Saturday, September 26, 2009

Working Your Ticket

The phrase 'working your ticket' comes from a story attributed to Baden-Powell: Upon completion of a British soldier's service in India, he had to pay the cost of his ticket home. The most affordable way for a soldier to return was to engineer a progression of assignments that were successively closer to home.

Part of the transformative power of the Wood Badge experience is the effective use of metaphor and tradition to reach both heart and mind. In most Scout associations, "working your ticket" is the cumulation of Wood Badge training. Participants apply themselves and their new knowledge and skills to the completion of items designed to strengthen the individual's leadership and the home unit's organizational resilience in a project or "ticket". The ticket consists of specific goals that must be accomplished within a specified time, often 18 months due to the large amount of work involved. Effective tickets require much planning and are approved by the Wood Badge course staff before the course phase ends. Upon completion of the ticket, a participant is said to have earned his way back to Gilwell.

--Wood Badge: Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia

1 comment:

  1. As an amatuer Scouting historian. I would like to hear from anybody where is there documentation about BP havingmade the statement that he had to pay for his own way home after an overseas assignment.(working his ticket).

    I have not been able to find this referance nor that of any other British officer.

    Ian Greig. ianscout@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete