet they are just as obviously sub-council entities covered by the same standard camps are, in the previous discussion above, agreed upon six months ago. You've touched upon it yourself, we don't have enough volunteers who come to the rescue. Since we do not, we need to build the root articles before we even start thinking about allowing breakaways. Disagree or no, this has been covered long since, and it does cover camps whether they were explicitly listed or not. Camps are sub-council entities.
Chris01:45, 16 August 2006 (UTC)reply
This is just going around in circles. The rule was set, not enough consensus and editors have agreed to change it, so the rule stands as written on our RulesStandards page.
Rlevse02:09, 16 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Ummm ... no. There is really no rule about camps. Camps were not explicitly covered. Camps are not districts or troops, nor are they roundtables. OA Chapters and roundtables are clearly sub-council. I think we (even if it is just the three of us) should develop a standard for camp articles. We then post that rule on at the Village Pump and then we stick with it.
On a related subject, we should have a "article in danger" section of the project page and a quick action team to come to the rescue of endangered articles. --
evrik02:35, 16 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Camps are at the level of their council, district, whatever; Philmont, Sea Base, etc are national. I'll add that in a moment. An article in danger section likely draw no more response that the announcement section.
Rlevse09:52, 16 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Umm... yes. I am not going to participate in developing a separate standard, nor would I support anything developed and decided upon by only three project members, especially since two of those suggested members have already covered in great length and detail that there is a rule about camps, as sub-council entities, and in doing so stated their support for the existing policies. That rule has already been posted, and belabored, and then some more, and that is the one that needs to be stuck with. You're the lone dissenting voice on this one, this time. In brotherhood, I hope you will accede to the decisions several others made already, six months ago.
Chris01:50, 17 August 2006 (UTC)reply
By the way, earlier on this page it was mentioned that we had a mass article deletion earlier in the year. I think it's sad that we can't muster enough support to defend our articles.
Category:South Park episodes is an example of something completely trivial. Surely, our camps ar as important as an episode of South Park. --
evrik22:54, 17 August 2006 (UTC)reply
In this
section, I would like to clarify the standards by inserting the following text:
After this sentence, Such sub-articles are warranted when length, detail, or some other factor (such as Councils that cover parts of more than one state) warrant. Insert the following text:
Some general guidelines are as follows: notability – is there something particularly notable about the camp and its impact on people or in its region; length is the regional or council article in which it sits too long, or will the article be at least 1500 characters on its own; is the article complete and well-written; is this article also claimed by another wikiproject.
Rewrite this paragraph to read:
Camps and reservations are considered to be at the same level as their supporting organization. Some camps may be national in scope and those warrant their own article. To use the United States' BSA as an example, these are
Philmont,
Florida Sea Base,
Mortimer L. Schiff Scout Reservation, etc. A camp or reservation supported by a council is a council level organization and falls under council level rules. A camp or reservation run and supported by a district is a district level camp and falls under sub-council rules. The guidelines noted above also apply.
I object. The second para (camps and res...) says the same thing as the current version. I think the first one (general guide...) would only perpetuate this can of worms that keeps coming up. 1500 characters is not very long.
Rlevse21:59, 12 September 2006 (UTC)reply
Rlevse, is there a way we can broaden this discussion? I really tink we should have a better policy, and no one else from the wikiproject seems interested in discussing this. --
evrik02:03, 14 September 2006 (UTC)reply
Evrik, the only people who keep bringing this up are you and Chris, which seems to indicate you're the two who truly care about it and you're on opposite sides of the fence. I am not so sure broadening would do much good as no one else has participated in a long time; but before saying yea or nay or whatever, I'd like to hear what Chris thinks about broadening it (which I'm taking to mean you want to try to get more people involved). I doubt you and Chris would ever agree about what a better policy is.
Rlevse02:15, 14 September 2006 (UTC)reply
My stance is what it has always been. Camps are sub-council entities, and subordinate to a parent council or state article.
Chris16:40, 14 September 2006 (UTC)reply
We now have the the Kintetsubuffalo standard, an article "
fails notability - (if) it is not a Treasure Island or a Brownsea." You don’t understand the value of how the information is presented. The information may be copied to a larger article, but the article itself is lost. The article is what gets picked up by google and the article is what draws people in to our work. We should advance the opinion that, "individual scout camps have the right to be articles." We should stand together on this. If we stand together on this, there is no way any article would be deleted – but instead we do it ourselves. --
evrik(
talk)16:32, 4 April 2007 (UTC)reply
New Propsal
In this
section, I would like to clarify the standards by inserting the following text:
After this sentence, Such sub-articles are warranted when length, detail, or some other factor (such as Councils that cover parts of more than one state) warrant. Insert the following text:
Some general guidelines are as follows: notability – is there something particularly notable about the camp and its impact on people or in its region; length is the regional or council article in which it sits too long, or will the article be at least 1500 characters on its own; is the article complete and well-written; is this article also claimed by another wikiproject.
and rewrite this paragraph to read:
Camps and reservations are considered to be at the same level as their supporting organization. Some camps may be national in scope and those warrant their own article. To use the United States' BSA as an example, these are
Philmont,
Florida Sea Base,
Mortimer L. Schiff Scout Reservation, etc. A camp or reservation supported by a council is a council level organization and falls under council level rules. A camp or reservation run and supported by a district is a district level camp and falls under sub-council rules. We note however that "individual scout council and camps have the right to be articles if they meet guidelines noted above."
I'd agree with this so long as individual council camps have the ability to have be stub articles, so long as it is cleared up that verifiable regional notability is acceptable.
