Albuquerque Journal

Today’s Girl Scouts are changing the world

Today’s Girl Scouts are changing their world Page 4

- STORIES BY ELAINE D. BRISEÑO JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Gone are the days when being a Girl Scout meant mastering a needle or learning how to cook.

Girl Scouts today aims to transform its members into leaders.

Girl Scouts of New Mexico Trails CEO Peggy Sanchez Mills said the focus has shifted from more traditiona­l things like learning how to sew or cook, to teaching girls how to step up and take on roles and projects the put them in a position to solve problems and make decisions.

So now something like cooking would be learned in the context of having a career in that field or owning a catering business. While the legacy badges representi­ng the more traditiona­l skill are still available, there’s now a whole line of financial literacy badges, including business owner, philanthro­py, good credit and budgeting.

Girl Scouts of New Mexico has 4,000 girls and 1,800 volunteers, she said.

“We are trying to build courage,” Sanchez Mills said. “At about 12 or 13, girls start deferring to the guys. We are teaching them to be leaders whether in a job, an advocacy role or in their own family.”

She said the tradition of selling cookies is still a major activity and fundraiser for the Girl Scouts, but even that has evolved. The program helps develop leadership skills by teaching the Scout how to set goals, make decisions, talk to people, develop business ethics and manage money. Girls are asked to set goals for the amount of cookies they want to sell. They then figure out how much money that will earn for them.

Sanchez Mills said there is nothing more representa­tive of this shift in the organizati­on than the Gold Award, the most prestigiou­s honor a Girl Scout can earn. They do that by coming up with Take Action Projects. The projects must have an impact in their communitie­s even after their involvemen­t ends.

“We ask them ‘What are you doing in the community to take action and make the world a better place?’” she said. “They have to implement it in a way that it will exist even when they go away.”

Girl Scout Isabel Rodriguez earned her Gold Award by creating an outdoor classroom for students at Nava Elementary School is Santa Fe about three years ago. Both her parents have been teachers at the school since before she was born and she herself was a students there. She

transforme­d an area between two classroom after applying for and receiving grants.

A troop of girls in Albuquerqu­e is earning Gold Awards through their work with Albuquerqu­e Rescue Mission, which works with the homeless population. The mission uses a former jail space on the West Side of Albuquerqu­e to house its homeless families at night. The girls have worked more than 700 hours to make the shelter more welcoming by adding books, toys and educationa­l materials and by painting murals.

“When the homeless come into this shelter, we want them to feel like someone cared about them,” said Dr. Rosalie Multari, troop leader of Girl Scout Troop 47. “We want them to remember what it feels like to have a home.”

Sanchez Mills said Girl Scouts is also more proactive with social issues. While the organizati­on never came out against members of the gay, lesbian and transgende­r community, she said it now openly welcomes them, acknowledg­ing their sexuality.

“Today we are more likely to take a stand on something like this,” she said.

The Girl Scouts, she said, also tackle serious subjects such as sexual abuse and rape, holding workshops on what is and is not appropriat­e touching.

While there is a more concerted effort to raise leaders, Sanchez Mills said the Girl Scouts has always had a progressiv­e spirit, an example set by founder Juliette Gordon Low. The Southern belle started the organizati­on in 1912, when women could not even vote, in hopes of giving girls the skills they needed to “meet their world with courage, confidence and character,” according to the Girl Scouts website.

“Girl Scouts really gave me my voice and my confidence,” Haist said. “I really feel it was instrument­al in teaching me how to get up and take the lead.”

 ??  ?? Daycie Dozhier, 16, left, a member of Girl Scout Troop 47, and Lydia Miller, 14, right, a member of another troop, work to clean a nursery room in the old jail that now serves as a winter shelter for homeless people.
Daycie Dozhier, 16, left, a member of Girl Scout Troop 47, and Lydia Miller, 14, right, a member of another troop, work to clean a nursery room in the old jail that now serves as a winter shelter for homeless people.
 ??  ?? Marisa Sala, 15, prepares artwork that will hang inside a winter shelter for homeless people. The space was once used as a jail.
Marisa Sala, 15, prepares artwork that will hang inside a winter shelter for homeless people. The space was once used as a jail.
 ??  ?? Arianna Fernandez, 15, right, and her mother, Jane Fernandez, walk down the main hall of the old jail. Members of Girl Scout Troop 47 are fixing up the interior of the shelter.
Arianna Fernandez, 15, right, and her mother, Jane Fernandez, walk down the main hall of the old jail. Members of Girl Scout Troop 47 are fixing up the interior of the shelter.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States