The Digital Citizen Staged Activity badge is part of the movement’s first first major overhaul in 25 years. Photograph: Scouts.org The Digital Citizen Staged Activity badge is part of the movement’s first first major overhaul in 25 years. Photograph: Scouts.org Scouts and scouting ‘More relevant than making fires’: Explorer Scouts launch badges for AI and digital age Content creation and online safety among new topics for 14- to 18-year-olds – but tweaks may be needed when social media ban comes in
Prefer the Guardian on Google Scouts are introducing badges in content creation, digital communication and online safety after consulting nearly 3,000 teenagers who said they wanted skills to help them navigate a world increasingly shaped by AI, social media and digital technology.
The new Explorer Scout badges, part of the Scout movement’s first major overhaul in almost 25 years, will require 14- to 18-year olds to explore how digital communities shape opinion, create online campaigns, investigate digital footprints and design toolkits to help others stay safe online.
Ministers, schools and parents continue to debate whether children should face tighter restrictions on smartphone and social media use, including proposals for a ban on social media for under-16s.
View image in fullscreen Elie Mondah: ‘It’s key to modern life.’ Photograph: Martyn Milner/Martyn Milner/The Scouts Among the new badges is a content creation award, which asks young people to explore how digital communities can influence change, create content intended to positively influence their communities and develop digital storytelling projects.
A communication badge includes modules on digital footprints and the impact of social media and digital communication, while a personal safety badge requires young people to design resources to help others manage online risks.
Andrew Thorp, a Scout leader involved in developing the programme, said the changes reflected what young people themselves had asked for. “The programme for Explorer Scouts has not been overhauled for nearly a quarter of a century,” he said.
“What was really clear is that young people want to be able to get skills that will help them in their lives going forward, and they want to find a place to belong.”
The movement’s approach reflected the changing realities of young people’s lives, he said. “Next year, we’re 120 years old. When Scouts started there were different pressures, different motivations. Life was very different. It taught young people how to do things in a way that was relevant to their lives then.
“Now, clearly these kinds of skills are super relevant. With the development of AI, that will become more and more part of all of our lives.”
The organisation said guidance for the badges would be updated if necessary when the government introduced restrictions on social media use by younger teenagers. He said young people aged 14 to 16 would be reminded not to use social media to share material they created if such a ban came into force.
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View image in fullscreen Ethan Watkins: ‘School isn’t educating us about it.’ Photograph: Martyn Milner/Martyn Milner/The Scouts But Thorp suggested the debate risked missing the point. “This is about giving people skills for the future,” he said.…
