Arts and Hobbies Bronze Award
To earn the Bronze Award for ARTS AND HOBBIES activities:
Do nine of
the following:
- Visit a drafting company that uses state-of-the-art CAD systems and
see how the new technology is used.
-
- Choose a product that you are familiar with. Create an advertising
plan for this product, then design an advertising plan layout.
- Using your resources, create a clean, attractive tabletop display
highlighting your advertising plan for your chosen product.
- Show your display at your crew meeting or other public place.
-
- Learn about backstage support for artistic productions.
- Attend a theater production. Then critique the work of the artist
in set design, decoration, and costume design.
-
- Choose a new hobby such as CD, sports card, or stamp collecting;
in-line skating; or marksmanship.
- Keep a log for at least 90 days of each time you participate in
your hobby.
- Take pictures and/or keep other memorabilia related to your hobby.
- After participating in your hobby for at least 90 days, make a
presentation or tabletop display on what you have learned for your
crew, another crew, a Cub Scout or Boy Scout group, or another youth
group.
-
- Tour a golf course. Talk to the golf pro, caddy, groundskeeper,
manager, or other golf course employee about what it takes to operate
a golf course. Play at least nine holes of golf.
OR
- Tour a golf driving range. Talk to the manager or other driving
range employee about what it takes to manage a driving range. Hit a
bucket of balls.
-
- Develop a plan to assess the physical skill level of each member
of a group such as your crew, a Cub Scout or Boy Scout group, a
retirement home, or a church group.
- Once you have determined your starting point or base, develop a
plan with each member of your group to develop a physical training
improvement program.
- Test your group members on a regular basis over a 90-day period to
see if there is improvement.
- Share your results with the group and/or your crew.
-
- Lead or participate in a crew discussion on the merits of a young
person choosing a sports hobby such as golf, jogging, or cycling for a
lifetime. Discuss health benefits, opportunity to associate with
friends, costs, etc.
- Ask an adult who is not active in your crew and who has an active
sports hobby to join your discussion to get his or her point of view.
- Visit a hobby store. Talk with the manager about what the most
popular hobby is relative to what is purchased and the type and age of
people who participate in different hobbies. If they have free
literature about beginning hobbies, share it with your crew members.
- Teach disadvantage or disabled people a sport and organize suitable
competitions, or help them develop an appreciation for an art or hobby
new to them.
- Organize a hobby meet (a place where people gather to display and
share information about their hobbies) for your crew, a church group, a
Cub Scout or Boy Scout group, a retirement home, a group home, or
another group.
- Organize a photography contest in your crew, another crew, a church group, a Cub
Scout or Boy Scout group, a retirement home, a group home, or another
group. Secure prizes and judges. Plan an awards program.
- Using your artistic ability, volunteer to do the artwork for an
activity for your crew, another crew, a Cub Scout or Boy Scout group, a
district, or a council. Example: Do the posters and promotional materials
for a district Cub Scout day camp.
[Activities or projects that are more available in your area may be
substituted with your Advisor's approval for activities shown above.]
Above information from Venturing Handbook (No.
33494), 2009 printing.
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