Justinm197808:35, 15 April 2007 (UTC)reply
Stub Camp Articles
Issue: How should we handle stub articles on individual Scout camps? Proposals:
A. Blanket policy that we allow a stub for any Scout camp. Mark as stub and try to expand on it.
B. Blanket policy that Scout camp stubs are merged into corresponding "by State" article. A redirect is created. If enough information becomes available, use the Talk page to propose splitting into it's own article. (Must be at least B-class to justify splitting).
I would support that individual camps/reservations (as in property owned by councils) be allowed their articles, but marked as stubs and attempt to expand. Merging it all into "by State" will clutter those up horribly and look bad because it takes forever to split anything out. I would also suggest a standard infobox be used for camps that include location, owning council, date opened, etc. Articles usually get deleted because they are either all fluff, direct copyvios, or just look bad.
Justinm197808:31, 15 April 2007 (UTC)reply
I recently noted the {{scoutlogo}} image tag. I recommend use of this tag for any images that are "official" logos, patches, medals, etc. Another advantage is that these images will show up in
Category:Scout logos.
BSA seems to use the term emblem for any patch indicating leadership or other position of responsibility.
For BSA articles, I suggest useage of logos from the official
BSA site whenever possible.
Would somebody please go to
List of 2005 National Scout Jamboree Council Patches and change this guy's don't know tags to {{scoutlogo}}? I've been trying to help the poor fellow out, but I shortly have to go home and don't have a computer there presently. I tried to leave a note on the guy's talk page, but he's not gotten the message.
Chris05:53, 21 January 2006 (UTC)reply
My bag, there was a page it appears you say use logo for some and Scoutlogo for others, and I didn't get the differentiation. Sorry
Chris03:34, 23 January 2006 (UTC)reply
The proper name for the US Girl Guiding movement is
Girl Scouts of the United States of America, and its abbreviation is GSUSA. As far as I know, though, this was not the original name of the organization. I assume that, like BSA, the name was originally Girl Scouts of America, but am not sure. Does anyone know/can anyone find out what the original name was, and when the switch was made. Also, would it be more proper to use the older term for articles referring to the organization before the switch, and just have the wikilink refer back to the GSUSA article? --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
21:11, 22 January 2006 (UTC)reply
This should be covered in any article discussing this. I believe it was indeed originally GSA. I think the standard practice is to talk about in using its present name, using clauses where needed to refer to the prior name.
Rlevse21:21, 22 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Actually, it was first named Girl Guides of America in 1912 and changed to Girl Scouts of America in 1913. It became Girl Scouts of the United States of America in 1947.
[1] --
Gadget850 ( Ed)00:13, 23 January 2006 (UTC)reply
This started as an informal collaboration of Americans, so the initial focus was on BSA, BUT we VERY MUCH want to include ALL SCOUTING, world wide, boys and girls. We have already recruited other users with non-BSA backgrounds and we're glad to have ANY Scouting topic included.
Rlevse14:09, 23 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I am not very familiar with these organizations. There are also organizations such as Traditional Scouts and Primitive Scouts. These two and the one you mention should probably be in their subcat. For the Insular cat, I was thinking more along the line of orgs that are in their fledging stages and/or being cared for by the org of a larger country. Someone should educate me more on this subject of non-WOSM and non-WAGGGS before I go further. For now, we'll use Insular for orgs that have nowhere else to be put for now or fall into the intended purpose. We can always move cats around and re-categorize later.
Rlevse01:21, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Randy, the five nonWOSM international organizations, and several dozen non-aligned Scout movements believe 1) that WOSM has become too political (they're not entirely wrong), or that 2) WOSM has strayed from B-P's original purpose (up for debate). Those organizations range from the WFIS and FSE which comprise dozens of organizations, to the OWS which has but three. Thus far, most of the national members of these organizations do not have their own articles, and brief mention is made of them as "other Scout associations in x-country" in many WOSM articles.
Sounds like I need to make a "non-aligned Scout organizations" category. Then someone that knows about them needs to write a set of articles. I'll put this on the Todo list....Rnady,
Rlevse01:47, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
There are existing articles on each of these organizations, which link to the breakaway and nonaligned section of the main
Scouting article, about midway down.
Chris01:54, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
"Several dozen non-aligned Scout movements" seems a low estimation to me. Germany alone has about 130 non-aligned organizations, France about 60 and Italy about 30. About half of them are single-troop organizations (and thus non-notable), but we won't run out of work in this field. --
jergen14:14, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I meant no offense. Do you feel likewise about the Young Pioneers (communist)? While I do NOT support the HJ, many German Scouts were forced to join them (as I've always heard), so there is a connection there; and granted the HJ were highly politicized and militarized. Is this same true of the YP? This would beg the question, which needs addressing obviously: At what point and by what standards do we say a youth organiztion's article is not part of our project? I'm all open to suggestions. Did the HJ not abuse/warp the Scout method? Granted, I need to know more here.
Rlevse16:16, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
It is different with HJ and YP, the HJ used only are very small part of the program and the uniform style, while the YP were - in an early stage - kind of a socialist Scout Movement using wide parts of the Scout method. But I wouldn't even list the YP as "Non-aligned Scouting organization", it should be something like "look-a-like organization".
Wann ich war Student aufs Universitaet; Ich habe Deutsch als Hauptfacht studiert, aber jetzt habe Ich ganz zu viel vergessen. I have not used my German much since those days 25+ years ago. But, I remember enough to understand the gist of what you wrote in the German article. I understand you to be saying that if the orgnization veers too far from the Scout method and/or becomes overly politicized; we should not include it. Given that and the additional details you provided on HJ and YP, I'll remove them from the project and alter any articles referring to them as appropriate.
