Skills

45 Possible Horizon Award Board of Review Questions

​I spend a lot of time thinking about what it is we do in Trail Life USA, and what we are trying to accomplish.  To that end, I have gone over the requirements for the Horizon Award extensively and compiled a list of possible Board of Review questions for a Horizon Award candidate.  Obviously you aren’t going to ask All forty-five, and you might be inspired to write your own after reading these, using none of mine.  That said, these are here for you to use if you desire.  Look them over, see which ones resonate with you, and go from there!  

When you get to the end of the list, there’s also a gift idea, should you wish to reward a young man who earns the Horizon Award!  ​

Without further ado, I present, 45 Questions to ask a Horizon Award candidate:​

  1. What was your worst Troop camping experience?

  2. What did you learn from it?

  3. How have you contributed to First Officers’ Conferences during the past six months?

  4. Why do you think the Citizenship, Family Man and Personal Resources Trail Badges Are required for the Horizon Award?

  5. What leadership position do you currently hold?

  6. What challenges has your position presented?

  7. How have you handled difficulties in your leadership position?

  8. Of the Trail Badges that you have earned, which one do you think will be most beneficial to you in the future?

  9. Do you have brothers in Trail Life or sisters in American Heritage Girls?

  10. How can you assist them in reaching their goals?

  11. Why do you think the Ready Trailman Rank And Horizon Award both require so many service hours?

  12. Do you think that you will carry a commitment to serving your community into adulthood?

  13. What do you believe is the purpose of a Board of Review?

  14. Why do you think the words Adventure, Character and Leadership are featured prominently in the Trail Life USA logo?

  15. The Trailman Oath states that we should “respect authority.” Why do you think that’s important?

  16. That Trailman Oath states that we should “be a good steward of Creation.” Why do you believe that’s important?

  17. Where do you think Trail Life found the phrase “Treat others as I want to be treated” that is part of the Trailman Oath?

  18. Have you decided what you want to do for your Servant Leadership Project?

  19. Do you feel as though Trail Life USA has been a valuable use of your time since joining?

  20. How has being a member of this Troop changed the way you deal with the people around you?

  21. Aside from your parents, who has had the biggest impact on you? Why?

  22. What is the most difficult part of the Trailman Oath for you to live out in your daily life, and why?

  23. What does the phrase “Walk Worthy” mean to you?

  24. What do you think we can do to improve our Troop?

  25. What should other leaders expect of you, if they know that you’ve earned the Horizon Award?

  26. How can you make an impact on the lives and growth of the Trailmen in the Woodlands Trail Program?

  27. Why do you think we utilize the Patrol Method in Troop XX?

  28. Can you explain any personal growth you’ve experienced as a result of participating in your Patrol?

  29. Tell me about a time when you had to deal with another Trailman not doing his part during a campout. Do you think you handled it well? How could you have improved that interaction?

  30. Tell me how you contributed to the overall betterment of the most recent campout.

  31. How many campouts have you attended this program year? Which was your favorite and why?

  32. How have you contributed to the betterment of Troop XX since becoming an Adventurer?

  33. What is the one skill you think that you could most improve in your leadership abilities?

  34. What was the most difficult Trail Badge you had to earn for your Horizon Award?

  35. Do you plan to pursue the Freedom Award? Why do you want (or not want) to earn it?

  36. Have you decided what Freedom Experiences you will pursue? Why did you choose those specific experiences?

  37. What outdoor skill do you enjoy the most and why?

  38. What was your favorite experience during your Trail Life USA “career” and why? What, if anything, did you learn from it?

  39. How do you feel about your First Aid skills?

  40. Do you plan to serve in leadership positions after earning your Horizon Award?

  41. Do you think that participating in Trail Life USA has positively influenced your character?

  42. Tell me about two of the Elective Trail Badges you’ve earned. Why did you choose them? What did you learn from them?

  43. How many Troop Events have you participated in during this past program year? Do you think you should have been more involved?

  44. Have you participated in any of our High Adventure Trips? What did you get out of that?

  45. Have you ever taught a Woodlands Trail unit? ***If yes - What did you get out of that? ***If no - Why not?

What do you guys think?​

Any ideas for questions that I should add to the list?  ​

Any of these rub you funny?  Let me know if you think I should remove any, and why.  ​

If you made it this far and you found this list useful, you can reward the author and reward your Horizon Award recipient at the same time, while receiving a 50% discount on a single coin for a limited time!  This discount applies to any one coin listed in the “Adventurers Coins” category.  Use code “HORIZON” to buy a gift for your Horizon Award candidate/recipient today!

Adventurers Coin - As Low As $5 Each!
$9.99

Why Do We Camp in Trail Life USA Troop TX-0098?

After our Troop campout this past weekend, I woke up this morning with a few things on my heart.  I shared the following with our Troop, and thought maybe a few nuggets of usefulness would be present for other leaders.  Maybe not.  I’m not a writer and this is mostly raw, unedited, unrefined stream-of-consciousness, but here goes:

Just a “short” reminder that camping has a higher purpose and is just a vessel, through which we *hopefully* accomplish so much more.

