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Girl Scouts Launch New Program For 80s
The Girl Scouts are mov
ing into the 1980 s and beyond
with a new system of
achievement awards and an
entirely new program for
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teen-age girls.
For the first time in al
most 20 years, the badge and
achievement award system
for girls has been redesigned
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and updated. While it in
cludes some traditional el
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as camping, cooking and
community service, new
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badges have been added that
were not even dreamed of
when Girl Scouting began 63
years ago.
According to Christy
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Heighten, executive director
of the Northeast Georgia
Girl Scout Council, girls can
earn badges with titles like
“Aerospace,” “Computer
am? a
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THE FORSYTH COUNTY NEWS-WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1,1000-
gram designed to help them
prepare for their roles as
women in a changing world,
particularly in regard to de
velopments in such fields as
PAGE 5B
technology and science.
Leadership skills are em
phasized and camping is still
encouraged, but girls have a
wide variety of other activ
ities to choose from.
+ + +
Earning badges is as old
as Girl Scouting. Originally,
badges worn by a girl
showed that she had done
the activity often and well
enough to teach someone
else. The new proficiency
badges are no exception.
However, there is more to
today’s Girl Scout badges
than skill development.
The Girl Scout program
and achievement award sys
tem are designed to help
girls progress as they grow
older and develop increasing
skills, build personal values,
understand themselves and
others, and contribute to
their communities.
The program for younger
girls (6-11) centers on devel
oping a wede range of skills,
while the program for teens
(12-17) encourages girls to
focus their skills on explor
ing careers and other inter
ests.
The new badge and
achievement award system
for girls 6-17 is capped by the
Girl Scout Gold Award, the
highest award a girl can
earn in Scouting. It gener
ally takes several years to
earn and is achieved by girls
from 14-17 years old. It is
preceded by the Silver
Award, two leadership
awards and two challenges.
The 76 action-oriented
badges for Junior Girl
Scouts (9-11) and the 27 in
terest projects for Cadettes
and Seniors provide flexibil
ity in activities and the op
portunity for skill
development based on each
individual girl’s interests,
abilities and resources.
The badges and project
patches are color-coded and
grouped according to Girl
Scouting”s five interest
areas or “Worlds.” They are
Well-Being, People, The
Arts, The Out-of-Doors’ and
Today and Tomorrow (sci
ence and preparing for the
future).
The badge system for
younger girls is graded in
two levels of difficulty, and
for the first time Brownie
Girl Scouts (ages 6-8) are el
igible to complete five
badges. >
For more information, call
the Girl Scout Council office
in Athens, 548-7297 or ask
your local Girl Scout volun
teer.
New Moms
To Receive
Visitors
ATLANTA Starting in
October, new mothers deliv
ering in Georgia hospitals
will have a visitor in addi
tion to family and friends.
Club women from the Ju
nior Conference of the
Georgia Federation of Wom
en’s Clubs will visit new
mothers in hospitals around
the state to tell them how
and when to have their ba
bies immunized against
childhood diseases.
“We want to help make
sure new mothers know how
important immunizations
are, and that they should
start early,” said Pat Swan,
director of the Junior Con
ference.
“Many parents put off
having their children immu
nized. Some even wait until
children are ready to start
school. But by that time
many children have suffered
needlessly or have been se
riously disabled by diseases
that can be prevented’” she
said.
The Junior Women, with
assistance from the General
Conference women, adopted
the two-year project in sup
port of the Georgia Depart
ment of Human Resources
effort to immunize children
beginning at two months of
age.
2 Receive
UGA Degrees
Two University of Georgia
students from Cumming
completed requirements for
their degrees at the end of
summer quarter in Septem
ber.
Michael Leon Cole earned
the bachelor of science de
gree in pharmacy and Wil
liam Colquitt Whitworth Jr.
earned the specialist degree
in education.