Showing posts with label Left Girl Scouts For a While. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Left Girl Scouts For a While. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Jumi A-S (Girl Scout Leader)


Jumi grew up an only-child in Chiba, Japan. When she was eight, her father decided she should be more of a people-person, so he signed her up to be a Brownie with her local Girl Scout Troop.
When Jumi was a Brownie, she remembers her troop mainly focusing on songs and games. When she progressed to being a Junior however, they began to learn skills like building a tent or creating a DIY oven. The different skills started becoming harder and harder, making Jumi want to quit. But after she talked with her Girl Scout leader she gave it all another try and continued being a Girl Scout. Nowadays, Jumi’s friends often compliment her on her perseverance and determination.
When Jumi was still a Senior Scout, she took her first troop trip out of country to visit Quezon City in the Philippines. This was the first opportunity Jumi got to use her English socially and it made her realize that if she wanted to communicate properly with people around the world she would need to study harder. So when Jumi returned to Japan, she threw herself into her studies.
Later on, Jumi became a Brownie leader of her own Girl Scout troop. She taught her girls the skills, songs and games she learned when she was a Scout and watched them grow into Ranger Scouts.
As a Girl Scout, Jumi wore a navy blue ensemble of a skirt, shirt and cap. The uniform was the same until about two years ago where the uniform changed to reflect level. As a leader, Jumi wears a uniform consisting of a navy-blue suit.
World Thinking Day has remained unchanged from when Jumi was a girl however. In Jumi’s area, they choose eight global action themes a year. Each troop chooses two to focus on and then the council has a group discussion.
Two of the songs that Jumi taught her troop are the Princess Pat (a song Jumi learned in the USA) and Conpact. Conpact is a Japanese game song where the girls dance as they sing about getting ready for a date.
Jumi’s troop celebrates the holidays together with parties at New Year and Christmas. They also have cooking competitions where they quiz the girls who are “on the stage” about different skills and dishes.
Instead of the American cookie selling, they go around collecting donations for UNICEF once a year. Jumi often takes this opportunity to teach her girls about how to handle money and how the money they collect will be spent. As Ranger Scouts, they used these skills to help them help people affected by the Earthquake.
Jumi has traveled to the USA for Girl Scouts and she noticed a few differences between the American and Japanese Girl Scout Way.  One difference is troops are attached to schools in America, while in Japan they are attached as one troop per town. She also noticed a difference in teaching style. She used the idiom “don’t cry over spilled milk” to illustrate her point. She said that when a Japanese Girl Scout spilled milk, the Leader would be sweet and come help her clean it up with a paper towel or a mop, but if an American Girl Scout spilled milk, the leader would give her a hint to clean it up. Jumi noticed benefits in both of the methods, but she said that if she was continually helping a girl clean up her “spilled milk”, the girl would never learn to do it on her own.
At this point in time, Girl Scout’s is Jumi’s life. Her troop is “like a house” and her family is inside.

If you want to know the stages in Japanese Girl Scouting, go to the Index Page and check near the bottom.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Harini P. (Ambassador)


Harini began her Girl Scout career the same way many girls do: she joined her local (Wisconsin) troop in elementary school with a bunch of friends. During this time (2001 – 2004), she remembers many things that she had a lot of fun doing.
One of those things was the local Fall Festival. She and her troop decorated pumpkins. After that, as fall passed into winter, she sang at the senior center and skated around the ice rink.
Harini left her Girl Scout troop in 2004 to move to California, and for the next few years she was involved in choir and school centered activities. In 2011, she found out she could rejoin Girl Scouts.
In her new troop (during High school at the age of an Ambassador), she has done many things including gaining a passion for the Women's Rights Movement. One of the things that really affected Harini was when she learned about the "horrors and the terrible things that happen to women of all ages, all colors, all religions and all sizes around the world." She was really affected by the book and movie Half the Sky. She knows for a fact that she wants to volunteer and get involved more with promoting women’s rights through Girl Scouts and on her own.
She says Girl Scouts taught her how to be a good citizen, student, friend, daughter and person. Girl Scouts has taught her to be confident and proud of goodness in opposition to the current belief that one shouldn’t be too much of a "goody two-shoes." It encouraged her to pursue what she loves. It has taught her the valuable lesson that kindness is a strong asset.
In her words, Girl Scouts “makes you feel like you are important even though you might think that you are just one person amongst millions of people in this world. It reminds you that each person makes up the world and if everyone can just think positive thoughts and believe in their worth, then we can actually really effect the world that we live in a good way.”
She plans to become a troop leader, and help mentor and give feedback back to middle school and high school girls.