CORNWALL COUNTY SCOUT COUNCIL

www.cornwallscouts.co.uk - The official website for scouting in Cornwall
Home
About Us
Site Map
News
Development
For Sale
Beaver Scouts
Cub Scouts
Scouts
Explorer Scouts
Scout Network
Scout Fellowship
Districts
County
Leader Training
Non-Scouting Awards
Duke of Edinburgh's Award
ASC Challenge Award
John Muir Award
Discovery Award
Navigation Award
V - Volunteering
Scouting Trust
Activities
Camping & Activity Sites
Edge Adventure
Centenary Archive
2008 Events & Activities
2009 Events & Activities
2010 Events & Activities
2011 Events & Activities
Weather Conditions
Website Links
Contact Us
 
John Muir Award
 

 
 
The John Muir Award & Scouting
The best way to use this award, is as a 'purpose' to run alongside you Expedition Section of your Duke of Edinburgh's Award or Queen's Scout Award
 
What is the John Muir Award?
The John Muir Award is an environmental Award scheme focused on wild places. This could be any where from a mountaintop to a city garden. It encourages the discovery and conservation of wild places, in a spirit of fun, adventure and exploration. The Award is non-competitive, open to all and is the educational initiative of the John Muir Trust. There are three Levels of the John Muir Award, encouraging a progressive involvement. All levels of the Award are based on meeting the same four challenges of:

Discover: Get out in a wild place. This could be your garden, a nearby park, a high mountain, or a local beach. This challenge is all about discovering your own wild place.

Explore: Find out more about your wild place. Look at the plants and animals that live there, travel through it, or spend a night camping out and find out what it sounds like at night. Exploring is about getting to know and experience a place.

Conserve: John Muir set up the world's first national park and was committed to ‘putting something back’ into wild places. So for this challenge you need to do something to help take responsibility for your wild place. You could be planting trees or plants, maintaining paths, minimising your impact or perhaps conducting a survey of the wildlife that lives there. It's your turn to look after your wild place.

Share: A major part of the Award is to encourage people to value wild places. So throughout your Award we ask that you find ways to share what you are doing. This could be a group discussion around a campfire, a display at school or work, or maybe a contribution to a website. It could be artwork, information leaflets or taking other people out to enjoy the places you have discovered. This is the chance to share your experiences with others.

Who does the John Muir Award?
Anyone can do the award. We work with a wide range of groups and individuals, including schools, families, youth groups, charities, disability groups, outdoor education centres, countryside ranger services and anyone else you care to think of. If you like to work or play in the outdoors then you could do the John Muir Award.

Why do the John Muir Award?
Because it:
Acknowledges what organisations and individuals already do in terms of outdoor and environmental activity
Encourages more activity in, and responsibility for, wild places
Provides a structure to encourage environmental awareness, responsibility, understanding and appreciation
It can be used alongside existing initiatives, programmes and the National Curriculum
Celebrates what's achieved

What does it cost & what do we offer?
Participating in the John Muir Award is free for groups and individuals alike.

At the John Muir Award office we offer:
Support in developing a proposal for your Award activity
Resources such as record books, an informational video (or DVD) and useful information (e.g. local bio-diversity action plans) to help you with your Award
Certificates for every individual in recognition and celebration of your Award
What next?
If this has captured your imagination and you want to do a John Muir Award then here are the basic steps:


More information:
The John Muir Award information handbook provides you with all you need to know to run the John Muir award. There are a lot of resources, examples and testimonials about the value of the Award, available.
Fill in a Proposal Form: This is a short form (1 page) that outlines what you / your group wants to do to achieve a John Muir Award. Make sure you have read through the Award criteria and thought about how you will meet each challenge. The form can be downloaded from their website. Within 2 weeks: A Regional Manager from the John Muir Award office will give you a call to talk through your Proposal Form. Once it is agreed that the proposal meets the John Muir Award criteria, you are good to get started.
Get started: You are now good to go and get on with discovering, exploring, conserving and sharing your experiences of your wild place
Getting finished: Once you have completed your award activity send a Certificate Request Form to your local office. A Regional Manager will give you a call to talk through what you have done for your Award and then send out a certificate. Now you can start planning for the next level of the John Muir Award.

Tel: 0845 458 2910