Wednesday, October 16, 2024

In Defense of the Boy Scouts

 


"Okay guys, here's the plan. This is a map I drew that combines several of the Skymont trails. I think we can do this in a few hours. Who's in?", my son Luke says to his fellow scouts on a wet summer afternoon in Tennessee. It's been a soggy few days at Boy Scout summer camp, but as Senior Patrol Leader of his troop, he's determined to lead a hike to get some requirements done for the other boys. His brother Alex grudgingly goes along with the group.

As the group leaves, it starts pouring rain yet again. I'm expecting them to come back and hide in their tents. But I'm wrong. Two hours later, the waterlogged group of teens trudge back to camp, hair matted to their heads, shoes black with mud, clothes soaked to the bone. Complaining of course, but with stories they will share for years to come. To me, this is the essence of Boy Scouts: experiencing nature in all its unpredictability and sharing it with others.

In the last several years, Scouting America (BSA, Boy Scouts, pick your own name), has been rocked from many directions. Certainly, the years of sexual abuse by some leaders is most troubling. But both sides of the political spectrum have also hammered the organization. The left claims intolerance of LGBTQ while the right claims including girls and taking out the word "boy" somehow emasculates the entire organization.

I'm not here to make excuses or debate any political view. I'm here to argue that destroying Scouting will also take away access to fundamental skills our kids, especially boys, need more than ever. First aid, camping, navigation, outdoor cooking, the list goes on. What other activity does so much for boys?


Nine years ago, my school had an information session about Cub Scouts. The school pack was dormant and some parents were trying to bring it back. Two other middle school teachers and I had sons in the second grade so we showed up. Like typical teachers, we sat in the front row while one parent explained scouting to us. The other dads were sitting in the back, faces buried in their phones. When they asked who could help run the pack, like good teachers we raised our hands. The dads in the back never looked up from their phones. 

After four years of weekly meetings and several campouts, eleven boys finished Arrow of Light, the final rank of Cub Scouts. Along the way, little brothers and sisters of these boys joined the pack and went on all the same campouts. Finding animals on hikes, nearly missing alligators while canoeing, racing pinewood derby cars, and just having fun cooking and eating s'mores by campfire created lasting memories for these kids.

When Covid hit and most packs and troops shut down, we continued on. Alex, his mom, and I worked him through the last ranks of cub scouts while camping in the backyard to meet requirements. Luke's Boy Scout troop continued to meet masked and still found ways to camp every month. Ranks and merit badges were still achieved through it all.


Even after Covid, the last few years have not been easy. As their assistant scoutmaster, I attend their weekly meetings and monthly campouts. The troop has been shrinking every year and inspiring the boys to finish requirements and earn ranks has been difficult. Scouting is a multi-year commitment and many kids and families come and go. Taking grumbling teens to Monday night meetings, sleeping in a tent in the freezing cold, pouring rain, and painful humidity has taken a toll on my old, fat body. But watching Alex pitch his own tent, cook his own dinner and clean his own dishes gives me hope. Luke's year as Senior Patrol Leader taught him invaluable leaderships skills in teaching and managing a group of his peers. His Eagle Scout project took him months to plan, prepare and execute effectively. Now that he is almost done with Scouting, I really see how it's become such a major influence on his life. In an era of overprotective parents who terrify their kids into staying home in the rooms on their devices, Luke now takes his friends out on exploration trips around the city to learn and grow. His experience in Scouting gave him that confidence.

Scouting has many faults: a troubled past, slow to change, and many others. But it's an organization that builds confident leaders who learn life skills taught nowhere else. Outdoors is the scouting classroom and it's a wonderful one. Let's keep it going; our youth deserve it.





#scouts #scout #boyscouts #boy #boys #boyscoutsofamerica #cubscouts #eaglescout #scouting



Tuesday, October 15, 2024

College Admissions: Stressed Students, Anxious Parents




Ivy league schools give no merit scholarships. Despite having billions of dollars in endowments, they won't do it. Why not? Because they don't have to. It's simple economics of supply and demand. Tens of thousands of students apply to these schools and, if accepted, will take out lifelong loans to pay for it. All for the perceived "golden ticket" of an Ivy league education that is supposed to unlock wealth and success. But who gets the wealth and success most of time? The financial companies who live of the decades of interest students pay on loans.

It's one of the harsh realities I've learned as I help my high school junior start his college admissions journey. Another sobering fact is college admissions today is nothing like it was in the 80's when I was finishing high school. Getting into a state school in Florida back then was relatively easy. In 2024, Florida State University's admission rate is 25%. The University of Florida is 23%. Why? Again, it's supply and demand. With Florida's rapid population growth, more Floridians are enjoying the $6,500 per year tuition at FSU. Even the out-of-state tuition of $21,000 per year is a bargain compared to west coast and northeast schools. The south is the new gold rush when it comes to population growth and southern universities are benefitting from it which is making these schools difficult to get into, even for residents of that state.

This fact is not limited to Florida or the south. We visited the University of Maryland this summer and were shocked at the $60,000 annual out-of-state tuition. Taking a campus tour only reinforced the cost: multi-million dollar football stadiums, student centers, libraries everywhere so schools can compete with each other. Couple that with state legislatures who are constantly cutting funding to colleges and you see who gets stuck with the bill for all these amenities: student families. 

Even small private schools' tuition is out of reach for many families. Their options? Take out massive loans and push their kids hard to get top grades and scholarships to pay for some of it. The result? Kids who should be enjoying their high school days are spending weekends with test prep, tutoring, homework, and clawing to get their GPA a decimal point higher. They are stressed, not sleeping or eating. Anxious parents play the delicate balancing act of keeping them on track while letting them have at least some fun.

As a parent, I find it maddening that my son, a native Floridian his entire life, may be forced out of state while we pay 10 times the tuition for the same education. At least FSU limits early action applications to Florida residents only, which helps their tuition chances. Weren't state universities created to educate their own residents in the first place? They should consider that instead of following the money of out-of-state applicants. And it would go a long way in reducing the stress on students and parents who want an affordable future that doesn't drive them into bankruptcy.