I genuinely believe that this weekend was one of the best campouts that we’ve had in quite some time.

It certainly wasn’t because we had beautiful, clear skies the entire time or because things were comfortable and easy.

It also wasn’t because everyone knew exactly what to do, how to do it, or because we were 100% prepared for every possible situation or difficulty.

In fact, the running lights on our trailer went out on the way there, I was pulled over by a Sheriff due to said lights (that’s the first time I know of for that to happen on a Troop campout in the past ten years), we had our first broken bones that I know of in the 20 year history of our Troop, it rained for a significant portion of the trip, it hailed, we had water inside of our Troop tents for the first time ever, we had first timers who had no clue what they were doing, we had teenage boys walking through a difficult time of life and adult men with different opinions of how things should be done, and we had Trailmen who were disappointed that they didn’t earn badges they had hoped for.  For each of those things, let me extend an apology for things outside of the control of men. 

But let us also consider that maybe character isn’t built by sleeping in a temperature-controlled hotel room with room service.  Maybe our young men won’t learn to lead others *only* by reading a handbook.  Maybe they aren’t going to figure out how to respect an axe, hatchet or pocket knife by watching YouTube videos.  Maybe, if we avoid all possibilities of injury or disagreement or bad weather, we won’t ever have the opportunity to give these young men the various skills that they’ll desperately need someday.

There’s nothing wrong with a hotel room, or YouTube, or reading a handbook. Each can be useful, but by getting out in the Lord’s Creation, experiencing the unexpected, and rising to new challenges, these men of tomorrow are building skills that many won’t have.

To the seven dads who joined me in building into the young men this weekend: THANK YOU!!  Believe me, I know it isn’t easy to show up every week for meetings and/or every month for campouts, year after year for a decade, but our sons need you.  They need every dad that they can get - speaking life, encouragement, courage, skills, Biblical teaching, values and character into them and sharing adventure with them as frequently as possible. 

They need all of us men, building a better village for tomorrow, so that they can go out into the world in a few short years with the best tool kit they could possibly wield.  What tool can you add to their belt?

If any of you have had the unfortunate luck of experiencing a campout where I am the primary lead adult, you are painfully aware that these boys will need the skills of other dads.  How can you help?

I can’t even begin to thank each of you enough for your efforts to help me raise Kyle to be the kind of Godly man that I pray he will become.  Trail Life USA, Troop 98, and you men have built so much into him, and I am blessed to watch it happen and see the effects on who he is.  

Each trip, each adventure, each Wisdom from the Wild, each Chapel service, each time he messes up and receives correction, each time he falls and is lifted by others, each time he gets to laugh and experience something new, his world is opened up in great new ways.  I pray that the same is true for each of your sons.

Each of you dads brings something different - gifts, skills, knowledge, abilities, passions, and so much more - to the table.  During the course of a weekend, each of you will feel a nudge from the Lord to bring a word or to teach a skill or speak encouragement or tell a joke or to cook something or to remind a young man to be careful or even to take calculated risks - that will never come from me.

These are the things that a community does for one another. 

That’s what Troop 98 does for each other.

We are all in this for different reasons, and I get that.  We want our sons to have more friends.  Our sons want to camp or canoe or hike or learn to tie knots.  We want them to have one more avenue where they hear about Jesus in a different environment.  We want them to, or they want to, earn a specific rank or award or even ALL the awards.  We want them to be better people than we are or to experience things we wanted to do as kids, but couldn’t.  Some of us want all of that and more!

Whatever the reason you and your son are involved, whatever God used to bring you here, let’s all commit together to view this as a ministry.  Look at it through Kingdom-colored glasses.  Consider what you have to bring to the table and do it the best you can.  Ask the Lord to show you where you can help, and jump in.  Talk to your son about what he’d like to see you do in the Troop.  Talk to an adult leader about where we need you.  Look for ways to be a blessing to the boys and the other dads around you.  Look for ways to build  the Kingdom of God, by building into 50 young men!  This applies to Tuesday nights and monthly campouts the same.

Lastly, let me assure you that if you do, I can promise you that eventually, several things will happen:

1. You’ll be even more exhausted than you already are,

2. The exhaustion will be 100% worthwhile if you ask yourself about the most important things in your life,

3. You will see your son and the men around you through different eyes,

4. You’ll wonder why you didn’t get involved sooner,

5. You’ll come to a point where the end of your son’s time in the Troop and his 18th birthday are both rapidly approaching, and you’ll be saddened that you have only a little time left to make the difference you’ve always wanted to make in his life,

6. You’ll cultivate some of the best friendships that you never realized were possible, and

7. Your only regrets, a few years down the road, will be that you didn’t do a better job, more for your son, or more for the Troop.   

Thank you for taking the time to read this, but thank you even more for committing right now to pray about what you can do for our young men, and thus for the world of tomorrow.