Rlevse 17:39, 24 January 2006 (UTC) PS: I've also made this part of the RulesStandards.
Rlevse17:42, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I disagree with the exclusion of the YPs. As far as I know (I was never a YP myself), they were more than just an indoctrination machine. Like the Scouts, they developed character, with proper Communist ideals foremost but far from exclusive. I've been led to believe that their emphasis on Communism did not far exceed, say, the BSA's emphasis on faith and republican citizenship. IMHO, they have a place on the not-too-distant fringes of the Scouting family tree. --
Smack (
talk)
21:43, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I was chewing on the answer to this last night. Both the Pioneers and the Hitler Jugend have their roots in Scouting, as the wide-game worked and appealed to youth, and they did not want to reinvent the wheel. However, having lived in the former Soviet Union, there was no doubt that their influence did in fact exceed mere citizenship. Pioneer membership was almost a prerequisite for better government jobs, and most certainly children who did not belong for one reason or another faced ostracism from their peers. I don't even like the fact that the
Eurasian Region has taken over the reins, literally, from the Pioneer movement, as the locals will see Scouting as tainted for years. However, I think there needs to be a new category, having to do with youth organizations that stemmed from Scouting yet had their own evolution separate from it.
Chris21:55, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I have to agree that HJ and YP are outside our normal scope. However, I am open to a separate category, but only with more discussion and consensus.
Rlevse22:12, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
While at some time even B.-P. himself had favourable comments on the Balilla (the fascist youth organization) it should be remembered that all these organizations were founded in opposition to scouting, and disbanding the local scout organizations, where they existed. We can't group them with scouting. We can, on the other hand, mention them because they have been influencing in our history, But we must mention them as something else... a sort of enemy! --
Lou Crazy04:43, 25 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I wouldn't go so far as to call them "enemies." That term implies a simplistic worldview and encourages militant and fanatical behavior, which is not acceptable in Wikipedia. These organizations were imitations of Scouting, set up by governments that brooked no opposition. Some turned entirely to serve a political cause; others merely leaned in that direction. --
Smack (
talk)
06:20, 27 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I have to concur with Smack, let's stay away from terms like "enemies", a term like "not true reps of the Scouting movement" or something would be better.
Rlevse11:29, 27 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Reviews
Do we have somewhere we can submit articles for peer review?
Gadget850 ( Ed)
The collaboration of the month is sort of a peer review. You also have the standard wiki peer review process. If you mean a Scouting Project place, go to the Scouting Portal and select the "candidates option" on the collaboration article box.
Rlevse22:29, 6 February 2006 (UTC)reply
Stance on OA Article Specificity
We all know that the articles about the Order of the Arrow are constantly being altered between two groups: one who want to list as much information as possible in them, and the other who don't think that details about the OA are appropriate on a public encyclopedia. Now that said articles are part of this project (or are they?), how is this going to be dealt with? It seems to me that a policy on this should be added to
WikiProject_Scouting/RulesStandardsBcaff21:45, 18 February 2006 (UTC)reply
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.
I'd like to split the following paragraph into three parts:
I feel it necessary to widen the criterias to 'political' Scouting organizations like
The Woodcraft Folk (which states despite its connections to the cooperative movement and to the
International Falcon Movement: The Folk do not have political affiliations but does endorse and support the work of the peace movement.).
We should also remember that there are (or were) quite a large number of real 'political' Scouting organizations, some examples from
Category:Non-aligned Scouting organizations are
Hanoar Hatzioni,
Hashomer Hatzair or
Fianna Éireann, but there are a lot more (I know at least five defunct German organizations). All these organizations were started as Scouting organizations but with a clear political orientation - thus they could not reach membership of WOSM or WAGGGS. --
jergen08:51, 12 July 2006 (UTC)reply
Jergen, I knew you would know a lot about this, thanks. I'll get to work on it today. WE defeinitely should not cover groups that meet this: "compulsary youth organisations introduced by extreme political groups who were governing a country as a dictatorship.", ie HJ and YP. So where should we draw the line?
Rlevse10:05, 12 July 2006 (UTC)reply
Troops?
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.
Do you mean more specific than..."Generally, an entity smaller than a Council (such as a troop or district) should not have its own article, unless it has done something truly exceptional or unique."? Also note our project didn't know of that article until 3 days ago, which is why our template isn't at the top of the talk page.
Rlevse10:44, 9 September 2006 (UTC)reply
I thought this WikiProject might be interested. Ping me with any specific queries or leave them on the page linked to above. Thanks! -
Jarry1250(
t,
c)22:19, 1 February 2009 (UTC)reply
Wikipedia:WikiProject Scouting/Project editing conventions is part of the Scouting WikiProject, an effort to build a comprehensive and detailed guide to
Scouting and
Guiding on the Wikipedia. This includes but is not limited to boy and girl organizations,
WAGGGS and
WOSM organizations as well as those not so affiliated, country and region-specific topics, and anything else related to Scouting. If you would like to participate, you can edit the article attached to this page, or visit the
project page, where you can join the project and/or contribute to the
discussion.ScoutingWikipedia:WikiProject ScoutingTemplate:WikiProject ScoutingScouting articles
Rank articles...the rank articles should be separate (and renamed, see Language section). This means
List_of_BSA_rank_requirements should be deleted. Each rank having its own article allows more flexible, specificity, and shorter articles.
