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Scouts to0 embarrassed to march.
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http:// www.tel egraph. ...n-St -George s-Day.h tml
Further to my earlier question regarding the £10m scheme to set up uniformed youth clubs, today's Telegraph report on today's kids not wanting to let their mates see them marching, says it all.
Further to my earlier question regarding the £10m scheme to set up uniformed youth clubs, today's Telegraph report on today's kids not wanting to let their mates see them marching, says it all.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm all for forming clubs and organisations for young people, very much so to be honest and have actively been involved in mentoring young offenders who would have benefited from such things, but the concept of having to wear a uniform to be included is really alien to me and I think alienating to certain members of society- not to mention a tremendous waste of money making it well out of reach for a lot of very low income families.there is far better things to spend money on than scout-like uniforms.
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It's not at all naive, naomi - if the youngsters don't want to join, they don't - but those who do, benefit enormously. For every youngster that enrols, there are dozens who don't, and we wouldn't ask them why they don't want to. I acknowledge the "parental load of cobblers" perspective, but I can see the rounded and skilled young people who leave the squadrons when they age out. They are proud of who they are and what they've achieved.
Personally, I can see their point. When I was a teenager, I would have been mortified if my friends had seen me parading across town. That was even before the age of the peer pressure that there is today with kids. I`m sure they have good intentions but in this Facebook age of "cool" I can understand why kids in this country don`t want to do that.
I love the comment in that article about kids getting beyond Beaver age though :-)
I love the comment in that article about kids getting beyond Beaver age though :-)
Boxy, I know they benefit enormously - and I'm not criticising – I’m all for such organisations - but I do think you’re naïve because you don’t fully recognise the role that negative parents play in their children’s lives. They consider something like the Scouts to be ‘stupid’ – and hence their children do too – and that’s why they don’t want to join. Children are what adults make them. Sad in some instances - but true in all.
Naomi, oh I do. I see enough of families round here who encourage their kids in absolutely nothing except the must-have and it's-my-right ethos. I'm far from unobservant in these matters, and I know the youngsters I work with are the lucky ones who have supportive and encouraging parents. It's the others I feel sorry for - and we have had a few parents who take their children away from our organisation because they can't see the point of it - those youngsters are losing out right from the start.
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