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Tips
for the Daisy Girl Scout Meeting
In
this busy world of ours, a Daisy Girl Scout meeting can be a happy
time-out for girls and a special occasion for you as their first Girl
Scout leader. It is your opportunity to make a big difference in their
lives and well worth your time in planning a successful experience.
Here are some suggestions to help you ensure a pleasant and meaningful
troop meeting.
Be prepared
Setting up materials and reviewing the
day’s plans are important preparation steps. Having a brief meeting
before the girls arrive, with the assistant leader and others providing
support to the troop, helps to bring the leadership together as a team.
You can accomplish this in person or by telephone conference.
Plan a pre-meeting
activity
Daisy Girl Scouts may be on various
schedules and arrive at scattered times before the troop meeting. It is
very important to set up a pre-meeting activity with the help of an
assistant or program aide. This contributes to the girls’ ability to do
things independently and gives you the opportunity to greet each girl
and any family members who come to the meeting. Some successful
pre-meeting activities include homemade puzzles made from a magazine
picture mounted on cardboard and then cut into big puzzle pieces,
drawing, looking at and reading books, working on Daisy Girl Scout
scrapbooks, or playing a game everyone knows and can join as they
arrive.
Connect with each
girl
As each girl arrives, take time to say
hello and find out how she is feeling. It means giving her a smile, a
hug or a handshake and letting her know you are glad she came. It will
show her how much you care and give you clues about each girl’s state of
mind before the meeting begins.
Use the five and
one minute warnings
Daisy Girl Scouts need to know ahead of
time when one activity is about to end and another begin. This helps
them to find what they are doing and move smoothly into the next
activity without feeling rushed or robbed of time. Before a transition,
let them know they have five minutes to finish. Then remind them again
one minute before the transition.
Establish routines
Involving Daisy Girl Scouts in the
meeting routines is essential in ensuring their interest in the
meeting. It becomes their meeting when they know what the day’s plans
are. Post Kaper Charts that list the girls who are helping with
particular meeting tasks. This will help the troop become organized and
responsible.
When you establish meeting routines, it is important to help the girls
learn how to use the meeting space and materials properly. Everyone
should be familiar with the locations of materials, bathrooms, exit
doors, fire drill procedures, and the like.
Plan Opening
Ceremonies
Opening ceremonies are a very important
part of the Daisy Girl Scout meeting; the signal that the meeting is
really starting. They are also your opportunity to begin the meeting in
an enjoyable and meaningful way and to bring the girls together as a
group. Opening ceremonies can include simple flag ceremonies, group
cheers and greetings, singing favorite songs, telling a short story,
reading or reciting a poem, or sharing a thought for the day. Reciting
the Promise and saying the parts of the Law will help each girl
understand her special place in Girl Scouting.
One of the kapers or jobs for the girls should be helping to plan the
next opening ceremony. Take five minutes at the end of a meeting for a
planning session with those girls who have signed up for this kaper.
Enjoy a sharing
time
Sharing time helps develop good
relationships and communication. The more the troop knows and cares
about each of its members, the more responsive each member will be to
the needs of the other members and the troop as a whole.
During the sharing time, encourage girls to talk about their interests,
feeling, and daily experiences. Set a good example for your Daisy Girl
Scouts by truly listening to what girls say. This will inspire girls to
do the same for one another, especially if sharing times are brief to
prevent the girls from becoming bored or restless. If sharing time is a
routine part of the meeting, they will be reassured that they will have
their turn to share at the next meeting.
Involve Daisy Girl
Scouts in planning activities
Daisy Girl Scouts have lots of ideas and
if you involve them in planning what they do, they will become more
interested in the troop. They learn that the Girl Scout meeting is a
place where there are people who regard what they think, who respect
what they say, and who really care about them. This is also an
important first step in cultivating the girl/adult partnership that will
foster leadership skills in the future.
Daisy Girl Scouts make their formal decisions about what they will do as
a troop in the Daisy Girl Scout Circle. This is their form
of troop government. Your girls can meet in the Daisy Girl Scout Circle
once a month, twice a month, or whenever there is a need for the troop
to get together to make formal decisions for planning troop activities.
You can help girls in the Daisy Girl Scout Circle to share
their ideas, listen to one another, and make troop decisions. Decisions
can be made by consensus or voting. You will then need to spend time
and effort helping the girls follow up on the decisions they make.
Every effort should be made to incorporate their plans and ideas into
the main activities of the troop meetings.
Snack time
Snack time tasks are also included on the
kaper chart. With adults helping to pour the beverages, Daisy Girl
Scouts assigned to this kaper can serve the rest of the snack. Whether
snack time is before or after the main activity, it should be an
enjoyable time when the girls can relax with one another and enjoy the
treats.
Clean up
Clean up is another job on the kaper
chart. Clean up is really everyone’s responsibility, but one or two
girls can be assigned as checkers to make sure the meeting place is left
clean and in good order. This responsibility can be rotated among the
girls.
You may feel it is easier and faster to pick up after the girls
yourself, but resist the temptation. Clean up is a troop responsibility
and another opportunity for girls to feel ownership in the meeting.
Adults should help clean up as members of the troop.
Finish with a
closing ceremony
Closing ceremonies are very important for
Daisy Girl Scouts. They end the meeting in a meaningful way and bring
everyone together before they have to leave.
A
few girls may be assigned to plan the closing ceremony and can get
together with you ahead of time to decide on what to do. Some popular
closing ceremonies include the friendship circle and squeeze, saying
goodbye in other languages, a group hug, singing a goodnight or goodbye
song, simple flag ceremonies, sharing thoughts for the day, or reciting
the Girl Scout Promise.
Making the right
goodbye connections
Parents should be aware of the importance of coming for their children
promptly when the meeting is over. Take the time to learn the names and
the faces of those who are responsible for picking up each girl in the
troop to ensure the girls are making the right connections. Encourage
the girls to tell you when a different person is coming to pick them up,
but rely primarily on parents and guardians for this information.
Remembering to follow through will all these basics will help the
typical Daisy Girl Scout meeting become an exciting and memorable
occasion – one that you and your troop always look forward to.
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