Participate in a conference with your advisor midway through your
tenure to discuss and evaluate your responsibilities and the performance
of your duties. (Note: You can still have a conference with your
advisor at any time. If you feel like having a discussion, just ask.)
Resources: As
PL, there are many resources available to you to help you
do your
job. These
include people such as your Scoutmaster,
ASM’s, Troop Committee Members, and other Scouts. Other
resources include teachers, religious leaders, community leaders,
and fellow
junior leaders. There is also literature available, some of which
is in the Troop Library
The Patrol Leader's Creed
I will develop spirit in my Patrol
I will be cheerful constantly. I will be the fast friend of
all the Patrol Members and be ready at all times to serve
them. They can count on me to have a new song, a fresh idea
or a stunt at my finger's end and we will all be as thick
as the Forty Thieves.
I will advance along the Scout ladder
I will steadily step up from Tenderfoot to Second Class, to
First Class and through all the Merit Badges to the Eagle Rank,
so that I may be a guide and perhaps the inspiration for the
rest of my fellows to go and do likewise.
I will do a Good Turn daily
I will not let the Good Turn Idea be a thing like my best necktie,
that I use only on special occasions. Neither will I automatically
stop looking for and doing Good Turns after the first one of
the day. Just because I have already done my Good Turn for
the day is no reason at all why I should refuse to grab the
opportunity to help grandmother find her specs or put ice in
the refrigerator for mother.
I will live the Scout Oath and Law
I will remember always that I must be loyal and I will not
misjudge Bill when he plays me what seems to be a dirty trick.
And I will be exceedingly cheerful, even when it hurts, when
it would do my old heart good to backbite and be sarcastic
or even just plain grouchy. I will take time, once in a while,
to sit down and think what it means to do my duty to my country
... and to other people and to God... I will remember that
it is a part of the Scout Law and make good old soap my constant
companion. I will remember that it works just as well on my
uniform as on my hands and neck and behave accordingly. I will
be thrifty, even though it hurts and my heart years for an
extra tennis racquet and I have just about twelve dollars in
the bank. The best thing I can do, then, is to sock another
dollar in there to make a lucky thirteen and go whistling on
my way. I will be trustworthy and absolutely reliable always
and my Scoutmaster may count on me to be on time for every
meeting and hike.
I will lead my Patrol
I will remember that I am the Patrol Leader and that I am responsible
for what my fellows do and how they act and I will take steps
to make sure that they respect my leadership. I will plan carefully
all my Patrol Meetings and the parts of the Troop Meetings
for which I am responsible. I will take an active interest
in all my Patrol projects and stunts and contribute my fair
share of all Patrol work. I will be fair to my Assistant and
train him in Patrol management to the best of my ability. I
will be alert to the possibilities of all my fellows in my
Patrol and will call upon them frequently to add their share
to the Troop and Patrol work.
I will plan my work
I know that there is only one way to be a successful director
and leader and that is to know what I am trying to accomplish
and how I want it done. I will not hold a Patrol meeting without
first being very sure that I know just what I want Tom and
John to do in connection with the song-fest and the games the
Troop is to pull at the next meeting, and how I am going to
get Frank to see that he ought to pass First Aid to clear up
his work on the First Class tests.
I will be generous and give credit where it is due
I know that there is nothing that helps a fellow so much as
a word of encouragement and to cheer when he has done a job
well. I want to be on the lookout for fellows who do more than
their share of the work and let them know that I appreciate
their spirit. I will not take credit for their work and when
Ed has a particularly fine First Class map I will be very sure
that all the fellows in the Troop get a chance to look it over
and congratulate him on his work.