Anonymous wrote:A lot of Eagle Scouts send their badges back because of LGBT issues. Your audience is AO’s. AO’s are young and extremely progressive. Ask yourself if they give a shit about patriotic activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eagle Scouts often tend to be a bit spectrum-y. Not saying that in a mean way, just what I have noticed. Not all of them, but quite a few. Kids who are a little too obsessed with order, process and accumulating things. So they really need to use the rest of their application to show offsetting characteristics.
Are you in Scouting? I'm guessing not, because if you were you'd see what an incredible range of kids (and families) participate.
They PP said "not all of them, but quite a few." You seem pretty defensive.
I'm pretty sure PP wouldn't dismiss their own child's accomplishments this way; therefore, PP is not likely involved in Scouting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eagle Scouts often tend to be a bit spectrum-y. Not saying that in a mean way, just what I have noticed. Not all of them, but quite a few. Kids who are a little too obsessed with order, process and accumulating things. So they really need to use the rest of their application to show offsetting characteristics.
Are you in Scouting? I'm guessing not, because if you were you'd see what an incredible range of kids (and families) participate.
They PP said "not all of them, but quite a few." You seem pretty defensive.
Anonymous wrote:Does the Eagle Scouts provide accommodations?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eagle Scouts often tend to be a bit spectrum-y. Not saying that in a mean way, just what I have noticed. Not all of them, but quite a few. Kids who are a little too obsessed with order, process and accumulating things. So they really need to use the rest of their application to show offsetting characteristics.
Are you in Scouting? I'm guessing not, because if you were you'd see what an incredible range of kids (and families) participate.
Anonymous wrote:Eagle Scouts often tend to be a bit spectrum-y. Not saying that in a mean way, just what I have noticed. Not all of them, but quite a few. Kids who are a little too obsessed with order, process and accumulating things. So they really need to use the rest of their application to show offsetting characteristics.
Anonymous wrote:The work ethic and focus to become an Eagle Scout likely pays off in academics. So while bring an ES in itself may not be a huge boost, OTHER THINGS BEING EQUAL wrt scores and grades, the ES may tip the scale.
Anonymous wrote:It join the eagle late, can student pay extra to make catch up before junior?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eagle Scout is not a great extracurricular. It’s an assortment of achievements of dubious value and impact. They are not difficult, for the athletic ones, the level of physical preparedness is average so in that sense is less demanding than a sport. Many are just reading up things and discuss with the counselor, and require no mastery or skills.
The badges that may be useful like First Aid, are much better done through other organizations like Red Cross, which take about the same amount of time, but you’re getting a certification that legitimately verifies the learned skills.
Same with swimming or lifeguarding, take it through Red Cross to actually mean something if the student is looking for a summer job. Nobody is taking scout badges seriously.
A part time job is way more impactful for college applications, just check the common data set, it’s listed as a criteria for many colleges.
False. Please read from Ivy Scholars. My own Eagle got into 2 Ivies, UVA and is now at Oxford heading for Yale Law. And if you don't believe that, I receive a class profile from Harvard Law every year, which tells me, amongst many other statistics, how many Eagles are in the next incoming class. https://www.ivyscholars.com/eagle-scout-scholarships-college-admissions/#:~:text=Colleges%20often%20ask%20about%20how,material%20for%20this%20in%20spades.
Anonymous wrote:Eagle Scout is not a great extracurricular. It’s an assortment of achievements of dubious value and impact. They are not difficult, for the athletic ones, the level of physical preparedness is average so in that sense is less demanding than a sport. Many are just reading up things and discuss with the counselor, and require no mastery or skills.
The badges that may be useful like First Aid, are much better done through other organizations like Red Cross, which take about the same amount of time, but you’re getting a certification that legitimately verifies the learned skills.
Same with swimming or lifeguarding, take it through Red Cross to actually mean something if the student is looking for a summer job. Nobody is taking scout badges seriously.
A part time job is way more impactful for college applications, just check the common data set, it’s listed as a criteria for many colleges.