Webelos Scout Activity Badges
Community Group
These are the requirements as they appear
in the 2003 edition of the Webelos Handbook (33452).
(Revisions to requirements are shown in bold
underlined type.
Deletions are shown struck through in
red italics, like this text.
To see the current requirements with no highlighting
of the changes, Click Here
To see the OLD requirements (as they appeared in the
1998 edition of the Webelos Scout Book -
#33108), Click Here.
CITIZEN(*),
COMMUNICATOR, FAMILY
MEMBER, READYMAN(**)
* Required for Webelos Badge
** Required for Arrow of Light
Required for
Webelos Badge
Arrow of Light
Do this
- With your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader, complete
the Citizenship Character Connection.
- Know: List some of your rights as a citizen of the
United States of America. Tell ways you can show respect for the
rights of others.
- Commit: Name some ways a boy your age can be a good
citizen. Tell how you plan to be a good citizen and how you plan to
influence others to be good citizens.
- Practice: Choose one of the requirements for this
activity badge that helps you be a good citizen. Complete the
requirement and tell why completing it helped you be a good citizen.
Do all of
these:
1. Know the
names of the President and Vice-President of the United States,
elected . Know the names of the
Governor of your state and the head of your local government.
2. Describe the
flag of the United States and give a short history of it. With another
Webelos Scout helping you, show how to hoist and lower the flag, how to
hang it horizontally and vertically on a wall, and how to fold it.
Tell how to retire a worn or tattered flag properly.
3. Explain why
you should respect your country's flag. Tell some of the special
days we you should
fly it. Tell when to salute the flag and show how to do it.
4. Repeat the
Pledge of Allegiance from memory. Explain its meaning in your own words.
Lead your Webelos den in reciting the
pledge.
5. Tell how our
National Anthem was written.
6. Explain the
rights and duties of a citizen of the United States. Explain what a
citizen should do to save our natural resources.
7. Alone or with your Webelos den,
do a special Good Turn. Help your church or other religious
organization, school, neighborhood, or town. Tell what you did.
As a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout
Academics belt loop for
Citizenship At a Webelos den meeting, talk about the service project
Good Turn that you did.
And do two of these:
8. Tell about
two things you can do that will help law enforcement agencies.
9. Visit
With your Webelos den or your family, visit a community leader.
Learn about the duties of the job or office and tell
. Tell
the members of your Webelos den what you have
learned.
10. Write a
short story of not less than 50 words about a former U.S. president or
some other great American man or woman.
Give a report on this to your Webelos den.
11. Tell about
another boy you think is a good citizen. Tell what he does that makes
you think he is a good citizen.
12. List the
names of three people you think are good citizens. (They
can be from any country.) Tell why you chose each of them.
13.
Tell why we have laws. Tell why you think it is important to obey the
law. Tell about three laws you obeyed this week.
14. Tell why we
have government. Explain some ways your family helps pay for government.
15. List four
ways in which your country helps or works with other nations.
16. Name three
organizations, not churches or other religious organizations, in your
area that help people. Tell something about what one of these
organizations does.
Do seven of these
- Play the Body Language Game with your den.
- Prepare and give a three-minute talk to your den on a subject of
your choice.
- Invent
and use
a sign language or a picture writing language and use it to tell someone
a story.
- Identify and discuss with your den as many different methods of
communication as you can (at least six different methods).
- Invent your own den secret code and send one of your den members a
secret message.
- With your den or your family, visit a library and talk
to a librarian. Learn how books are catalogued to make them easy to
find. Sign up for a library card , if you don't already have one.
- Visit the newsroom of a newspaper or a radio or
television station and find out how they receive information.
- Write an article about a den activity for your pack newsletter
or web site, your
or
local newspaper, or your school newsletter, newspaper, or Web site.
- Invite a person with a visual, speaking, or hearing impairment to
visit your den. Ask about the special ways he or she communicates.
Discover how well you can communicate with him or her.
- With your parent or guardian, or your Webelos den leader,
invite a person who speaks another language (such as Spanish, French,
Arabic, Hebrew, etc.) as well as English to visit your den. Ask
questions about the other language (its background, where it is spoken,
etc.), discuss words in that language that den members are already
familiar with, or ask about ways to learn another language.