Rlevse17:43, 13 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I was fiddling with it. I do like the blue, but the FdL has a white box around it. May need a SVG version with a transparent background to clean that up. Play with it as you like. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)20:09, 13 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Separate articles
I know it's attractive to have a series of articles with a spiffy series box, but why do we really need separate articles for every rank? I think they might do better as sections of a main article. --
Smack (
talk)
21:00, 13 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I think the pattern used in the "History of ..." articles works pretty well for history, because the subject of history is broad and deep, and easily allows for a summary article linking out to narrower articles on specific periods. However, I don't think that any part of Scouting rank advancement has the necessary depth to make this structure work. --
Smack (
talk)
19:23, 15 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Another option is to have separate articles for Cubs, Scouts, Venturers for recognition; as I think one article containing all three could be huge.
Rlevse19:47, 17 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Apologies for the belated objection. I consider the rank structure an organic whole, which won't do well if divided into pieces. For instance, if we had them all together, we wouldn't have to duplicate the paragraph about the Star/Life switcheroo. Right now,
First Class Scout rank (Boy Scouts of America) is the most complete one besides Eagle, and it looks torn out of context - a bit like getting one chapter of a book without the ones before and after it. That said, I'm willing to sit tight for a while and see how this division works out. --
Smack (
talk)
05:49, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
Let's see how Gadget's current effort goes, with a parent article and one each for pack/troop/crew. I think this is quite workable and it turns out to kind of be a compromise.
Rlevse11:02, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
Council, District, Troop articles
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.
Would Scouting Wikipedians entertain the idea of having the Councils-by-state sections recategorized to "Scouting in Arizona", "Scouting in Washington", and so on, rather than a list of every council and district? The reason I would like this considered is
1) no other country's Scouting articles are divided into such minute details (except for
The Scout Association of Hong Kong, and really, is that much minutiae important or interesting to the reader?)
2) many councils that a reader may choose to look up, like the Fitchburg Area Council of Massachusetts or the Vigilante Area Council of Montana, went extinct 30+ years ago, yet may be of interest in a more state-based article
3) many states like Alaska share a communal Scout history, only fairly recently being broken into smaller councils, others like North Dakota had several merged into one, and some Scouting histories are better told encompassing an entire state. The fact that Scouts in California prior to the charter of the BSA were the youth arm of the California Highway Patrol, or the fact that Connecticut, while having only eight counties, has had 22 councils over the course of its history, would be well-included in a statewide article
Chris22:57, 13 January 2006 (UTC)reply
It seems to me that many of these facts and whatnot might be better suited to a standalone "History of the BSA" article. When certain topics/regions/whatever there grow big enough, those can also be broken out into articles dealing with regional histories and whatnot. --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
19:44, 20 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I agree that we should be careful about how many councils/districts get articles, the ones perceived to be non-notable will wind up on VfD. Regions probably won't be that big a deal, there's only a few of them (local region office is in my hometown). How much coverage do we want to give these? The Council I "came up" in no longer exists - DuPage Area Council merged with Two Rivers Council in the early 1990s and is now known as the Three Fires Council. The old DAC offices in
Wheaton, Illinois were closed, and TFC is in
Saint Charles, Illinois. --
JohnDBuell01:39, 19 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I favor the idea of having articles for states, regions, or some other large grouping, rather than for individual councils. However, I'm not sure how to accomplish this. The obvious solution is to redirect from the councils to the regions that contain them, but I wouldn't be very happy with that. --
Smack (
talk)
17:47, 20 January 2006 (UTC)reply
The large grouping I would favor would be by state, reason being, most folks are inclined to look for that in specific, and Councils so frequently merge and split, and often when they do, it is along state lines. Therefore, the Rhode Island article would include Narragansett Council, but the Moby Dick Council that merged into it would be first part of the Massachusetts article. My 237 lira.
Chris02:01, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I'm getting the feeling that to do this would be by state. But I'm not sure how to tie into Councils and Lodges (I see no reason to have articles smaller than that).
Rlevse11:49, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
call for immediate consensus let's get this agreed upon, in light of recent Afds, and I will begin to add merge tags to sub-state articles and start on renames and opening paragraphs.
Chris20:52, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Chris has been doing a bang-up job setting up the US scouting by state pages. I have two things I want to bring up about it, though. First, it seemed the consensus of this group that Districts were inherently non-notable, so I'm not sure why every district in each state is listed. Also, many councils reside in one state and have a camp or camps in another state (Both Three Fires Council's Camp Freeland-Leslie and Chicago Area Council's Owasippe Scout Reservation come to mind, and I'm sure there are others). It makes sense to me to include at least a mention of these out-of-state camps on the pages for the states in which the camps lie, but I'd like to get a better consensus for this. --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
05:37, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
The reason they are lists now is because they were lists to begin with in when created in 2002, and I am converting as best I can, but don't know what to do without losing that information.
Chris05:48, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
Personally, I would not be sad to see the lists of districts go. I would like to see under each council's section: a blurb about the council itself (including history and any mergers), at least a mention of the camp(s) owned by the council, and a mention or subsection on the council's OA lodge. --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
10:25, 1 February 2006 (UTC)reply
I wanted to point out that whenever you make a page, such as Scouting in Alabama, that you need to also make redirects using possible searc terms. I went ahead and did it for the Alabama article using Alabama scouting, scouting in alabama.
Will23:10, 13 April 2006 (UTC)reply
I agree, I've left a note on that user's talk page and asked him to join the project and follow the guides. The info needs to be saved as it could seed our larger goal, but the articles should not be around very long. The info could be saved by pasting into a file for future use or put into an article that meets our goals.
