Storytelling and Interviews

Req 3d — Cover a Scouting Event

3d.
Attend a Scouting event and write a 200-word article (feature or hard news) about the event. Use either the inverted pyramid style or the chronological style. Review the article with your counselor, then submit it to your community newspaper or Scouting America local council or district newsletter for consideration.

This option is the closest thing in the badge to a real assignment from an editor. You have a specific audience, a short word count, and a requirement to send your work out when you are done.

Pick the Right Structure

The inverted pyramid puts the most important facts first. This is best for hard news.

The chronological style tells the story in the order events happened. This often works well for a feature or event recap.

Because you only have 200 words, every sentence has to earn its place. Focus on one clear angle: what happened, why it mattered, and one or two details that help the reader picture it.

What to Gather at the Event

Submitting your story matters because journalism is meant to be read, heard, or seen by other people. Even if the publication does not use your article, you will have completed the full reporting cycle from assignment to submission.

Next, you will attend a public event and choose another way to cover it — in writing, broadcast style, or photos.