Winter Merit Badges:
Cycling
Skating
Oceanography
Chess
Pets
Dog Care
Camping
Hiking
Scouting Heritage
Bird Study
Pioneering
Backpacking
Landscape Architecture
Reading
Fingerprinting
December Scool is about Christmas Journaling for Fun-Schooling, makeup math homework, Merit Badges - point of interest and life intrest, and life with Christmas music and movies. And most of all celebrate Jesus Christ!
Countdown-Christmas-Journal-Coloring-Book Amazon link to Coloring Book Requirement left to complete the following Merit Badges and Rank Requirments. The kids had me compile the following so they could find all their BSA homework in one place. My kids created a time slot in their school day for BSA schooling this is a term they call BSA lesson time at home. π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦ Requirements for the Pets merit badge:
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All pioneering projects constructed for this merit badge must comply with height standards as outlined in the Guide to Safe Scouting.
Requirements for the Scouting Heritage merit badge:
π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦ Requirements for the Fingerprinting Merit BadgeFingerprinting RequirmentsRequirements for the Fingerprinting merit badge:
π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦ Requirements for the Landscape Architecture Merit BadgeFacebook link to Zoom ClassLandscape Architecture Rank Requirments Requirements for the Landscape Architecture merit badge:
π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦ Requirements for the Scouting Heritage Merit BadgeScouting Heritage ClassScouting Heritage Requirments Requirements for the Scouting Heritage merit badge:
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Requirements for the Cycling merit badge:
- Do the following:
- Explain to your counselor the most likely hazards you may encounter while participating in cycling activities and what you should do to anticipate, help prevent, mitigate, and respond to these hazards.
- Show that you know first aid for injuries or illnesses that could occur while cycling, including cuts, scratches, blisters, sunburn, heat exhaustion, heatstroke, hypothermia, dehydration, insect stings, tick bites, and snakebite. Explain to your counselor why you should be able to identify the poisonous plants and poisonous animals that are found in your area.
- Explain the importance of wearing a properly sized and fitted helmet while cycling, and of wearing the right clothing for the weather. Know the BSA Bike Safety Guidelines.
- Clean and adjust a bicycle. Prepare it for inspection using a bicycle safety checklist. Be sure the bicycle meets local laws.
- Show your bicycle to your counselor for inspection. Point out the adjustments or repairs you have made. Do the following:
- Show all points that need oiling regularly.
- Show points that should be checked regularly to make sure the bicycle is safe to ride.
- Show how to adjust brakes, seat level and height, and steering tube.
- Describe how to brake safely with foot brakes and with hand brakes.
- Show how to repair a flat by removing the tire, replacing or patching the tube, and remounting the tire.
- Describe your state's traffic laws for bicycles. Compare them with motor-vehicle laws. Know the bicycle-safety guidelines.
- Using the BSA buddy system, complete all of the requirements for ONE of the following options: road biking OR mountain biking.
- Road Biking
- Take a road test with your counselor and demonstrate the following:
- Properly mount, pedal, and brake, including emergency stops.
- On an urban street with light traffic, properly execute a left turn from the center of the street; also demonstrate an alternate left-turn technique used during periods of heavy traffic.
- Properly execute a right turn.
- Demonstrate appropriate actions at a right-turn-only lane when you are continuing straight.
- Show proper curbside and road-edge riding. Show how to ride safely along a row of parked cars.
- Cross railroad tracks properly.
- Avoiding main highways, take two rides of 10 miles each, two rides of 15 miles each, and two rides of 25 miles each. You must make a report of the rides taken. List dates for the routes traveled, and interesting things seen.
- After completing requirement b for the road biking option, do ONE of the following:
- Lay out on a road map a 50-mile trip. Stay away from main highways. Using your map, make this ride in eight hours.
- Participate in an organized bike tour of at least 50 miles. Make this ride in eight hours. Afterward, use the tour's cue sheet to make a map of the ride.
- Take a road test with your counselor and demonstrate the following:
- Mountain Biking
- Take a trail ride with your counselor and demonstrate the following:
- Properly mount, pedal, and brake, including emergency stops.
- Show shifting skills as applicable to climbs and obstacles.
- Show proper trail etiquette to hikers and other cyclists, including when to yield the right-of-way.
- Show proper technique for riding up and down hills.
- Demonstrate how to correctly cross an obstacle by either going over the obstacle on your bike or dismounting your bike and crossing over or around the obstacle.
- Cross rocks, gravel, and roots properly.
- Describe the rules of trail riding, including how to know when a trail is unsuitable for riding.
