Gold Award Girl Scouts 2025

Giuliana Bishouty 2025 Girl Scout Gold Award

Girl Scouts of Western New York is proud to announce Giuliana Bishouty as a 2025 Gold Award Girl Scout.

Project: Healthy Eating and Fitness

For my Gold Award, I created a healthy awareness program, which I shared via social media. I conducted research and interviewed various professionals so I could provide information to my peers. As children, our parents planned our meals and encouraged us to join sports. But how many peers truly know what it takes to be healthy? I created an awareness program to educate peers on healthy living and healthy eating, and also make peers aware of illnesses that are associated with unhealthy lifestyles, such as obesity, diabetes, and eating disorders. I wanted to educate my peers on food tracking apps, simple exercises and community exercise events. This is an important issue and an issue that still gains a lot of attention. There is no cure but hopefully learning early and often can eliminate some of the negative trends that have been emerging and can teach peers how to have healthy, lifelong, relationships with food.

About the Girl Scout Gold Award

The Gold Award project is the culmination of all the work a girl puts into “going for the Gold.” A Girl Scout’s project should be something that a girl can be passionate about—in thought, deed, and action that encompasses organizational, leadership, and networking skills. The project should also fulfill a need within a girl’s community (whether local or global) and create change that has the potential to be on-going or sustainable. Approximately 80 hours of community service are involved in the project. Completion of the Gold Award also qualifies the Girl Scout for special scholarship opportunities and she can enlist in the military at a higher starting pay grade. The Girl Scout Gold Award, the most prestigious award in the world for girls, acknowledges the power behind each recipient’s dedication to not only empowering and bettering herself, but also to making the world a better place for others. These young women are courageous leaders and visionary change makers. The Gold Award requires a Girl Scout to identify an issue and investigate it to understand what can be done to address the problem. The girl then forms a team to act as a support system, including a project advisor close to the issue who is not a troop leader or family member, while she leads the project. The Girl Scout creates a plan to ensure they know what steps they must tackle while working on the project. The Girl Scout submits a proposal for her project to her local Girl Scout council. After acceptance, the girl begins to work through the steps of their plan utilizing the assistance of her support team where necessary. Lastly, the project is used to educate and inspire others about the cause they are addressing. For more information on the Gold Award,  click here.

Leave a comment