My Scouting experiences have played an important part in making me the man, husband, father, grandfather, teacher and citizen that I am. Teach another Scout a first-aid skill selected by your counselor.Fifty years ago, as a 15-year-old Eagle Scout, I earned a Golden Jubilee patch and neckerchief slide for attending a camporee celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) in 1910.1 Today my red patch jacket sports patches testifying to my attendance at various Centennial Year events sponsored by the BSA, from the Golden Empire Council camporee at Beale Air Force Base in Sacramento to a summer camp on Catalina Island with my 15-year-old grandson. Teach and play the game with other Scouts.įirst Aid 14. You may find one on your own (with your counselor’s approval), or pick one from the Scouting Heritage merit badge pamphlet. Reproduce the equipment for an old-time Scouting game such as those played at Brownsea Island. Or team as part of a unit program activity Teach a Fishing or Fly Fishing merit badge skill to your troop, crew, With your counselor, determine whether the person has learned what you intended.īSA Complete Angler Award. With your counselor’s approval, develop a plan to teach a skill or inform someone about something. Teach and lead one game with a Scout group.Įmergency Preparedness 2.c Meet with and teach your family how to get or build a kit, make a plan, and be informed for the situations on the chart you created for requirement 2b.Ĭommunication 6. Learn three games played by a group or tribe. Learn a song, dance, poem, or story that is traditional to one group, and teach it to a group of your friends Plant Science 8 Option 3 F(1)(d) Lead a walk to teach others about trees and their value, OR write and distribute materials that will help others learn about trees.Īmerican Cultures 1.d. Teach orienteering techniques to your patrol, troop, or crew. How each chess piece moves, including castling and en passant captures Then, using Scouting’s Teaching EDGE*, teach someone (preferably another Scout) who does not know how to play chess:Ĭ. Demonstrate to your counselor that you know each of the following. Home, at school, in your community, and while traveling.Ĭhess 3. Teach your family or patrol members how to protect themselves from crime at
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January 2023
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