Rlevse11:18, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
call for immediate consensus let's get this agreed upon, in light of recent Afds, and I will begin to add merge tags to sub-state articles and start on renames and opening paragraphs.
Chris20:51, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I have gone ahead and done three test articles, for anyone to improve, as right now they are just adds-back-in of other articles. I used Alabama 1) as alphabetically first; 2) as it had no links so no one would complain if I moved it; and 3) as a scarcely-visited article, we can test and modify as seems appropriate to us. (As to the clip I borrowed from the controversy page, some states just don't yet have a lot of unique things I know about them, and for that my apologies). I then tried to set an example merging my own Colorado and Hawaii articles into new state pages.
Chris03:37, 27 January 2006 (UTC)reply
If the info should be saved, perhaps putting it all on a User subpage for now would be the best way to keep it around and wiki-formatted until its decided whether or not we need it. --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
21:34, 26 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I liked your Colorado and Hawaii articles Chris. I like the box at the bottom with all of the links to the other states. I think each state should have a picture at the very top with an image of the state showing how it is divided by the councils in the state, or at least at the beginning of the Boy Scout Section, and if other types of scouting are included then a similar image should be at the beginning of each of these sections as well. I also think that each council and lodge should have an image of its patch/flap. The pictures of camp patches are useless in my opinion. While the list of districts may not be necessary, all of the camps and properties owned by the council should be present, and if the camp is in a neighboring state/council it should say so, otherwise it should just have the location. But maybe a list of the districts would give enough room for an image of the council patch and an image of the section of the state it occupies. As for the OA lodges I think they should be grouped by Section, in seperate articles. I do think that they should remain as part of each state article with the article stating the name, number, current lodge flap, totem, meaning, language of the totem, and anything else that is relevent.
Could someone please point me to where the standard is for the notbaility standard of a camp or scout reservation? I object to the wholesale lumping of camp articles in the council's description. Many camps are notablale in their own right.
Here we say,
The Scouting WikiProject endeavors to have state-related articles rather than 400+ council articles. Articles on lodges, camps and districts will immediately be suggested to merge into the proper state or council article. If your council camp crosses state boundaries, choose the state the main council office is located in.
The discussion above was vague on the notability of the camps and the difference between a camp and a reservation. Where was this developed?
It's a matter of volume, and was developed in February 2006 after we lost 50+ articles to non-notability. Non-Scout Wikipedians are the ones who vote to delete such articles, not us, but as they are the vast number of Wikipedians out there, they call the shots generally. Last night I found several more Scout articles that had been deleted or nominated for afd, because they were counted as non-notable by others. You wouldn't believe the good stuff I had to bring back from the dead, that was deleted wholesale without being properly merged before redirect. Brother, I have nothing against your camp, I wish all camps and lodges and districts could have articles, the cold fact is, most Wikipedians disagree. For that reason, the only logical place for such sub-council articles is within the council article itself.
For the record, I am really tired of having this discussion, with new participants and old alike. It's a common-sense approach to what has been a bad situation for a long time. I hate losing any Scout article to deletion, and this was codified to prevent that. It has nothing to do at all with whether one's camp or lodge is really great, or whether a participant is longstanding or no. At this point I need to call for a vote and get this decided as official policy, once and for all.
Chris17:12, 11 August 2006 (UTC)reply
I'm not saying that every camp needs an article. I do think we need a length standard or something that we can point to that says that the article deserves to be there - we need an objective standard. --
evrik17:48, 11 August 2006 (UTC)reply
OK, this is in a few spots, let's centralize here. I'm not trying to be wishy washy, but....I'm tired of this keeping coming up too. I understand people want articles on "their" camp,etc. But Chris is right too, if we don't keep a lid on it, we lose them. But I also see Evrik's point a more concrete standard would help. First, I think some confusion exists out there about "sub-council". If Council XYZ has camp/reservation that is it's main camp, is that sub-council or council-level?? Second, at what point do we say "this is a full article and can stand on its own with a summary and 'main' fork from the council/state article? I think we all agree stubs should get merged. B-class and above can probably survive. The problem as I see it is the start class. As I see, the Resica article is weak: it's barely more than a stub and nowhere near B-class. Let's move the discussion of what to do with the cat names separate from this one.
Rlevse18:07, 11 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Standards?
Notability
Article Length (more than 1500 characters)
Completeness
Camps versus reservation?
Other projects (is the article tagged with another Wikiproject)
Sometimes the diff in a camp and reservation is in name only. Length should be B-class or above, maybe a strong Start class, complete-cover all major areas.
Rlevse18:13, 11 August 2006 (UTC)reply
I do not support any opening on this, else that door will never be able to be closed to articles of uneven quality written by those who come in future. Consensus on sub-council entities was already reached, as per Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Scouting/RulesStandards, in February, 2006 (above). I have written the bulk of the stubs on here, and I would love to see the national articles expand or find homes. The fact is, right now there is no place to tuck many articles, and we always risk losing several. For those articles that have a place to be, they need to be there. Camps and lodges and such may locally be notable, but outside of
Treasure Island, there are none that are nationally significant to Scouting heritage outside of another, larger article. That's why local garage bands get deleted all the time. There should only be camp articles on national camps like
Philmont, plus Treasure Island because of its notability to national Scouting, and that's it. All others, even if good articles, are sub-council entities, and as already agreed upon, need to be subsumed or expanded into Council articles. I have to stand by that, and do not support any leeway. Those not of our project see _all_ of our work as non-notable. Sub-council articles need council or state homes. 90+ percent of the Project members are BSA, there really needs to be a hard-and-fast mandate.