- On trails approved by your counselor, take two rides of 2 miles each, two rides of 5 miles each, and two rides of 8 miles each. You must make a report of the rides taken. List dates for the routes traveled, and interesting things seen.
- After fulfilling the previous requirement, lay out on a trail map a 22-mile trip. You may include multiple trail systems, if needed. Stay away from main highways. Using your map, make this ride in six hours.
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Requirements for the Hiking merit badge:
- Do the following:
- Explain to your counselor the most likely hazards you may encounter while hiking, and what you should do to anticipate, help prevent, mitigate, and respond to these hazards.
- Show that you know first aid for injuries or illnesses that could occur while hiking, including hypothermia, frostbite, dehydration, heat exhaustion, heatstroke, sunburn, hyperventilation, altitude sickness, sprained ankle, blisters, insect stings, tick bites, and snakebite.
- Explain and, where possible, show the points of good hiking practices including proper outdoor ethics, hiking safety in the daytime and at night, courtesy to others, choice of footwear, and proper care of feet and footwear.
- Explain how hiking is an aerobic activity. Develop a plan for conditioning yourself for 10-mile hikes, and describe how you will increase your fitness for longer hikes.
- Take the five following hikes, each on a different day, and each of continuous miles. These hikes MUST be taken in the following order:
- One 5-mile hike
- Three 10-mile hikes
- One 15-mile hike
- Take a hike of 20 continuous miles in one day following a hike plan you have prepared. You may stop for as many short rest periods as needed, as well as one meal, but not for an extended period (example: overnight).*
- After each of the hikes (or during each hike if on one continuous "trek") in requirements 4 and 5, write a short reflection of your experience. Give dates and descriptions of routes covered, the weather, and any interesting things you saw. It may include something you learned about yourself, about the outdoors, or about others you were hiking with. Share this with your merit badge counselor.
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Requirements for the Backpacking merit badge:
- Discuss the prevention of and treatment for the health concerns that could occur while backpacking, including hypothermia, heat reactions, frostbite, dehydration, insect stings, tick bites, snakebite, and blisters.
- Do the following:
- List 10 items that are essential to be carried on any backpacking trek and explain why each item is necessary.
- Describe 10 ways you can limit the weight and bulk to be carried in your pack without jeopardizing your health or safety.
- Do the following:
- Define limits on the number of backpackers appropriate for a trek crew.
- Describe how a trek crew should be organized.
- Tell how you would minimize risk on a backpacking trek.
- Explain the purpose of an emergency response plan.
- Do the following:
- Describe the importance of using Leave No Trace principles while backpacking, and at least five ways you can lessen the crew's impact on the environment.
- Describe proper methods of handling human and other wastes while on a backpacking trek. Describe the importance of and means to assure personal cleanliness while on a backpacking trek.
- Tell what factors are important in choosing a campsite.
- Do the following:
- Demonstrate two ways to treat water and tell why water treatment is essential.
- Explain to your counselor the importance of staying well hydrated during a trek.
- Do the following:
- Demonstrate that you can read topographic maps.
- While on a trek, use a map and compass to establish your position on the ground at three different locations, OR use a GPS receiver unit to establish your position on a topographic map and on the ground at three different locations.
- Explain how to stay found, and what to do if you get lost.
- Tell how to prepare properly for and deal with inclement weather.
- Do the following:
- Explain the advantages and disadvantages of the different types of backpacking stoves using at least three different types of fuel.
- Demonstrate that you know how to operate a backpacking stove safely and to handle liquid fuel safely.
- Prepare at least three meals using a stove and fuel you can carry in a backpack.
- Demonstrate that you know how to keep cooking and eating gear clean and sanitary, and that you practice proper methods for food storage while on a backpacking trek.
- Do the following:
- Write a plan that includes a schedule for a patrol/crew backpacking hike of at least 2 miles.
- Conduct a prehike inspection of the patrol and its equipment.
- Show that you know how to properly pack your personal gear and your share of the crew's gear and food.
- Show you can properly shoulder your pack and adjust it for proper wear.
- While using the plan you developed for requirement 9a, carry your fully loaded pack to complete a hike of at least 2 miles.
- Using Leave No Trace principles, participate in at least three backpacking treks of at least three days each and at least 15 miles each, and using at least two different campsites on each trek. Carry everything you will need throughout the trek.
- Do the following:
- Write a plan for a backpacking trek of at least five days using at least three different campsites and covering at least 30 miles. Your plan must include a description of and route to the trek area, a schedule (including a daily schedule), a list of food and equipment needs, a safety and emergency plan, and a budget.
