January 2002 Cub Scout
Roundtable Issue
|
Volume 8, Issue 6 February Theme
|
Our Native Peoples
Webelos Scholar & Engineer
|
WEBELOS
Scholar
The quality that a Webelos leader will find most helpful on
this badge is the ability to listen to a boy and praise him for his school
accomplishments. Advance planning is
important to make this badge appealing to a 10-year-old.
You will need to find out who works at the school and how
the education chain of command works in your locality. The school secretary can usually be very
helpful. Also, the Education Service
Center will be glad to furnish you information. PTA or PTO officers will also be able to help you get
information. Try to find out some of
these things:
§
What jobs are there at school for the boys to do?
§
What extra-curricular activities are available?
§
What community activities is the school used for?
§
Who are the people on the office staff, cafeteria
staff, custodial staff
§
What are their responsibilities?
§
What are some of the problems of the school and how can
you help?
Most of the work on this badge will be done by the boy in
school. You needn't limit the meetings
to discussions. You might take a trip
to a high school and college to show the difference from elementary school.
Den Activities
§
Let the boys talk about what's going on in school. Don't try to change any of their ideas, but
guide the discussion in such a way that they will see the value of an
education.
§
Learn about the history of education, how schools
developed in America.
§
Prepare a chart of the school system and explain and
discuss with boys.
§
Discuss & do a den service project for the school.
§
Invite the parents of Webelos to come to a den meeting
dressed in the type of clothes they wore to school. Have them bring along such things as class pictures, yearbooks,
report cards, etc. and allow each ample time to share his/ her school days with
the den.
§
Have a panel of parents with various jobs explain their
schooling and training for these jobs
§
Invite an educator to talk with the den about some of
the scholar requirements.
§
As a den, talk about good study habits.
§
Have someone from the public library talk about the
local literacy project.
§
Tour a local high school or visit a local college
campus.
§
Play a Newspaper Search game looking for articles about
education.
§
Encourage boys to find out all they can about schools
in your community, the different types and how they work, the problems and
opportunities. Discuss these at a den
meeting. Have the boys make a list of
the things they like about school and another list of the things they don't
like about school. Give these lists to
the principal.
§
Have the boys make a daily time schedule and use it to
determine if they are making the best use of their time.
Speakers
Teacher, college professor, school principal, librarian
Field Trips:
·
Plan a trip to the library to have the librarian
demonstrate the use of a microfilm or microfiche viewer.
·
Briefly visit a school board meeting. Let them know you are coming. They may be interested to know the boys are
working on the Scholar Activities Badge.
Ideas for Pack
Meetings
Exhibit: Chart of
school system, old school books alongside current ones.
Demonstration:
Oral report on field trip. Explain chart
of school system, oral report on responsibilities of employees of school.
Games
Intelligence Test -- This test is to see if you can follow
directions. Just concentrate, but
remember, you have only 2 minutes.
1.
Read everything before doing anything,
2.
Put your name in the upper right-hand corner of this paper.
3.
Circle the word "name" in sentence number 2.
4.
Draw five small squares in the upper left-hand corner of this
paper.
5.
Put an "x" in each square.
6.
Put a circle around each square.
7.
Put a circle around each word in sentence number 5.
8.
Put an "x' in the lower left-hand corner of this paper.
9.
Draw a triangle around the "x" you just put down.
10. If
you think you have followed directions up to this point call out "I
have."
11. Now
that you have finished reading carefully, do only number 1 and number 2.
12. You
have finished. How did you do?
Aptitude Test
1.
If you went to bed at 8:00 at night and set the alarm to get
up at 9:00 the next morning, how many hours of sleep would this permit you to
have? (one hour)
2.
Do they have a 4th of July in England? (yes)
3.
Why can't a man living in Winston-Salem, N.C. be buried west
of the Mississippi? (He has to be dead first.)
4.
How many birthdays does the average man have? (one)
5.
If you have only one match and enter a room in which there is
a kerosene lamp, an oil heater and a wood burning stove, which do you light
first? (the match)
6.
Some months have 30 days; some have 31. How many have 28? (all
of them)
7.
If a doctor gave you three pills and told you to take one
every half hour, how long would they last? (one hour)
8.
A man built a rectangular house. Each side has a southern exposure. A big bear comes wandering by.
What color is the bear? (white)
9.
How far can a dog run into the woods? (halfway)
10.
What four words appear
on every U.S. coin? (United States of America or In God We Trust)
11.
In baseball, how many outs are in each inning? (six)
12.
I have in my hand two U.S. coins which total 55 cents. One is not a nickel. What are the two coins? (A half dollar -
which is not a nickel - and a nickel.)
13.
A farmer had 17 sheet.
All but nine died. How many did
he have left? (nine)
14.
Divide 30 by 1/2 and add 10.
What is the answer? (70)
15.
Take two apples from three apples and what do you have? (two
apples)
12 correct -- genius;
8 correct -- normal; 5 correct
-- not so good; 3 correct -- back to
school!
Materials found in Baloo's
Bugle may be used by Scouters for Scouting activities provided that
Baloo's Bugle and the original contributors are cited as the source of the
material.
Materials found at the U. S. Scouting Service Project, Inc. Website
©1997-2002 may be reproduced and used locally by Scouting volunteers for
training purposes consistent with the programs of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA)
or other Scouting and Guiding Organizations. No material found here may be used
or reproduced for electronic redistribution or for commercial or other non-Scouting purposes without the express
permission of the U. S. Scouting Service Project, Inc. (USSSP) or other
copyright holders. USSSP is not affiliated with BSA and does not speak on behalf
of BSA. Opinions expressed on these web pages are those of the web authors.
|
|