In the next two years, many suggestions of name change were discussed but no consensus was reached. Rose Kerr recounts a conversation with Robert Baden-Powell in 1920 where he suggested "Ranger", one of the rejected suggestions for the Senior Scouts (by then called Rovers). In June 1920, Olave Baden-Powell, then the Chief Guide, wrote:
Here is the suggested new name: 'Ranger'. If you look it up in the dictionary, you will find it means quite a number of things. 'To range' is 'to set in proper order'; 'to roam', and this might well mean you are going to tread ground as a Senior Guide that as a Guide you have not yet passed.The name received approval at a Conference on County Commissioners in July 1920, and was thereafter the official name.
'Distance of vision, and extent of discourse or roaming power' again shows that as a senior member of the community you are expected to look farther afield for good, and the work that you can do for the community.
'To range' means to travel, or to rove over wide distances, whether in your mind or your body. A Ranger is ' one who guards a large tract of land or forest,' thus it come to mean one who has the wide outlook, and a sense of responsible protective duties, appropriate to a Senior Guide. Another definition is 'to sail along in a parallel direction,' and so we can feel that the Ranger Guides are complementary to the Rover Scouts.
And so we hope that this new title will have the approval of all.
Later on in the year 1921, girl guiding was successfully established in the state of Perak,where the first company was started in our school, Methodist Girls' School Ipoh. The guiding spirit continues to spark and burnt throughout this 90 years.