- Using Leave No Trace principles, take the trek your have planned and, while on the trek, complete at least one service project approved by your merit badge counselor.
- Keep a daily journal during the trek that includes a day-by-day description of your activities, including notes about what worked well and thoughts about improvements that could be made for the next trek.
Backpacking Worksheet
Backpacking Time Control Plan
Backpacking Injury Report
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Requirements for the Skating merit badge:
- Do the following:
- Explain to your counselor the most likely hazards associated with skating and what you should do to anticipate, help prevent, mitigate, and respond to these hazards.
- Show that you know first aid for injuries or illnesses that could occur while skating, including hypothermia, frostbite, lacerations, abrasions, fractures, sprains and strains, blisters, heat-related reactions, and shock.
- Complete ALL of the requirements for ONE of the following options.
Ice Skating
- Do the following:
- Give general safety and courtesy rules for ice skating. Discuss preparations that must be taken when skating outdoors on natural ice. Explain how to make an ice rescue.
- Discuss the parts and functions of the different types of ice skates.
- Describe the proper way to carry ice skates.
- Describe how to store skates for long periods of time, such as seasonal storage.
- Do the following:
- Skate forward at least 40 feet and come to a complete stop. Use either a two-footed snowplow stop or a one-footed snowplow stop.
- After skating forward, glide forward on two feet, then on one foot, first right and then left.
- Starting from a T position, stroke forward around the test area, avoiding the use of toe picks if wearing figure skates.
- Do the following:
- Glide backward on two feet for at leaast two times the skater's height.
- Skate backward for at least 20 feet on two skates.
- After gaining forward speed, glide forward on two feet, making a turn of 180 degrees around a cone, first to the right and then to the left.
- Do the following:
- Perform a forward shoot-the-duck until you're nearly stopped. Rise while still on one foot.
- Explain to your counselor the safety considerations for running or participating in an ice skating race.
- Take part in a relay race.
- Perform a hockey stop.
Roller Skating
- Do the following:
- Give general safety and etiquette rules for roller skating.
- Discuss the parts and functions of the roller skate.
- Describe five essential steps to good skate care.
- Do the following:
- Skate forward with smooth, linked strokes on two feet for at least 100 feet in both directions around the rink and demonstrate proper techniques for stopping.
- Skate forward and glide at least 15 feet on one skate, then on the other skate.
- Do the following:
- Perform the crosscut.
- Skate backward for at least 40 feet on two skates, then for at least 15 feet on one skate.
- Skate forward in a slalom pattern for at least 40 feet on two skates, then for at least 20 feet on one skate.
- Skate backward in a slalom pattern for at least 15 feet on two skates.
- Do the following:
- Shuttle skate once around the rink, bending twice along the way without stopping.
- Perform a widespread eagle.
- Perform a mohawk.
- Perform a series of two consecutive spins on skates, OR hop, skip, and jump on skates for at least 10 feet.
- Do the following:
- Race on a speed track, demonstrating proper technique in starting, cornering, passing, and pacing.
- Perform the limbo under a pole placed at least chest-high OR shoot-the-duck under a waist-high pole and rise while still on one foot.
- Perform the stepover.
- While skating, dribble a basketball the length of the floor, then return to your starting position, OR push a hockey ball with a stick around the entire rink in both directions.
In-Line Skating
- Do the following:
- Do the following:
- Give general and in-line skating safety rules and etiquette.
- Describe the parts and functions of the in-line skate.
- Describe the required and recommended safety equipment.
- Describe four essential steps to good skate care.
- Do the following:
- Skate forward with smooth, linked strokes on two feet for at least 100 feet.
- Skate forward and glide at least 15 feet on one skate, then on the other skate.
- Stop on command on flat pavement using the heel brake.
- Do the following:
- Perform the forward crossover.
- Perform a series of forward, linked swizzles for at least 40 feet.
- Skate backward for at least 40 feet in a series of linked, backward swizzles.
- From a b pace, perform a lunge turn around an object predetermined by your counselor.
- Perform a mohawk.
- Do the following:
- Perform a series of at least four one-footed downhill slaloms on pavement with a gentle slope.
- Describe how to pass a pedestrian or another skater from behind.
- Describe at least three ways to avoid an unforeseen obstacle while skating.
- Describe two ways to get on and off a curb, and demonstrate at least one of these methods.
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Requirements for the Chess merit badge:
- Discuss with your merit badge counselor the history of the game of chess. Explain why it is considered a game of planning and strategy.
