National Scout Organization of Thailand explained

National Scout Organization of Thailand
Headquarters:Chonburi
Location:60/38 Sukhumwit Rd., Si Racha, Chon Buri, Thailand 20110
Members:828,248
Country:Thailand
F-Date:July 1, 1911
Founder:King Vajiravudh
Chiefscout:King of Thailand
Affiliation:World Organization of the Scout Movement
Pattern Head:beret
Skintone:M
Color Head:FF0000
Pattern Body:shirt short sleeves
Color Body:D2B48C
Pattern Legs:trousers
Color Legs:D2B48C

The National Scout Organization of Thailand (NSOT; Thai: คณะลูกเสือแห่งชาติ,) is the national Scouting organization of Thailand. Scouting was founded in Thailand in 1911 and was among the charter members of the World Organization of the Scout Movement in 1922. It is currently regulated by the Scouting Act, BE 2551 (2008). The organization has 828,248 members (as of 2013)[1] and is open to boys and girls.

Early history

Scouting was first introduced in Thailand as a branch of the Wild Tiger Corps on July 1, 1911 by King Rama VI, who is known as the Father of Thai Scouting. Thailand claims to be the third country in the world to establish Scouting,[2] but it was more likely fourth. King Rama VI brought back the idea of Scouting from Great Britain where he studied.

Abhai Chandavimol served on the World Scout Committee of the World Organization of the Scout Movement from 1965 to 1971. Five Thais have been honored with the Bronze Wolf, the highest distinction of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, awarded for exceptional services to Scouting. Recipients and the year they received the Bronze Wolf are: Abhai Chandavimol (1971), Chitra Dansuputra (1976), Kong Visudharomn (1980), and Bhethai Amatayakul (1984), and Bhumibol Adulyadej (2006).

Scouting and schools

Although Scouting is part of the school program, especially for grades 6-8, it is not actually mandatory. Options do exist for participation in other youth programs, such as the Thai Red Cross; however, the vast majority of Thai youth participate in Scouting. Scouts wear their Scout uniforms to school once a week, though which day of the week is set by the local schools.

Programs

Thai youth are normally placed in a Scouting program based on the school grade they are in, not their age. These are also open to both boys and girls.

ProgramGradeAges
Cub Scouts1-37-9
Scouts4-610-12
Senior Scouts7-913-15
Rover10 to young adults16-25
Sea Scouts10 to young adults16-25
Air Scouts10 to young adults16-25

Sea Scouts are supported by the Royal Thai Navy and Air Scouts by the Royal Thai Air Force.

Scout ideals and methods

Major events

EventYear
3rd Asia Pacific Scout Conference1963
33rd World Scout Conference1993
38th Asia Pacific Basic Management Course1994
1st Asia Pacific Scout Camp & Hostel Management Workshop1996
Asia-Pacific Seminar for Adult Resources Committee Chairmen & Executives2001
20th World Scout Jamboree in Sattahip, Chonburi Province28 December 2002 - 7 January 2003
4th ASEAN Scout Jamboree in Si Racha, Chonburi Province27 November 2013 - 4 December 2013

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Triennal review: Census as at 1 December 2010. World Organization of the Scout Movement. 2011-01-13. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120508035838/http://www.scout.org/en/content/download/22261/199900/file/Census.pdf. 8 May 2012.
  2. Web site: Thai Scouting . Thaiscouting.com . 2006-07-25 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060717223109/http://www.thaiscouting.com/scouting.html . 2006-07-17 .