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Bear
Achievements
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- Bear Rank Requirements
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- To earn the Bear Badge, a Cub Scout must complete
12 achievements out of a possible 24 that are offered in the book.
The achievements are grouped in 4 major areas, GOD, COUNTRY, FAMILY,
and SELF. Within each group, a required number of achievements
must be completed, as indicated below. Also, any achievements
that they do NOT use to earn the Bear Badge may be used to earn
Arrow Points.
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(Note that these achievements, as were the
Wolf activities, are primarily done at home and signed off by
an adult family member after the boy has completed each one.
The book is then shown to the Den Leader who records the progress
and also signs the boy's book.)
The Bear Achievements are as follows, page
number references to the Bear Book are in parenthesis.
If the Cub Scout has not previously earned
the Bobcat Badge, it must be earned first.
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ACHIEVEMENTS
GOD
(Do ONE of the following)
COUNTRY
(Do THREE of the following)
FAMILY
(Do FOUR of the following)
SELF
(Do FOUR of the following)
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GOD (Do ONE of the following)
WAYS WE WORSHIP
(Page 26)
Complete both requirements.
- Complete the Character Connection for Faith
- Know. Name some people in history
who have shown great faith. Discuss with an adult how faith
has been important at a particular point in his or her life.
- Commit. Discuss with an adult how
having faith and hope will help you in your life, and also
discuss some ways that you can strengthen your faith.
- Practice. Practice your faith as
you are taught in your home, church, synagogue, mosque, or
religious fellowship.
- Make a list of things you can do this
week to practice your religion as you are taught in your home,
church, synagogue, mosque, or other religious community. Check
them off your list as you complete them.
EMBLEMS OF FAITH
(Page 30)
Complete the requirement.
- Earn the religious emblem of your faith.
(A list of the religious emblems available to Cub Scouts is
listed on this site. Click here to see it.)
COUNTRY (Do THREE of the following)
WHAT MAKES AMERICA
SPECIAL? (Page 34)
Do requirements (a) and (j) and any two
of the other requirements.
- Write or tell what
makes America special to you.
- With the help of your
family or den leader, find out about two famous Americans. Tell
the things they did or are doing to improve our way of life.
- Find out something
about the old homes near where you live. Go and see two of them.
- Find out where places
of historical interest are located in or near your town or city.
Go and visit one of them with your family or den.
- Choose a state; it
can be your favorite one or your home state. Name its state
bird, tree, and flower. Describe its flag. Give the date it
was admitted to the Union.
- Be a member of the
color guard in a flag ceremony for your den or pack.
- Display the U.S. flag
in your home or fly it on three national holidays..
- Learn how to raise
and lower a U.S. flag properly for an outdoor ceremony.
- Participate in an
outdoor flag ceremony
- Complete the Character Connection for
Citizenship.
- Know. Tell
ways some people in the past have served our country. Tell
about some people who serve our country today. (Don't forget
about "ordinary" people who serve our country.)
- Commit.
Tell something that might happen to you and your family
if other people were not responsible citizens. Tell one
thing you will do to be a good citizen.
- Practice. Tell three things
you did in one week that show you are a good citizen.
TALL TALES (Page
42)
Do all three requirements.
- Tell in your own words what folklore is.
List some folklore stories, folk songs, or historical legends
from your own state or part of the country. Play the Folklore
Match Game on page 48.
- Name at least five stories about American
folklore. Point out on a United States map where they happened.
- Read two folklore stories and tell
your favorite one to your den.
SHARING YOUR
WORLD WITH WILDLIFE (Page 50)
This elective is also part of the Cub Scout
World Conservation Award.
Do four of the requirements.
- Choose a bird or animal that you like and
find out how it lives. Make a poster showing what you have learned.
- Build or make a bird feeder or birdhouse
and hang it in a place where birds can visit safely.
- Explain what a wildlife conservation officer
does.
- Visit one of the following:
- Zoo
- Nature center
- Aviary
- Wildlife refuge
- Game preserve.
- Name one animal that has become extinct in
the last 100 years. Tell why animals become extinct. Name one
animal that is on the endangered species list.
TAKE CARE OF
YOUR PLANET (Page 56)
Do three requirements.
- Save 5 pounds of glass or aluminum, or 1
month of daily newspapers. Turn them in at a recycling center
or use your community's recycling service.
- Plant a tree in your yard, or on the grounds
of the group that operates your Cub Scout pack, or in a park
or other public place. Be sure to get permission first.
- Call city or county officials or your trash
hauling company and find out what happens to your trash after
it is hauled away.
- List all the ways water is used in your home.
Search for dripping faucets or other ways water might be wasted.
With an adult, repair or correct those problems.
- Discuss with an adult in your family the
kinds of energy your family uses.
- Find out more about your family's use of
electricity.
- Take part in a den or pack neighborhood
clean-up project.
LAW ENFORCEMENT
IS A BIG JOB (Page 64)
Do all six requirements.
