Inspired by National Cadet Corps (NCC), this innovative activity encourages students to be always ready to help others and recognises their efforts by awarding them different badges/ribbons. The main idea is that students get opportunities to hone their sense of responsibility and empathy, and they willingly start identifying ways to develop leadership and life skills through self-development, challenge, adventure and fun!
Scouts & Guides is all about young children’s all-round development. Their general knowledge improves, and they learn important skills required for better learning in classroom and in life, including sense of Duty, Commitment, Discipline, Leadership and Teamwork. Their confidence and self-esteem also improves significantly. This activity is most suitable for upper primary class, and can also be integrated with syllabus topics.
Teachers spend 10-15 minutes talking to students about the importance of helping others. In this discussion, the difference between sympathy and empathy can also be mentioned. Sympathy means you merely pity someone’s misfortune. Whereas empathy means that you understand the feelings of another and take some action to comfort this person. Then, discuss with students how they can lend a helping hand to their classmates, family members, neighbours, pets and stray animals. For this, they do not have to take any risky work. Sometimes simple and intuitive tasks can be a big support to others.
1. Introduce Scouts & Guides to your class as a game of collecting badges/ribbons of all the colours within one academic year, by helping others in their school, home or community. Provide examples, like helping parents with household work (cleaning, feeding animals, feeding siblings etc.). The second example is teaching classmates, younger siblings or neighbourhood students. Another one is of helping the elderly persons cross the road, or fetch water, or visit the market.
2. Scouts & Guides can also be integrated with subject topics taught in the classroom. For example, if students have read about mosquito-borne diseases or about cleanliness, then the teacher can ask them to help their neighbours ensure there is no stagnant water in their homes, bathrooms drainage is not blocked, kitchen is clean, etc.
3. Students must write a description of the helping work done in their Scouts & Guides notebook.
4. At the end of every week (or month), the teacher reviews students’ notebooks and presents them the respective colour badges/ribbons based on the type of help provided by them. (If the teacher is not sure whether a student has written the truth or not, he/she may ask follow up questions and assess the student’s sincerity.)
5. At the end of the academic year, students who have managed to collect badges/ribbons of all the colours are applauded and recognised in the class.
6. At year-end/annual day celebrations, the teacher may also invite various persons helped by the students, so they can share their experience and further encourage children to continue the good work.
This activity improves teacher-student trust and bonding, and also creates a cordial, supportive learning environment as classmates get to understand each other’s goodness. Values of gratitude and humility can be especially encouraged through this activity, along with curiosity and urge to understand things better.
The teacher will need to create and hang a postbox in the classroom. You may decorate an empty cardboard box with colourful paper and write 'My Postbox, My Voice' on it. Students may also participate in decoration work.
Discuss with students that to stay on the path of righteousness as we grow up, it is important to keep asking questions and seek answers, so the right people can guide us at the right time. Also, many times, it is not easy to practice good behaviour. Even simple values-based tasks, like saying ‘thank you’ and ‘sorry’, can be a challenge if we are influenced by ego, hierarchy and social status. Overcoming these hesitations, and finding a way to express our thoughts is important. After this, encourage them towards character building by taking the following steps on a regular basis:
- After reading a chapter on India’s Independence Movement, a student posted a letter asking why it was considered okay for Indian freedom fighters to throw bombs, but not okay for British soldiers to arrest them when actually it was the law? - When a student’s sister got married, she was given dowry. The student posted an anonymous letter expressing strong opinion against the dowry system, which he could not speak among his family members being the youngest person. - Two friends had a misunderstanding and stopped talking to each other. After many months, when one of them could not bear the loneliness, she posted an anonymous letter to her angered friend, with just one line saying ‘Sorry I did not like that every day you expected me to follow your orders.’
By Sri Aurobindo Society Rupantar