Chris19:18, 12 August 2006 (UTC)reply
I have to go with Chris on this one, let's stick to the RulesStandards as is instead of constantly fighting the battle of people protecting their own sugar bowl article.
Rlevse16:39, 14 August 2006 (UTC)reply
I still have to disagree. First, camps were never explicityly covered in the previous discussion, Second, I think we need to come up with an objective standard for quality and length and stick with it. I think that by, as a rule, tucking them into the state and council articles we risk making those articles, large, difsue and unwieldy. The biggest reason we lose articles is that we don't have enough volunteers who come to the rescue and 'vote' to save articles. --
evrik17:14, 14 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Local Cubmaster roundtables and OA chapters were never explicitly covered in the previous discussion, either, yet they are just as obviously sub-council entities covered by the same standard camps are, in the previous discussion above, agreed upon six months ago. You've touched upon it yourself, we don't have enough volunteers who come to the rescue. Since we do not, we need to build the root articles before we even start thinking about allowing breakaways. Disagree or no, this has been covered long since, and it does cover camps whether they were explicitly listed or not. Camps are sub-council entities.
Chris01:45, 16 August 2006 (UTC)reply
This is just going around in circles. The rule was set, not enough consensus and editors have agreed to change it, so the rule stands as written on our RulesStandards page.
Rlevse02:09, 16 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Ummm ... no. There is really no rule about camps. Camps were not explicitly covered. Camps are not districts or troops, nor are they roundtables. OA Chapters and roundtables are clearly sub-council. I think we (even if it is just the three of us) should develop a standard for camp articles. We then post that rule on at the Village Pump and then we stick with it.
On a related subject, we should have a "article in danger" section of the project page and a quick action team to come to the rescue of endangered articles. --
evrik02:35, 16 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Camps are at the level of their council, district, whatever; Philmont, Sea Base, etc are national. I'll add that in a moment. An article in danger section likely draw no more response that the announcement section.
Rlevse09:52, 16 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Umm... yes. I am not going to participate in developing a separate standard, nor would I support anything developed and decided upon by only three project members, especially since two of those suggested members have already covered in great length and detail that there is a rule about camps, as sub-council entities, and in doing so stated their support for the existing policies. That rule has already been posted, and belabored, and then some more, and that is the one that needs to be stuck with. You're the lone dissenting voice on this one, this time. In brotherhood, I hope you will accede to the decisions several others made already, six months ago.
Chris01:50, 17 August 2006 (UTC)reply
By the way, earlier on this page it was mentioned that we had a mass article deletion earlier in the year. I think it's sad that we can't muster enough support to defend our articles.
Category:South Park episodes is an example of something completely trivial. Surely, our camps ar as important as an episode of South Park. --
evrik22:54, 17 August 2006 (UTC)reply
In this
section, I would like to clarify the standards by inserting the following text:
After this sentence, Such sub-articles are warranted when length, detail, or some other factor (such as Councils that cover parts of more than one state) warrant. Insert the following text:
Some general guidelines are as follows: notability – is there something particularly notable about the camp and its impact on people or in its region; length is the regional or council article in which it sits too long, or will the article be at least 1500 characters on its own; is the article complete and well-written; is this article also claimed by another wikiproject.
Rewrite this paragraph to read:
Camps and reservations are considered to be at the same level as their supporting organization. Some camps may be national in scope and those warrant their own article. To use the United States' BSA as an example, these are
Philmont,
Florida Sea Base,
Mortimer L. Schiff Scout Reservation, etc. A camp or reservation supported by a council is a council level organization and falls under council level rules. A camp or reservation run and supported by a district is a district level camp and falls under sub-council rules. The guidelines noted above also apply.
I object. The second para (camps and res...) says the same thing as the current version. I think the first one (general guide...) would only perpetuate this can of worms that keeps coming up. 1500 characters is not very long.
Rlevse21:59, 12 September 2006 (UTC)reply
Rlevse, is there a way we can broaden this discussion? I really tink we should have a better policy, and no one else from the wikiproject seems interested in discussing this. --
evrik02:03, 14 September 2006 (UTC)reply
Evrik, the only people who keep bringing this up are you and Chris, which seems to indicate you're the two who truly care about it and you're on opposite sides of the fence. I am not so sure broadening would do much good as no one else has participated in a long time; but before saying yea or nay or whatever, I'd like to hear what Chris thinks about broadening it (which I'm taking to mean you want to try to get more people involved). I doubt you and Chris would ever agree about what a better policy is.
Rlevse02:15, 14 September 2006 (UTC)reply
My stance is what it has always been. Camps are sub-council entities, and subordinate to a parent council or state article.
Chris16:40, 14 September 2006 (UTC)reply
We now have the the Kintetsubuffalo standard, an article "
fails notability - (if) it is not a Treasure Island or a Brownsea." You don’t understand the value of how the information is presented. The information may be copied to a larger article, but the article itself is lost. The article is what gets picked up by google and the article is what draws people in to our work. We should advance the opinion that, "individual scout camps have the right to be articles." We should stand together on this. If we stand together on this, there is no way any article would be deleted – but instead we do it ourselves. --
evrik(
talk)16:32, 4 April 2007 (UTC)reply
New Propsal
In this
section, I would like to clarify the standards by inserting the following text:
After this sentence, Such sub-articles are warranted when length, detail, or some other factor (such as Councils that cover parts of more than one state) warrant. Insert the following text:
Some general guidelines are as follows: notability – is there something particularly notable about the camp and its impact on people or in its region; length is the regional or council article in which it sits too long, or will the article be at least 1500 characters on its own; is the article complete and well-written; is this article also claimed by another wikiproject.
and rewrite this paragraph to read:
Camps and reservations are considered to be at the same level as their supporting organization. Some camps may be national in scope and those warrant their own article. To use the United States' BSA as an example, these are
Philmont,
Florida Sea Base,
Mortimer L. Schiff Scout Reservation, etc. A camp or reservation supported by a council is a council level organization and falls under council level rules. A camp or reservation run and supported by a district is a district level camp and falls under sub-council rules. We note however that "individual scout council and camps have the right to be articles if they meet guidelines noted above."
