Advancement �101
What is Advancement?
Let’s start with what it is not.
It is not competition between scouts.
It is not a race to see how fast you can finish.
It is not something that units, districts or council are authorized to make changes to.
Scouting America Mission� Statement��The mission of Scouting America is to prepare young people to make ethical and moral choices over their lifetimes by instilling in them the values of the Scout Oath and Scout Law
Advancement….. “is nothing more and nothing less than one of several methods. It is a means of accomplishing the Scouting America mission, not an end in itself.” Guide to Advancement 2025
The GTA is regularly updated. The 2025 edition has over 1300 changes. Don’t panic. Most of those are changing Boy Scouts of America to Scouting America.
YOu
Earned Requirements Can Not Be Rescinded
Use of AI
When a requirement says to “attend a meeting,” in-person participation is strongly recommended. While virtual participation may be convenient, in-person attendance allows for a significantly richer experience, with more socialization and more focus. Virtual attendance should be extremely rare, when extenuating circumstances prevent in-person participation, and the merit badge counselor must approve the substitution in advance.
There’s new wording to specify the meaning of requirements such as “discuss,” “explain” and “demonstrate,” and there’s specific guidance on the use of artificial intelligence.
Generative artificial intelligence and other tools (spell checkers, grammar checkers, autofill, etc.) may be used by a Scout to assist with written requirements, but their use must be fully disclosed to the person reviewing the work, and the final output must be the Scout’s own original work.”
“Scouts can use AI to help them, just like they can use a word processor,” Balbes says. “But they can’t use it to do the work for them.”
Starting Merit Badges
A Scout who avoids or ignores the unit leader’s role and completes a badge without first discussing it with the leader should be counseled about the proper way to start a merit badge, and the discussion should be documented. If the Scout (or the parents) continue to ignore the established process, merit badges will not be recorded as earned until the Scout has demonstrated, told, shown, etc. that they have met all the requirements to the satisfaction of a merit badge counselor acceptable to the unit leader.
Online Merit Badge Classes
Merit badges are meant to be a personal activity, involving real interaction between a Scout and an enthusiastic expert in the subject at hand. … While the lack of merit badge counselors in some areas and advances in technology have increased use of virtual platforms, care must be taken that this does not diminish the learning experience. Councils may implement guidance for virtual options, with specific policies based on availability of counselors, Scout’s medical conditions, and so on. …
Requirements to show, tell, discuss, explain or demonstrate must not be substituted with checklists or forms under any circumstances. Just registering and being logged in is not sufficient. The Scout must be engaged and must actually and personally complete all requirements exactly as written, just as they would for an in-person class.
Appeal for Eagle Boards�Section 8.0.4.1 is titled, Filing and Processing an Appeal. It specifies a two-week time limit for a council to document its denial of advancement to the rank of Eagle Scout and also specifies that Scouts or parents have two months to file an appeal of that denial.����������
����������Eagle Reference Letters����Sections 9.0.1.3 and 9.0.1.7 concern references for an Eagle Scout candidate. The updated guide specifies the number of reference letters required (four) and who they should come from.�These may be Scout leaders, teachers, employers, coaches, other Scouts, etc. References do not need to be 21 or older. Parents and other relatives are strongly discouraged from serving as references. The current unit leader and committee chair are not eligible to serve as references.���������
The updated guide also specifies that the Scout is responsible for requesting references, not the council advancement committee or any other adult. The letters should be returned by whatever method the council specifies. They could be returned directly to the Scout, but only if in a sealed envelope or other method to assure confidentiality, as Scouts must not see the contents. They could also be sent to the Scoutmaster, a district or council volunteer, or via an online form. A reference from the Scout’s place of worship is encouraged but not required.��“We want the Scout to ask for the letters,” Balbes says. “This is a valuable life skill that they’re going to need.”�
The entirety of Section 10, Advancement for Members with Special Needs, was reorganized and rewritten based on guidance from Scouting America’s National Special Needs and Disabilities Committee.�
Questions?
Michell Crawford��214-793-2933��Crawford-clan@sbcglobal.net�
Thank you