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Alliance Children’s Organization

From Sariel's Core

Template:Organization

The Alliance Children’s Organization (ACO) is a long-established educational, cultural, and observational program for children of spacefaring families within the Alliance, the Prosian Defense Corps, and the Prosian Merchant Corps.

The organization emphasizes observation, restraint, responsibility, and respect for all forms of labor rather than early specialization or militarization.

Structure

ACO is divided into two primary youth divisions:

  • Girls’ Division
  • Boys’ Division

Each division operates independently in daily instruction and ceremony, while shared instruction occurs during joint learning sessions, missions, and community events.

Parents and certified teachers participate actively in the organization. Some parents and teachers serve in both divisions, particularly during shipboard or station-based programs.

Age Range

  • Entry Age: approximately 7 Annuli
  • Upper Age: 18 Annuli
  • Post-18 Participation: Eligible graduates may train and serve as ACO teachers or mentors

Membership

ACO membership is open to children from families affiliated with:

  • Alliance civilian services
  • Prosian Defense Corps
  • Prosian Merchant Corps

Due to the mobile nature of many spacefaring families, ACO maintains a strong presence aboard stations, ships, and trade hubs.

The Children’s Center on Scavenger Base functions as an active ACO meeting and training site.

Core Philosophy

ACO instruction is built on several guiding principles:

  • Observation precedes action
  • Understanding context is as important as technical skill
  • Restraint is a learned discipline
  • Responsibility grows through witnessing real outcomes
  • No role essential to survival is insignificant

Children are taught that authority does not confer superiority, and that command decisions are only as effective as the people who maintain, clean, repair, prepare food, monitor systems, and sustain daily operations.

Respect for Labor and Function

A foundational element of ACO education is the cultivation of respect for every role required to sustain a ship, station, or world.

ACO instruction emphasizes that:

  • Survival depends on reliability, not prestige
  • Failure in overlooked roles often causes the greatest harm
  • Dismissal of “less visible” work undermines system stability

Children learn early that ships do not function because of heroic moments, but because of consistent, often unseen labor.

Instruction by Level

Star Children (≈7–9 Annuli)

  • Learn the names and purposes of non-bridge roles
  • Visit maintenance corridors, kitchens, cargo bays, and life-support spaces
  • Are taught to thank crew members by role, not rank

Core lesson: Ships do not move because of heroes. They move because of people.

Orbit Children (≈10–12 Annuli)

  • Observe routine maintenance cycles
  • Learn how minor failures cascade into emergencies
  • Practice documenting unnoticed but essential work

Core lesson: Stability is built from repetition.

Galaxy Children (≈13–15 Annuli)

  • Study incidents caused by neglected labor
  • Learn cultural differences in how societies value work
  • Discuss ethical consequences of dismissing support roles

Core lesson: Systems fail where respect fails.

Pathfinders (≈16–18 Annuli)

  • Shadow non-command crew during extended duty cycles
  • Assist under supervision with basic tasks
  • Mentor younger members in courtesy and awareness

Core lesson: Leadership begins with service.

Mentors (Post-18)

  • Reinforce dignity across all professions
  • Intervene when hierarchy erodes respect
  • Teach that responsibility is owed downward before it is exercised upward

Core lesson: Authority never negates obligation.

Pins, Badges, and Recognition

ACO uses a system of pins and badges to mark learning milestones.

Observer Pins

  • Awarded to children who participate in sanctioned missions as observers
  • Recognize attentiveness, conduct, and restraint
  • Do not confer authority or operational responsibility

Training Badges

As children mature, additional badges may be earned for:

  • Shipboard systems familiarity
  • Safety procedures
  • Cultural and diplomatic education
  • Environmental and planetary observation

Some advanced training sessions are formally recognized as credit-bearing coursework within the Prosian School System.

Cultural Significance

Among Prosian and Alliance families, participation in ACO is considered:

  • A rite of maturity
  • Preparation for ethical citizenship
  • A shared generational responsibility

ACO graduates are often noted for courtesy toward service crews, attentiveness to unseen work, and willingness to listen before directing others.

A commonly cited Prosian saying associated with ACO instruction is:

Arold gun Zomrayit.
To wait is also to act.

Role in the Scavenger Universe

ACO appears publicly in Scavenger DX-1017: The Famine and The Search during the observer pin ceremony for Tirasha Liera Rin.

The organization serves as a narrative counterweight to crisis-driven action, reinforcing that stewardship begins with learning how—and when—not to intervene.

See Also