- Discuss with your merit badge counselor the following:
- The benefits of playing chess, including developing critical thinking skills, concentration skills, and decision-making skills, and how these skills can help you in other areas of your life
- Sportsmanship and chess etiquette
- Demonstrate to your counselor that you know each of the following. Then, using Scouting's Teaching EDGE*, teach someone (preferably another Scout) who does not know how to play chess:
- The name of each chess piece
- How to set up a chessboard
- How each chess piece moves, including castling and en passant captures
- Do the following:
- Demonstrate scorekeeping using the algebraic system of chess notation.
- Discuss the differences between the opening, the middle game, and the endgame.
- Explain four opening principles.
- Explain the four rules for castling.
- On a chessboard, demonstrate a "scholar's mate" and a "fool's mate."
- Demonstrate on a chessboard four ways a chess game can end in a draw.
- Do the following:
- Explain four of the following elements of chess strategy: exploiting weaknesses, force, king safety, pawn structure, space, tempo, time.
- Explain any five of these chess tactics: clearance sacrifice, decoy, discovered attack, double attack, fork, interposing, overloading, overprotecting, pin, remove the defender, skewer, zwischenzug.
- Set up a chessboard with the white king on e1, the white rooks on a1 and h1, and the black king on e5. With White to move first, demonstrate how to force checkmate on the black king.
- Set up and solve five direct-mate problems provided by your merit badge counselor.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Play at least three games of chess with other Scouts and/or your merit badge counselor. Replay the games from your score sheets and discuss with your counselor how you might have played each game differently.
- Play in a scholastic (youth) chess tournament and use your score sheets from that tournament to replay your games with your merit badge counselor. Discuss with your counselor how you might have played each game differently.
- Organize and run a chess tournament with at least four players, plus you. Have each competitor play at least two games.
Chess Worksheet
* You may learn about Scouting's Teaching EDGE from your unit leader, another Scout, or by attending training.
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Requirements for the Camping merit badge:
- Do the following:
- Explain to your counselor the most likely hazards you may encounter while participating in camping activities and what you should do to anticipate, help prevent, mitigate, and respond to these hazards.
- Discuss with your counselor why it is important to be aware of weather conditions before and during your camping activities. Tell how you can prepare should the weather turn bad during your campouts.
- Show that you know first aid for and how to prevent injuries or illnesses that could occur while camping, including hypothermia, frostbite, heat reactions, dehydration, altitude sickness, insect stings, tick bites, snakebite, blisters, and hyperventilation.
- Learn the Leave No Trace principles and the Outdoor Code and explain what they mean. Write a personal plan for implementing these principles on your next outing.
- Make a written plan for an overnight trek and show how to get to your camping spot using a topographical map and
- a compass
- a GPS receiver
- a smartphone with a GPS app
- Do the following:
- Make a duty roster showing how your patrol is organized for an actual overnight campout. List assignments for each member.
- Help a Scout patrol or a Webelos Scout unit in your area prepare for an actual campout, including creating the duty roster, menu planning, equipment needs, general planning, and setting up camp.
- Do the following:
- Prepare a list of clothing you would need for overnight campouts in both warm and cold weather. Explain the term 'layering'.
- Discuss footwear for different kinds of weather and how the right footwear is important for protecting your feet.
- Explain the proper care and storage of camping equipment (clothing, footwear, bedding).
- List the outdoor essentials necessary for any campout, and explain why each item is needed.
- Present yourself to your Scoutmaster with your pack for inspection. Be correctly clothed and equipped for an overnight campout.
- Do the following:
- Describe the features of four types of tents, when and where they could be used, and how to care for tents. Working with another Scout, pitch a tent.
- Discuss the importance of camp sanitation and tell why water treatment is essential. Then demonstrate two ways to treat water.
- Describe the factors to be considered in deciding where to pitch your tent.
- Tell the difference between internal- and external-frame packs. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each.
- Discuss the types of sleeping bags and what kind would be suitable for different conditions. Explain the proper care of your sleeping bag and how to keep it dry. Make a comfortable ground bed.
- Prepare for an overnight campout with your patrol by doing the following:
- Make a checklist of personal and patrol gear that will be needed.
- Pack your own gear and your share of the patrol equipment and food for proper carrying. Show that your pack is right for quickly getting what is needed first, and that it has been assembled properly for comfort, weight, balance, size, and neatness.
- Do the following:
- Explain the safety procedures for:
- Using a propane or butane/propane stove
- Using a liquid fuel stove
- Proper storage of extra fuel
- Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of different types of lightweight cooking stoves.