I'd agree with this so long as individual council camps have the ability to have be stub articles, so long as it is cleared up that verifiable regional notability is acceptable.
Justinm197808:35, 15 April 2007 (UTC)reply
Stub Camp Articles
Issue: How should we handle stub articles on individual Scout camps? Proposals:
A. Blanket policy that we allow a stub for any Scout camp. Mark as stub and try to expand on it.
B. Blanket policy that Scout camp stubs are merged into corresponding "by State" article. A redirect is created. If enough information becomes available, use the Talk page to propose splitting into it's own article. (Must be at least B-class to justify splitting).
I would support that individual camps/reservations (as in property owned by councils) be allowed their articles, but marked as stubs and attempt to expand. Merging it all into "by State" will clutter those up horribly and look bad because it takes forever to split anything out. I would also suggest a standard infobox be used for camps that include location, owning council, date opened, etc. Articles usually get deleted because they are either all fluff, direct copyvios, or just look bad.
Justinm197808:31, 15 April 2007 (UTC)reply
I recently noted the {{scoutlogo}} image tag. I recommend use of this tag for any images that are "official" logos, patches, medals, etc. Another advantage is that these images will show up in
Category:Scout logos.
BSA seems to use the term emblem for any patch indicating leadership or other position of responsibility.
For BSA articles, I suggest useage of logos from the official
BSA site whenever possible.
Would somebody please go to
List of 2005 National Scout Jamboree Council Patches and change this guy's don't know tags to {{scoutlogo}}? I've been trying to help the poor fellow out, but I shortly have to go home and don't have a computer there presently. I tried to leave a note on the guy's talk page, but he's not gotten the message.
Chris05:53, 21 January 2006 (UTC)reply
My bag, there was a page it appears you say use logo for some and Scoutlogo for others, and I didn't get the differentiation. Sorry
Chris03:34, 23 January 2006 (UTC)reply
The proper name for the US Girl Guiding movement is
Girl Scouts of the United States of America, and its abbreviation is GSUSA. As far as I know, though, this was not the original name of the organization. I assume that, like BSA, the name was originally Girl Scouts of America, but am not sure. Does anyone know/can anyone find out what the original name was, and when the switch was made. Also, would it be more proper to use the older term for articles referring to the organization before the switch, and just have the wikilink refer back to the GSUSA article? --
Thesquire (
talk -
contribs)
21:11, 22 January 2006 (UTC)reply
This should be covered in any article discussing this. I believe it was indeed originally GSA. I think the standard practice is to talk about in using its present name, using clauses where needed to refer to the prior name.
Rlevse21:21, 22 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Actually, it was first named Girl Guides of America in 1912 and changed to Girl Scouts of America in 1913. It became Girl Scouts of the United States of America in 1947.
[1] --
Gadget850 ( Ed)00:13, 23 January 2006 (UTC)reply
This started as an informal collaboration of Americans, so the initial focus was on BSA, BUT we VERY MUCH want to include ALL SCOUTING, world wide, boys and girls. We have already recruited other users with non-BSA backgrounds and we're glad to have ANY Scouting topic included.
Rlevse14:09, 23 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I am not very familiar with these organizations. There are also organizations such as Traditional Scouts and Primitive Scouts. These two and the one you mention should probably be in their subcat. For the Insular cat, I was thinking more along the line of orgs that are in their fledging stages and/or being cared for by the org of a larger country. Someone should educate me more on this subject of non-WOSM and non-WAGGGS before I go further. For now, we'll use Insular for orgs that have nowhere else to be put for now or fall into the intended purpose. We can always move cats around and re-categorize later.
Rlevse01:21, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Randy, the five nonWOSM international organizations, and several dozen non-aligned Scout movements believe 1) that WOSM has become too political (they're not entirely wrong), or that 2) WOSM has strayed from B-P's original purpose (up for debate). Those organizations range from the WFIS and FSE which comprise dozens of organizations, to the OWS which has but three. Thus far, most of the national members of these organizations do not have their own articles, and brief mention is made of them as "other Scout associations in x-country" in many WOSM articles.
Sounds like I need to make a "non-aligned Scout organizations" category. Then someone that knows about them needs to write a set of articles. I'll put this on the Todo list....Rnady,
Rlevse01:47, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
There are existing articles on each of these organizations, which link to the breakaway and nonaligned section of the main
Scouting article, about midway down.
Chris01:54, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
"Several dozen non-aligned Scout movements" seems a low estimation to me. Germany alone has about 130 non-aligned organizations, France about 60 and Italy about 30. About half of them are single-troop organizations (and thus non-notable), but we won't run out of work in this field. --
jergen14:14, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I meant no offense. Do you feel likewise about the Young Pioneers (communist)? While I do NOT support the HJ, many German Scouts were forced to join them (as I've always heard), so there is a connection there; and granted the HJ were highly politicized and militarized. Is this same true of the YP? This would beg the question, which needs addressing obviously: At what point and by what standards do we say a youth organiztion's article is not part of our project? I'm all open to suggestions. Did the HJ not abuse/warp the Scout method? Granted, I need to know more here.
