Register your interest in achieving your King’s Scout award here once you have turned 16. You can only count activities towards your KSA after your 16th birthday.
To gain the King’s Scout Award you must complete the following:
Skill
Take up a skill for 6 or 12* months, and show progress and lasting interest. The skill can be an existing interest or something entirely new.
Physical activity
Take up a physical activity for 6 or 12* months, completing an agreed programme by taking part and achieving your objectives.
Volunteering
Provide service to an individual or the community for 12 months. Briefing and training should be given in order to gain the necessary skills. This may include helping with another section of the movement as an Explorer Scout Young Leader or adult volunteer.
Expedition Training framework
Show that you are competent in the following areas:
Residential
Notes
*All members should complete 12 months in either the skill or the physical activity challenges.
Award participants who are not holders of a Chief Scout’s Diamond Award or Silver DofE must complete an extra 6 months in either the service or the longer of the skills or physical recreation challenges.
Make a presentation covering all elements of your award to a suitable audience, with the aim of inspiring and motivating others to achieve the award. The presentation should be the final activity you complete.
Once you have completed all of the above requirements, your relevant District/County Lead Volunteer needs to approve the award.
Approval by the mentor or person signing off the award should be given prior to each element being undertaken. If you are unsure about whether an activity is appropriate, ask the relevant District/County Lead Volunteer who will sign off your award as completed.
Camping also includes other outdoor shelters, such as bivouacs and snow holes, often used in scouting activities.
Nights away achieved through activities as part of the KSA or Chief Scout’s Awards including the practice and final expedition, residential experience or anything else achieved in completion of an ICV requirement are excluded.
It can include any nights away undertaken as a Young Leader/Adult volunteer with another section.
An award does not have to be completed before activities can count for the next award. For example, if you have completed the expedition element of your Chief Scout’s Diamond Award but not the rest of the award, you can begin the expedition section of the King’s Scout Award as long as you are over the age of 16 and have registered for the King’s Scout Award.
The minimum time requirements for each section are expressed in months, during which you need to undertake a regular commitment averaging at least an hour a week.
If you want to change activities during an award, this is possible, although on one occasion only. It is also possible to take a break from an activity and then to restart from where you stopped. This could happen during a period of school, college or university exams.
The King’s Scout Award is based on personal best effort rather than fixed standards, and should be available to all members of Explorer Scouts and the Scout Network. This may mean that for some individuals, the requirements of the award need to be adapted to ensure that they face the same degree of challenge as other participants.
Where additional needs have to be taken into account, it is acceptable to adjust some of the activities to make them more accessible. You should work with your mentor to discuss any adaptations, and make sure that any adaptations have been approved by the relevant District/County Lead Volunteer who will sign off your award. As every set of individual circumstances will be different, it is left to the discretion of the relevant District/County Lead Volunteer to make any adaptations to the activities, including the expedition requirement.
For more information on how to include someone with additional needs in Scouting, visit scouts.org.uk/diversity. There is lots of information, including the factsheet Successfully Including Scouts with Special Needs (FS250061).
You can also email: [email protected] with specific queries.
Support Material for the King’s Scout Award
The King’s Scout Working Party website
The Adventure Begins – how the Chief Scout Awards and DofE Awards are aligned
An explorer, adventurer and TV presenter, Dwayne's been seen in BAFTA nominated Channel 5 series Race to the Pole, on BBC Springwatch, Countryfile, National Geographic and Disney+.
Find out more