10. Use a
personal computer to write a letter to a friend or relative. Create your
letter, check it for grammar and spelling, and save it to a disk
either a hard drive or a diskette.
Print it.
11. Under the
supervision of a parent or other trusted adult, search the
Internet and connect to five Web sites that interest you.
Exchange e-mail with a friend or relative.
12. While
you are a Webelos Scout, earn
Earn the Academics belt loop for
Computers.
13. While
you are a Webelos Scout, earn
Earn the Academics belt loop for
Communicating.
14. Find out
about jobs in communications. Tell your den what you learn.
Do all of these:
- Tell what is meant by family, duty to family, and family meetings.
- Make a chart showing the jobs you and other family members have at
home. Talk with your family about other jobs you can do for the next two
months.
3. Inspect your home and surroundings.
Make a list of hazards or lack of security that you find. Correct one
problem that you found and tell what you did.
4. Explain why garbage and trash must be disposed of properly.
5. Make a list
of some things for which your family spends money. Tell how you can help
your family save money.
6. Plan your
own budget for 30 days. Keep track of your daily expenses for seven
days.
- Take part in at least four family meetings and help make
decisions. The meetings might involve plans for family activities, or
they might be about serious topics that your parent wants you to know
about.
- With the help of an adult inspect your home and surroundings.
Make a list of hazards or lack of security that you find. Correct one
problem that you found and tell what you did.
And do two of these:
- With the help of an adult prepare
Prepare a family
energy-saving plan. Explain what
Tell the things you did to carry it out.
- Tell what your family does for fun. Make a list of fun things your
family might do for little or no cost.
Do one of them with a member of your family.
Plan a family fun night.
- Learn how to clean your home properly. With adult supervision,
help
Help
do it for one month.
- Show that you know how to take care of
look after your clothes.
With adult supervision, help at least twice with the family laundry.
Help
with at least two family washes.
- With adult supervision, help
Help plan the meals for
your family for one at
least 1 week. With
adult supervision, help Help buy the
food and help prepare at least
three meals for your family.
Take part in at least four family
meetings and help make decisions. The meetings might involve plans for
family activities, or they might be about serious topics that your
parent wants you to know about.
While you are a Webelos Scout, earn
the academics belt loop for
Heritages.
- Explain why garbage and trash must be disposed of properly.
Required for
Arrow of Light
Do all of these:
- With your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader, complete
the Courage Character Connection.
- Know: Define the importance of each courage step: Be
strong; Be calm; Be clear; Be careful. Explain how memorizing the
courage steps helps you to be ready.
- Commit: Explain why it is hard to follow the courage
steps in an emergency. Tell when you can use the courage steps in
other situations (such as standing up to a bully, avoiding fights,
being fair, not stealing or cheating when tempted, etc.)
- Practice: Act out one of the requirements using these
courage steps: Be strong; Be calm; Be clear; Be careful.
1. Explain what
first aid is. Tell what you should do after an accident.
2. Explain how
you can get help quickly if there is an emergency in your home. Make a
"help list" of people or agencies that can help you if you need it. Post
it near a phone or another
other place with easy access.
- Demonstrate the Heimlich maneuver and tell when it is used.
3. Show what to
do for these "hurry cases":
- Serious bleeding
- Stopped breathing
- Internal poisoning
- Heart attack
4. Show how to
treat shock.
5. Show first
aid for the following:
- Cuts and scratches
- Burns and scalds
- Choking
- Blisters on the hand and foot
- Tick bites
- Bites and stings of insects other than ticks
- Poisonous snakebite
- Nosebleed
- Frostbite
- Sunburn
6. Tell what
steps must be taken for a safe swim with your Webelos den, pack, family,
or other group. Explain the reasons for the buddy system.
And do two of these:
7. Explain six
safety rules of safety
you should follow when "driving"
driving a bicycle.
- Explain the importance of wearing safety equipment when
participating in sports activities (skating, skateboarding, etc.)
8.
Plan Make a home fire escape plan for
your family.
9. Explain how
to use each item in a first aid kit for
a home or car.
10. Tell where
accidents are most likely to happen inside and around your home.
11. Explain six
safety rules you should remember when riding in a car.
12. Attend a
first aid demonstration at a Boy Scout troop meeting, a Red Cross
center, or other community event or place.
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