- Practice one way police gather evidence:
by taking fingerprints, or taking shoeprints, or taking tire
track casts.
- Visit your local sheriff's office or police
station or talk with a law enforcement officer visiting your
den or pack to discuss crime prevention.
- Help with crime prevention for your home.
- Be sure you know where to get help in your
neighborhood.
- Learn the phone numbers to use in an emergency
and post them by each phone in your home.
- Know what you can do to help law enforcement.
FAMILY (Do FOUR of the following)
THE PAST IS EXCITING
AND IMPORTANT (Page 72)
Do requirement g and two other requirements.
- Visit your library or newspaper office. Ask
to see back issues of newspapers or an almanac.
- Find someone who was a Cub Scout a long time
ago. Talk with him about what Cub Scouting was like then.
- Start or add to an existing den or pack scrapbook.
- Trace your family back through your grandparents
or great-grandparents; or, talk to a grandparent about what
it was like when he or she was younger.
- Find out some history about your community.
- Start your own history: keep a journal for
2 weeks.
- Complete the Character Connection for
Respect.
- Know. As you learn about how Cub
Scout-age life was like for adults you know, does what you
learn change what you think about them. Tell how it might
help you respect or value them more.
- Commit. Can you think of reasons
others might be disrespectful to people or things you value?
Name one new way you will show respect for a person or thing
someone else values.
- Practice. List some ways
you can show respect for people and events in the past.
WHAT'S COOKING?
(Page 80)
Do four requirements.
- With an adult, bake cookies.
- With an adult, make snacks for the next den
meeting.
- With an adult, prepare one part of your breakfast,
one part of your lunch, and one part of your supper.
- Make a list of the "junk foods"
you eat. Discuss "junk food" with a parent or teacher.
- Make some trail food for a hike.
- With an adult, make a dessert for your family.
- With an adult, cook something outdoors.
FAMILY FUN (Page
90)
Do both requirements.
- Go on a day trip or evening out with members
of your family.
- Have a family fun night at home.
BE READY! (Page
96)
Do requirements a through e and requirement
g. Requirement f is recommended, but not required.
- Tell what to do in case of an accident in
the home. A family member needs help. Someone's clothes catch
on fire.
- Tell what to do in case of a water accident.
- Tell what to do in case of a school bus accident.
- Tell what to do in case of a car accident.
- With your family, plan escape routes from
your home and have a practice drill.
- Have a health checkup by a physician (optional).
- Complete the Character Connection for
Courage.
- Know. Memorize the courage steps:
Be brave, Be calm, Be clear, and Be careful. Tell why each
courage step is important. How will memorizing the courage
steps help you to be ready?
- Commit. Tell why it might be difficult
to follow the courage steps in an emergency situation. Think
of other times you can use the courage steps. (Standing
up to a bully is one example.)
- Practice. Act out one of
the requirements using these courage steps: Be brave, Be
calm, Be clear, and Be careful.
FAMILY OUTDOOR
ADVENTURE (Page 106)
This achievement is also part of Cub Scouting's
Leave No Trace Award.
Do three requirements.
- Go camping with your family.
- Go on a hike with your family.
- Have a picnic with your family.
- Attend an outdoor event with your family.
- Plan your outdoor family day.
SAVING WELL,
SPENDING WELL (Page 112)
Do four requirements.
- Go grocery shopping with a parent or other
adult member of your family.
- Set up a savings account.
- Keep a record of how you spend money for
2 weeks.
- Pretend you are shopping for a car for your
family.
- Discuss family finances with a parent or
guardian.
- Play a board game with your family that involves
the use of play money.
- With an adult, figure out how much it costs
for each person in your home to eat one meal.
SELF (do FOUR of the following)
RIDE RIGHT (Page
118)
Do requirement (a) and three other requirements.
- Know the rules for bike safety. If your town
requires a bicycle license, be sure to get one.
- Learn to ride a bike, if you haven't by now.
Show that you can follow a winding course for 60 feet doing
sharp left and right turns, a U-turn, and an emergency stop.
- Keep your bike in good shape. Identify the
parts of a bike that should be checked often.
- Change a tire on a bicycle.
- Protect your bike from theft. Use a bicycle
lock.
- Ride a bike for 1 mile without rest. Be sure
to obey all traffic rules.
- Plan and take a family bike hike.
GAMES, GAMES, GAMES!
(Page 126)
Do two requirements.
- Set up the equipment and play any two of
these outdoor games with your family or friends.
(Backyard golf, Badminton, Croquet, Sidewalk shuffleboard, Kickball,
Softball, Tetherball, Horseshoes, Volleyball)
- Play two organized games with your den.
- Select a game that your den has never played.
Explain the rules. Tell them how to play it, and then play it
with them.
BUILDING MUSCLES
(Page 130)
Do all three requirements.
- Do physical fitness stretching exercises.
Then do curl-ups, push-ups, the standing long jump, and the
softball throw.
- With a friend about your size, compete in
at least six different two-person contests. (Many examples in
book.)
