The 53rd JOTA 2010
The 53rd Jamboree On The Air will take place on 16 and 17 October 2010.
(Scouts in the Asia-Pacific Region (APR) are kindly requested to take part in their own Regional radio event on 7 & 8 August 2010. Next edition is in August 2011. More info here.
Please do not send any questions, reports or other material of this APR event to the World Scout Bureau in Geneva; these should go the Regional Office in Manila, Philippines. The JOTA information on the web pages below is not relevant to the APR radio event).
Vuvuzela Morse Code
From the National JOTA Organizer in (of course) South-Africa comes the suggestion to have a game with Morse Code on the vuvuzela. Dave Gemmell suggests:
- i) choose a place to practice so as not to annoy any one.
- ii) don’t practice after 19H00 or before 08H00 or on Sundays
- iii) wash/clean the mouth piece properly before blowing
- a) send each character correctly in morse.
- b) how many scouts can receive message correctly?
- c) determine the maximum distance that can be achieved.
- d) record the distance and tell us about it.
The 53rd JOTA theme: “The Right to be Heard”
This years JOTA will have a theme directly related to article 12 of the Convention of the Rights of the Child: the Right to be Heard. The theme is linked to the 20th anniversary of the Convention: http://www.unicef.org/rightsite/
How is article 12, the Right to be Heard, linked to the JOTA? Scouts in many, but not all, countries have the permission to speak directly over amateur radio. This greatly enhances their JOTA experience: a free and direct exchange of ideas between Scouts of all Nations. It helps them to get a feeling and understanding of other cultures. The Right to be Heard is also a Right to be Listened to. The International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) is fully supporting the Scouts to participate in JOTA. And even further, IARU stimulates to educate them in radio techniques so that they may once operate their own station. In fact, the IARU Region 1 Conference 2008 in Cavtat, Croatia passed the following resolution CT08_C3_Rec 24: (Paper CT08_C3_39): In recognizing the importance of the JOTA (Jamboree-On-the-Air) for radio amateur recruiting, it is recommended that Member Societies encourage radio amateurs to assist boy Scouts and girl Guides to participate in the annual JOTA the third full weekend of October each year, organized by the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM) and to use this opportunity to present amateur radio recruiting possibilities to the Scouts/Guides. The Right to be Heard….on the air. Many amateur radio associations offer youth courses to pass the radio exams; educational, fun to do and another step to the Right to be Heard. Ask your national amateur-radio association for details. Further theme information and suggestions will be available from this web site soon.
Download the Logo
Click on any of the following images to download it,
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you can also dowload the archive containing all version
Additional programme suggestions
A few examples of the many programme suggestions available in the JOTA fact sheets (on the radio-scouting web or in printed form):
- The continuing story.... Make up a short imaginative story of ten lines. Read it to the station with whom you are in contact. Ask them to add the next part to this story and pass it on to the next scout station that they will contact. If you receive such a story by radio from another scout group, write it down in your station report afterwards. This activity is also very well suited for RTTY (telex) and packet-radio contacts.
- The global weather situation. Take a large wall map of the whole world. Ask the Scouts who you speak to, to give you the local weather report. Indicate this on the map for the area where they are located. A weather report in a local newspaper will show you how to do this on a map. At the end of the weekend you have the global weather view.
- Determine the distance of each radio contact that you make and add them all up. Can you reach 100.000 km in one JOTA weekend ?
- Make a simple drawing. Give instructions by radio to Scouts how to draw the same picture, line by line, without telling them what the picture is. Can they reconstruct your drawing and tell you what it is ?
- Each scout patrol gets 20 metres of ordinary electrical wire. Can they construct a "super antenna", to their imagination, with which the radio operator can make a contact ?
- Find out what the local names are for "Scouts" and "Guides" in at least ten different countries. Make a list.
- Learn to sing the first lines of a foreign song. Find some Scouts on the radio from the country where the song comes from. Sing their song and see if they can join you in it.
Furthermore, the on-line radio-scouting library presents you amongst others:
- Idea book for antennas pulled into the air by kites
- Several exciting Foxhunting recipes
- Radio Puzzle games from different countries
- Morse code games
- Idea set for playing with the world’s time differences
Participation Cards
This year’s participation cards are mailed separately to the National Scout Organisations. The intend is that each participating station receives its card, as a confirmation of its participation and a souvenir of the event.
National JOTA - JOTI Stories
With your help, the World Scout Bureau can compile a world-wide overview of the weekend and make it available to all participants. Of course, the information has to come from the participating Scout groups in your country. So you may to prepare for that and send a short story of your activities to your National JOTA- or JOTI Organizer after the event.
Note that an increasing number of participating Scout groups are using the on-line web log to submit stories and reports of their JOTA and JOTI adventures. The link to the web log will be available here as soon as the weblog is opened.
Photographs showing Scouts in action at the microphone or keyboard and of other activities like electronic kit building, foxhunting, semaphore, map plotting and the like are most welcome. Of course, we do not need all your photographs, a selected set of e.g. the 5 best ones is greatly appreciated. So are clippings of local newspapers carrying the story of JOTA - JOTI in your local community.
We look forward to receive your input before the publishing deadline of:
15 December 2010.
















