Girl Scout Silver Award
Highest Award for Girl Scouts Grades 6-8
Click here for our
2009 Silver Award Recipients
Silver Award Workshop for girls already in the process of the Gold Award perquisites:
Thursday, Sept. 24, 2009
6:30PM ($6.00)
Camp Rotary
Silver Award Workshop for girls beginning the Silver Award perquisites (New Requirements):
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
6:30PM ($2.00)
Shelby Girl Scout Hut, Shelby
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
6:30 PM ($2.00)
Carolina Community Care Center, Forest City
Making Silver Dreams Come True!
The Girl Scout Silver Award represents a girl's accomplishments in Girl
Scouting and her community as she grows and works to improve her life
and the lives of others. The first four requirements of the Girl Scout
Silver Award help girls build skills, explore careers, gain leadership
skills, and make a commitment to self-improvement. The Girl Scout
Silver Award Project can be undertaken when the first four
requirements are completed. It can be done as an individual or with a
group. If done with a group, a girl must be responsible for a specific
part of the project and evaluate her contribution to the project and
the group.
Requirements
A girl must be age 11 or going into the sixth grade to begin work on the
first four steps of her Girl Scout Silver Award. She must be 12 or going
into the seventh grade to start work on steps 5 and 6. She must complete
steps 5 and 6 by age 15 or before the start of the 10th grade.
Steps
- Get Ready
- Download Go For It! Silver Award Workshop Booklet
- Read Go for It! The Girl Scout Silver Award STUDIO 2B Insert.
- Meet with advisor and develop a timeline for STEPS 2-4.
- Make an agreement with adult advisor.
- Girl Scout Silver Leadership Award (charm)
- Earn three Interest Project Awards found in Interest Projects for Girls 11-17 related to parts of the Girl Scout Promise and Law.
- Earn the STUDIO 2B Focus: uniquely me! The Real Deal charm.
- Put leadership into action: spend 15 hours in a leadership role
- Use the Go for It! The Girl Scout Silver Award STUDIO 2B Insert to keep records and a journal for discussion with advisor.
- The Girl Scout Silver Career Award (charm)
- What's Out There?
- Who's Out There?
- Be Your Own Boss - Earn "Your Own Business"
Interest Project Award
- Use Go for It! The Girl Scout Silver Award STUDIO 2B Insert to
"journal it" for discussion with advisor.
- The Girl Scout Silver 4Bs Challenge Charm
- Become: Set goals for self-improvement.
- Belong: Earn the charm from the STUDIO 2B Focus book: Looking in, Reaching Out.
- Believe: Identify an issue in school or community that you feel strongly about. Find out more about it. Use your voice to address it.
- Build: Focus on coming up with a solution to address a problem.
Use Go for It! The Girl Scout Silver Award STUDIO 2B Insert to "journal it" for discussion with advisor.
Note: Planning hours for the Silver 4Bs Challenge may be applied to the Girl Scout Silver Award hours in STEP 5.
- The Girl Scout Silver Award Project
- Plan It
- Know More About It
- Choose It
- Map It
- Adjust plans if necessary
- Do It! The project should:
- Take approximately 40 hours to complete (including planning time)
- Provide community service, but can be done inside or outside of Girl Scouting
- Be approved by your leader or advisor.
Note: Permission for any money-earning related to project must be obtained from Girl Scout council.
- Think About It
- After reading Go for It! The Girl Scout Silver Award STUDIO 2B Insert, evaluate your project with your advisor.
- Submit the Girl Scout Silver Award Final Report (PDF) to the Council and use it as an evaluation guideline.
Completion
Evaluate your project with your Girl Scout Silver Award advisor. You may need to fill out the Girl Scout Silver Award Final Report Form (PDF), have your advisor sign it, and submit it to your Girl Scout Council office.
Many Girl Scout councils honor Girl Scout Silver Awardees at a special ceremony in the spring of the year. In order to be eligible for the award, find out what the submission deadline is for your council. Ceremonies can also be planned by individuals, groups, or service units to honor girls upon completion of their award.
Inspiration Corner
Need inspiration? Here are some sample projects to get you thinking.
- Clean up a polluted stream for wildlife
- Create a "science nook" at a school
- Create a Lou Henry Hoover Memorial Sanctuary at camp
- Establish a sustainable food pantry in your community
- Host a walker "pit stop" for an extended breast cancer walk
- Learn to be clowns and visit hospitals or senior centers
- Make puppet boxes to accompany stories for Daisy and Brownie Girl Scouts
- Plan and coordinate a math day for younger girls
- Put on a bicycle safety fair in your community
- Start a sustainable recycling program at school
- Write and perform a puppet play to teach children safety tips they can use when not in school.