Scouters, your scouts (and you) can work towards earning the Outdoor Ethics Awareness Award. To help scouts and scouters track their progress, you can use my modified 430-063: https://www.pack183.com/scouts-bsa-outdoor-ethics-awards-430-063-modified/. This is form 430-063, but I have included the steps along with URLs and completion dates that you can type or write in for easier tracking.
The first 4 items in the Awareness Award are self-guided. Item 5 can be completed by LNT Trainer John Ball. Other trainers may be available at the District or Council level and there is a group of Pack and Troop leaders planning to take the Trainer course in 2023.
If you have any questions, please let me know! ~JBall
Outdoor Ethics Awareness Award
Scouts interested in learning more about outdoor ethics and Leave No Trace should begin by exploring the Outdoor Ethics Awareness Award. The requirements are as follows:
Recite from memory and explain the meaning of the Outdoor Code.
Participate in an outdoor ethics course, workshop, or training activity facilitated by a person who has completed the BSA outdoor ethics orientation course or is a BSA outdoor ethics trainer or master.
Upon earning the Outdoor Ethics Awareness Award, Scouts and Scouters can work towards earning the Outdoor Ethics Action Award which is more in-depth and demonstrates a deeper understanding of the outdoors.
Scout Action Award Requirements
Do the following:
Unless already completed, earn the Outdoor Ethics Awareness Award.
Complete the BSA outdoor ethics orientation course.
Explain how each of the four points of the Outdoor Code guides your actions when outdoors.
Do the following:
Read Chapter 7 of the Scouts BSA Handbook on Outdoor Ethics.
Teach a skill related to the Outdoor Code or Leave No Trace to another Scout in your troop or another Scouting unit.
Complete one of the following:
Successfully complete a term as your troop Outdoor Ethics Guide.
Participate in an outing that emphasizes the complete set of Leave No Trace or relevant Tread Lightly! principles. All members of the troop participating in the outing should use the outdoor ethics and the specific skills needed to minimize impacts from their use of the outdoors.
Follow the Outdoor Code, Leave No Trace, and Tread Lightly! principles on three outings. Write a paragraph on each outing explaining how you followed the Outdoor Code, Leave No Trace, and Tread Lightly! Share it with your unit leader or an individual who has completed the BSA outdoor ethics orientation course.
On a troop outing, help your troop on a service activity that addresses recreational impacts related to the type of outing. The project should be approved in advance by the landowner or land manager and lead to permanent or long-term improvements.
Participate in a report at a court of honor or similar family event on the service activity in Requirement 5.
Scouter Action Award Requirements
Do the following:
Earn the Outdoor Ethics Awareness Award.
Complete the BSA outdoor ethics orientation course.
Discuss with your troop how each of the four points of the Outdoor Code guides your actions when outdoors.
Read the North American Skills & Ethics booklet to learn about the principles of Leave No Trace. Review the principles of Tread Lightly! Review Chapter 7 of the Scouts BSA Handbook and Fieldbook chapters about Leave No Trace, using stoves and campfires, hygiene and waste disposal, and traveling and camping in special environments.
Facilitate your troop’s leadership in planning and leading an outing that emphasizes the complete set of Leave No Trace or Tread Lightly! principles. All members of the troop participating in the outing should use outdoor ethics and the specific skills to minimize impacts from their use of the outdoors.
Help plan and participate in at least three outings where your troop can follow the Outdoor Code and practice the principles of Leave No Trace and Tread Lightly! Facilitate a discussion at the end of the outings.
Assist your unit in arranging for a service project emphasizing outdoor ethics with a local landowner or land manager. The project must be approved by the landowner or land manager in advance. Participate in that project. The project should lead to permanent or long-term improvements.
Make, or facilitate youth in making, a presentation at a roundtable or similar gathering about what your troop did for Requirement 4.
Help at least three Scouts earn the youth Outdoor Ethics Action Award.