Rlevse16:16, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
It is different with HJ and YP, the HJ used only are very small part of the program and the uniform style, while the YP were - in an early stage - kind of a socialist Scout Movement using wide parts of the Scout method. But I wouldn't even list the YP as "Non-aligned Scouting organization", it should be something like "look-a-like organization".
Wann ich war Student aufs Universitaet; Ich habe Deutsch als Hauptfacht studiert, aber jetzt habe Ich ganz zu viel vergessen. I have not used my German much since those days 25+ years ago. But, I remember enough to understand the gist of what you wrote in the German article. I understand you to be saying that if the orgnization veers too far from the Scout method and/or becomes overly politicized; we should not include it. Given that and the additional details you provided on HJ and YP, I'll remove them from the project and alter any articles referring to them as appropriate.
Rlevse 17:39, 24 January 2006 (UTC) PS: I've also made this part of the RulesStandards.
Rlevse17:42, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I disagree with the exclusion of the YPs. As far as I know (I was never a YP myself), they were more than just an indoctrination machine. Like the Scouts, they developed character, with proper Communist ideals foremost but far from exclusive. I've been led to believe that their emphasis on Communism did not far exceed, say, the BSA's emphasis on faith and republican citizenship. IMHO, they have a place on the not-too-distant fringes of the Scouting family tree. --
Smack (
talk)
21:43, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I was chewing on the answer to this last night. Both the Pioneers and the Hitler Jugend have their roots in Scouting, as the wide-game worked and appealed to youth, and they did not want to reinvent the wheel. However, having lived in the former Soviet Union, there was no doubt that their influence did in fact exceed mere citizenship. Pioneer membership was almost a prerequisite for better government jobs, and most certainly children who did not belong for one reason or another faced ostracism from their peers. I don't even like the fact that the
Eurasian Region has taken over the reins, literally, from the Pioneer movement, as the locals will see Scouting as tainted for years. However, I think there needs to be a new category, having to do with youth organizations that stemmed from Scouting yet had their own evolution separate from it.
Chris21:55, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I have to agree that HJ and YP are outside our normal scope. However, I am open to a separate category, but only with more discussion and consensus.
Rlevse22:12, 24 January 2006 (UTC)reply
While at some time even B.-P. himself had favourable comments on the Balilla (the fascist youth organization) it should be remembered that all these organizations were founded in opposition to scouting, and disbanding the local scout organizations, where they existed. We can't group them with scouting. We can, on the other hand, mention them because they have been influencing in our history, But we must mention them as something else... a sort of enemy! --
Lou Crazy04:43, 25 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I wouldn't go so far as to call them "enemies." That term implies a simplistic worldview and encourages militant and fanatical behavior, which is not acceptable in Wikipedia. These organizations were imitations of Scouting, set up by governments that brooked no opposition. Some turned entirely to serve a political cause; others merely leaned in that direction. --
Smack (
talk)
06:20, 27 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I have to concur with Smack, let's stay away from terms like "enemies", a term like "not true reps of the Scouting movement" or something would be better.
Rlevse11:29, 27 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Reviews
Do we have somewhere we can submit articles for peer review?
Gadget850 ( Ed)
The collaboration of the month is sort of a peer review. You also have the standard wiki peer review process. If you mean a Scouting Project place, go to the Scouting Portal and select the "candidates option" on the collaboration article box.
Rlevse22:29, 6 February 2006 (UTC)reply
Stance on OA Article Specificity
We all know that the articles about the Order of the Arrow are constantly being altered between two groups: one who want to list as much information as possible in them, and the other who don't think that details about the OA are appropriate on a public encyclopedia. Now that said articles are part of this project (or are they?), how is this going to be dealt with? It seems to me that a policy on this should be added to
WikiProject_Scouting/RulesStandardsBcaff21:45, 18 February 2006 (UTC)reply
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.
I'd like to split the following paragraph into three parts:
I feel it necessary to widen the criterias to 'political' Scouting organizations like
The Woodcraft Folk (which states despite its connections to the cooperative movement and to the
International Falcon Movement: The Folk do not have political affiliations but does endorse and support the work of the peace movement.).
We should also remember that there are (or were) quite a large number of real 'political' Scouting organizations, some examples from
Category:Non-aligned Scouting organizations are
Hanoar Hatzioni,
Hashomer Hatzair or
Fianna Éireann, but there are a lot more (I know at least five defunct German organizations). All these organizations were started as Scouting organizations but with a clear political orientation - thus they could not reach membership of WOSM or WAGGGS. --
jergen08:51, 12 July 2006 (UTC)reply
Jergen, I knew you would know a lot about this, thanks. I'll get to work on it today. WE defeinitely should not cover groups that meet this: "compulsary youth organisations introduced by extreme political groups who were governing a country as a dictatorship.", ie HJ and YP. So where should we draw the line?
Rlevse10:05, 12 July 2006 (UTC)reply
Troops?
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.
Do you mean more specific than..."Generally, an entity smaller than a Council (such as a troop or district) should not have its own article, unless it has done something truly exceptional or unique."? Also note our project didn't know of that article until 3 days ago, which is why our template isn't at the top of the talk page.
Rlevse10:44, 9 September 2006 (UTC)reply
I thought this WikiProject might be interested. Ping me with any specific queries or leave them on the page linked to above. Thanks! -
Jarry1250(
t,
c)22:19, 1 February 2009 (UTC)reply