Duke of Edinburgh award
The Duke of Edinburgh's Award is committed to providing for young people an enjoyable,
challenging and rewarding programme of personal development, which
is of the highest quality and the widest reach.
What is the award?
The Award is a four-Section programme with three levels:
• Bronze (for those aged 14 and over)
• Silver (for those aged 15 and over) and
• Gold (for those aged 16 and over).
The Sections involve:
• Service (helping people in the community)
• Skills (covering almost any hobby, skill or interest)
• Physical Recreation (sport, dance and fitness)
• Expeditions (training for, planning and completing a journey
on foot or horseback, by boat or cycle)
• Residential Project (Gold Award only) (a purposeful enterprise
with people not previously known to the participant)
The delivery of the Award is entrusted to over 400 organisations
(Operating Authorities) in the UK licensed to run the Programme
through Award Groups in, for example, youth clubs, voluntary
organisations, Open Award Centres, schools, colleges, young
offender institutes
and businesses. Operating Authorities include local authorities
and national voluntary organisations and they authorise Awards
once applicable conditions have been met.
Award Groups are run by adults, many of whom are volunteers,
including youth workers, teachers, employers, trainers, Instructors,
Assessors
and individuals from the community, all of whom wish to share
their skills, enthusiasm and organising abilities to help young
people
reach their potential.
It would usually take a participant between 6-12 months to
complete a Bronze Award; 12-18 months for a Silver Award and
18-24 months
for a Gold Award. It may take less time for completion of the
Silver or Gold Awards if the participant holds the preceding
Award. All
Awards must be completed by the participant's 25th birthday.
The Ten Key Principles of The Duke of Edinburgh's
Award:
Non-Competitive: The Award is a personal challenge and not a competition
against others. Each participant's programme is tailor-made to
reflect the individual starting point, abilities and interests.
Available to All: With a commitment to equal opportunities, the
Award Programme is available to all young people who choose to
take up its challenge.
Voluntary: Young people make a free choice to enter the programme
and commit their own time to undertake the activities.
Flexible: Young people design their own programme,
which can be geared to their choice and personal circumstances
and also
to local
provision. They may enter for whichever level of Award best
suits them, and may take as long as they wish to complete
an Award.
Balanced: By choosing activities in each of four different
Sections (five at Gold), participants undertake a balanced
and wide ranging
programme.
Progressive: At each level, the Award Programme demands
more time and an increasing degree of commitment and
responsibility from
the participant.
Achievement Focused: Before starting an activity, young
people are encouraged to set their own goals. If they
aim for those
goals and show improvement, they will achieve their
Award.
Marathon, not a Sprint: The Award demands persistence
and commitment and cannot be completed in a short burst
of
enthusiasm. Participants
may want to continue with activities beyond the minimum
time requirements set out for each level of the Award.
Personal Development: The Award is a programme of personal
and social development. The value to young people
is dependent on
personal commitment, the learning process and the
quality of the experience.
Enjoyable: Young people and helpers should find participation
enjoyable and satisfying.
Benefits of the award
The Award is widely recognised by employers and people involved
in education. Some of the benefits to young people include
developing self-confidence and self-reliance; gaining a sense
of achievement
and a sense of responsibility; discovering new skills, interests
and talents and developing leadership skills and abilities.
They can also discover exciting opportunities; make new friends;
experience
teamwork, problem-solving and decision-making; increase their
motivation; enhance their self-esteem and develop their communication
skills. They will also, of course, have fun!
The Government has recognised that the Award has a valuable
role to play within a young person's personal development.
The Award
is closely linked with many Government initiatives across the
UK.
The Award gives opportunities for young people to:
• enjoy a wide variety of physical, creative and aesthetic
experiences which encourage personal growth and development;
• experience new lifestyles and cultures outside their
own immediate neighbourhood, possibly abroad;
• experience a variety of learning and teaching styles
with people from different walks of life;
• take decisions of increasing complexity and accept responsibility
for the consequences;
• discover new talents and abilities and test values and
beliefs;
• give a continuing personal commitment of service to others;
• establish and sustain inter-personal relationships;
• negotiate their own personal programme of participation,
seeking out and researching relevant information, and gradually
take
responsibility for their own learning;
• understanding their strengths and weakness, assess their
personal level of competence, increase their own personal
effectiveness and take responsibility for their own lives
having a great time!
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