- Compete with your den or pack in the
crab relay, gorilla relay, 30-yard dash, and kangaroo relay.
NOTE TO PARENTS: If a licensed physician
certifies that the Cub Scout's physical condition for an indeterminable
time doesn't permit him to do three of the requirements in this
achievement, the Cubmaster and pack committee may authorize
substitution of any three Arrow Point electives.
INFORMATION, PLEASE
- (Page 136)
Do requirement (a) and three more requirements.
- With an adult in your family, choose a TV
show. Watch it together.
- Play a game of charades at your den meeting
or with your family at home.
- Visit a newspaper office, or a TV or radio
station and talk to a news reporter.
- Use a computer to get information. Write,
spell-check, and print out a report on what you learned.
- Write a letter to a company that makes something
you use. Use e-mail or the U.S. Postal Service.
- Talk with a parent or other family member
about how getting and giving facts fits into his or her job.
JOT IT DOWN (Page
140)
Do requirement h and four other requirements.
- Make a list of the things you want to do
today. Check them off when you have done them.
- Write two letters to relatives or friends.
- Keep a daily record of your activities for
2 weeks.
- Write an invitation to someone.
- Write a thank-you note.
- Write a story about something you have done
with your family.
- Write about the activities of your den.
- Complete the Character Connection for
Honesty.
- Know. Tell what made it difficult
to be clear and accurate as you wrote details and kept records,
and tell what could tempt you to write something that was
not exactly true. Define honesty.
- Commit. Tell why it is important
to be honest and trustworthy with yourself and with others.
Imagine you had reported something inaccurately and tell
how you could set the record straight. Give reasons that
honest reporting will earn the trust of others.
- Practice. While doing the
requirement for this achievement, be honest when you are
writing about real events.
SHAVINGS AND CHIPS
(Page 146)
Do all four requirements.
- Know the safety rules for handling a knife.
- Show that you know how to take care of and
use a pocketknife.
- Make a carving with a pocketknife. Work with
your den leader or other adult when doing this.
- Earn the Whittling Chip card.
SAWDUST AND NAILS
(Page 152)
Do all three requirements.
- Show how to use and take care of four of
these tools.
(Hammer, Hand saw, Hand drill, C-clamp, Wood plane, Pliers,
Crescent wrench, Screwdriver, Bench vise, Coping saw, Drill
bit)
- Build your own tool box.
- Use at least two tools listed in requirement
(a) to fix something.
BUILD A MODEL (Page
156)
Do requirement g and two other requirements.
- Build a model from a kit.
- Build a display for one of your models.
- Pretend you are planning to change the furniture
layout in one of the rooms in your home.
- Make a model of a mountain, a meadow, a canyon,
or a river.
- Go and see a model of a shopping center or
new building that is on display somewhere.
- Make a model of a rocket, boat, car, or plane.
- Complete the Character Connection for
Resourcefulness.
- Know. Review the requirements
for this achievement and list the resources you would need
to complete them. Then list the materials you could substitute
for items that you do not already have. Tell what it means
to be resourceful.
- Commit. After you complete the
requirements for this achievement, list any changes that
would make the results better if you did these projects
again. Tell why it is important to consider all available
resources for a project.
- Practice. While you complete
the requirements for this achievement, make notes on which
materials worked well in your projects and why.
TYING IT ALL UP
(Page 162)
Do five requirements.
- Whip the ends of a rope.
- Tie a square knot, bowline, sheet bend, two
half hitches, and slip knot. Tell how each knot is used.
- Learn how to keep a rope from tangling.
- Coil a rope. Throw it, hitting a 2-foot square
marker 20 feet away.
- Learn a magic rope trick.
- Make your own rope.
SPORTS, SPORTS,
SPORTS (Page 170)
Do all five requirements.
- Learn the rules of and how to play three
team sports.
- Learn the rules of and how to play two sports
in which only one person is on each side.
- Take part in one team and one individual
sport.
- Watch a sport on TV with a parent or some
other adult member of your family.
- Attend a high school, college, or professional
sporting event with your family or your den.
BE A LEADER (Page
174)
Do requirement f and two other requirements.
- Help a boy join Cub Scouting, or help a new
Cub Scout through the Bobcat trail.
- Serve as a denner or assistant denner.
- Plan and conduct a den activity with the
approval of your den leader.
- Tell two people they have done a good job.
- Leadership means choosing a way even when
not everybody likes your choice.
- Complete the Character Connection for
Compassion.
- Know. Tell why, as a leader, it
is important to show kindness and concern for other people.
List ways leaders show they care about the thoughts and
feelings of others.
- Commit. Tell why a good leader
must consider the ideas, abilities, and feelings of others.
Tell why it might be hard for a leader to protect another
person's well-being. Tell ways you can be kind and compassionate.
- Practice. While you complete
the requirements for this achievement, find ways to be kind
and considerate of others.
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The contents of this page was reproduced
from material found on the U. S. Scouting Service Project,
Inc. Website.
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