- Prepare a camp menu. Explain how the menu would differ from a menu for a backpacking or float trip. Give recipes and make a food list for your patrol. Plan two breakfasts, three lunches, and two suppers. Discuss how to protect your food against bad weather, animals, and contamination.
- While camping in the outdoors, cook at least one breakfast, one lunch, and one dinner for your patrol from the meals you have planned for requirement 8c. At least one of those meals must be a trail meal requiring the use of a lightweight stove
- Explain the safety procedures for:
- Show experience in camping by doing the following:
- Camp a total of at least 20 nights at designated Scouting activities or events. One long-term camping experience of up to six consecutive nights may be applied toward this requirement. Sleep each night under the sky or in a tent you have pitched. If the camp provides a tent that has already been pitched, you need not pitch your own tent.
- On any of these camping experiences, you must do TWO of the following, only with proper preparation and under qualified supervision:
- Hike up a mountain where, at some point, you are at least 1,000 feet higher in elevation from where you started.
- Backpack, snowshoe, or cross-country ski for at least four miles.
- Take a bike trip of at least 15 miles or at least four hours.
- Take a non-motorized trip on the water of at least four hours or 5 miles.
- Plan and carry out an overnight snow camping experience.
- Rappel down a rappel route of 30 feet or more.
- Perform a conservation project approved by the landowner or land managing agency. This can be done alone or with others.
- Discuss how the things you did to earn this badge have taught you about personal health and safety, survival, public health, conservation, and good citizenship. In your discussion, tell how Scout spirit and the Scout Oath and Law apply to camping and outdoor ethics.
Read Bryan on Scouting for info about requirement 9a.
Camping Worksheet
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Requirements for the Oceanography merit badge:
- Name four branches of oceanography. Describe at least five reasons why it is important for people to learn about the oceans.
- Define salinity, temperature, and density, and describe how these important properties of seawater are measured by the physical oceanographer. Discuss the circulation and currents of the ocean. Describe the effects of the oceans on weather and climate.
- Describe the characteristics of ocean waves. Point out the differences among the storm surge, tsunami, tidal wave, and tidal bore. Explain the difference between sea, swell, and surf. Explain how breakers are formed.
- Draw a cross-section of underwater topography. Show what is meant by: (a) Continental shelf, (b) Continental slope; and (c)Abyssal plain.
Name and put on your drawing the following: seamount, guyot, rift valley, canyon, trench, and oceanic ridge. Compare the depths in the oceans with the heights of mountains on land.
- List the main salts, gases, and nutrients in sea water. Describe some important properties of water. Tell how the animals and plants of the ocean affect the chemical composition of seawater. Explain how differences in evaporation and precipitation affect the salt content of the oceans.
- Describe some of the biologically important properties of seawater. Define benthos, nekton, and plankton. Name some of the plants and animals that make up each of these groups. Describe the place and importance of phytoplankton in the oceanic food chain.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Make a plankton net*. Tow the net by a dock, wade with it, hold it in a current, or tow it from a rowboat. Do this for about 20 minutes. Save the sample. Examine it under a microscope or high-power glass. Identify the three most common types of plankton in the sample.
- Make a series of models (clay or plaster and wood) of a volcanic island. Show the growth of an atoll from a fringing reef through a barrier reef. Describe the Darwinian theory of coral reef formation.
- Measure the water temperature at the surface, midwater, and bottom of a body of water four times daily for five consecutive days. You may measure depth with a rock tied to a line. Make a Secchi disk to measure turbidity (how much suspended sedimentation is in the water). Measure the air temperature. Note the cloud cover and roughness of the water. Show your findings (air and water temperature, turbidity) on a graph. Tell how the water temperature changes with air temperature.
- Make a model showing the inshore sediment movement by littoral currents, tidal movement, and wave action. Include such formations as high and low waterlines, low-tide terrace, berm, and coastal cliffs. Show how offshore bars are built up and torn down.
- Make a wave generator. Show reflection and refraction of waves. Show how groins, jetties, and breakwaters affect these patterns.
- Track and monitor satellite images available on the Internet for a specific location for three weeks. Describe what you have learned to your counselor.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Write a 500-word report on a book about oceanography approved by your counselor.
- Visit one of the following: (1) an oceanographic research ship or (2) an oceanographic institute, marine laboratory, or marine aquarium. Write a 500-word report about your visit.
- Explain to your troop in a five minute prepared speech "Why Oceanography Is Important" or describe "Career Opportunities in Oceanography." (Before making your speech, show your speech outline to your counselor for approval.)
- Describe four methods that marine scientists use to investigate the ocean, underlying geology, and organisms living in the water.
* May be done in lakes or streams.
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