FOLLOW BIG BEAR'S ARROW POINT TRAIL ! |
Now that your boy is a Bear Cub Scout he can still have lots of fun with his Bear Book! Baloo has electives for him too. Tons of 'em! Electives are not like achievements. A boy can pick any requirement he likes from the electives and do it. When he has completed 10 elective requirements he has earned his first arrow point, a gold one. After earning a Gold Arrow Point, he may complete 10 more requirements to earn a Silver Arrow Point. A Bear Cub Scout may wear as many Silver Arrow Points as he can earn under your Bear badge. Details regarding the completion of the Bear electives can be found in the BSA Cub Scout Bear Handook starting on page 180 (BSA No. 33451, © 2003.)

BSA 33451 © 2003
When working on the achievements to earn his Bear badge, you may have seen some requirements you wanted to try but didn't. Now you can review the Achievements section of your Bear Book with your boy and use any requirement he did not count toward his Bear badge. These achievement requirements now follow the same rules as the elective requirements. Each one is a separate project. You can mix requirements from electives and unused achievements in any manner to get the ten you need for each arrow point.
A Bear Cub Scout may earn arrow points from the Big Bear Cub Scout Book until he becomes a Webelos Scout.
Remember this important rule: If a boy completed an achievement requirement to earn his Bear badge, he cannot use it again to earn arrow points. But there are lots more.
The Gold Arrow Point is worn 3/4" below and centered under the Wolf rank badge. Silver Arrow Points are worn in rows of two below, centered, and touching the Gold Arrow Point or previously earned Silver Arrow Points for the Wolf rank.
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THE BEAR ELECTIVES
BEAR ELECTIVE MENU
- Space
- Weather
- Radio
- Electricity
- Boats
- Aircraft
- Things That Go
- Cub Scout Band
- Art
- Masks
- Photography
- Nature Crafts
- Magic
- Landscaping
- Water and Soil Conservation
- Farm Animals
- Repairs
- Backyard Gym
- Swimming
- Sports
- Sales
- Collecting Things
- Maps
- American Indian Life
- Let's Go Camping
As you and your boy peruse the following list of electives for your Bear Cubs, remember that you can go back to the uncompleted requirements in the Bear Achievements section of the "Bear Handbook" and work on those towards Arrow Points.
- SPACE (Bear Handbook, Page 182)
- Identify two constellations and the North Star in the night sky.
- Make a pinhole planetarium and show three constellations.
- Visit a planetarium.
- Build a model of a rocket or space satellite.
- Read and talk about at least one man-made satellite and one
natural one.
- Find a picture of another planet in our solar system. Explain how
it is different from Earth.
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- WEATHER (Bear Handbook, Page 184)
This elective is also part of the Cub Scout
World Conservation Award.
- Learn how to read an outdoor thermometer. Put one outdoors and
read it at the same time every day for two weeks. Keep a record of
each day's temperature and a description of the weather each day (fair
skies, rain, fog, snow, etc.).
- Build a weather vane. Record wind direction every day at the same
hour for two weeks. Keep a record of the weather for each day.
- Make a rain gauge.
- Find out what a barometer is and how it works. Tell your den about
it. Tell what "relative humidity" means.
- Learn to identify three different kinds of clouds. Estimate their
heights.
- Watch the weather forecast on TV every day for two weeks. Describe
three different symbols used on weather maps. Keep a record of how
many times the weather forecast is correct.
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- RADIO (Bear Handbook, Page 190)
- Build a crystal or diode radio. Check with your local craft or
hobby shop or the nearest Scout shop that carries a crystal radio kit.
It is all right to use a kit.
- Make and operate a battery powered radio, following the directions
with the kit.
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- ELECTRICITY (Bear Handbook, Page 192)
- Wire a buzzer or doorbell.
- Make an electric buzzer game.
- Make a simple bar or horseshoe electromagnet.
- Use a simple electric motor.
- Make a crane with an electromagnetic lift.
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- BOATS (Bear Handbook, Page 196)
- Help an adult rig and sail a real boat. (Wear your PFD.)
- Help an adult repair a real boat or canoe.
- Know the flag signals for storm warnings.
- Help an adult repair a boat dock.
- With an adult on board, and both wearing PFDs, row a boat around a
100-yard course that has two turns. Demonstrate forward strokes, turns
to both sides, and backstrokes.
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- AIRCRAFT (Bear Handbook, Page 202)
- Identify five different kinds of aircraft, in flight if possible,
or from models or photos.
- Ride in a commercial airplane.
- Explain how a hot air balloon works.
- Build and fly a model airplane. (You may use a kit. Every time you
do this differently, it counts as a completed project.)
- Sketch and label an airplane showing the direction of forces
acting on it (lift, drag, and load).
- Make a list of some of the things a helicopter can do that other
kinds of airplanes can't. Draw or cut out a picture of a helicopter
and label the parts.
- Build and display a scale airplane model. You may use a kit or
build it from plans.
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- THINGS THAT GO (Bear Handbook, Page 206)
- With an adult's help, make a scooter or a Cubmobile. Know the
safety rules.
- With an adult's help, make a windmill.
- With an adult's help, make a waterwheel.
- Make an invention of your own design that goes.
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- CUB SCOUT BAND (Bear Handbook, Page 210)
- Make and play a homemade musical instrument - cigar-box banjo,
washtub bull fiddle, a drum or rhythm set, tambourine. etc.
- Learn to play two familiar tunes on any musical instrument.
- Play in a den band using homemade or regular musical instruments.
Play at a pack meeting.
- Play two tunes on any recognized band or orchestra instrument.
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- ART (Bear Handbook, Page 214)
- Do an original art project and show it at a pack meeting. Every
project you do counts as one requirement
Here are some ideas for art projects:
Mobile or wire sculpture, Silhouette, Acrylic painting, Watercolor
painting, Collage, Mosaic, Clay sculpture, Silk screen picture.
- Visit an art museum or picture gallery with your den or family.
- Find a favorite outdoor location and draw or paint it.
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- MASKS (Bear Handbook, Page 218)
- Make a simple papier-mâché mask.
- Make an animal mask.
- Make a clown mask.
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- PHOTOGRAPHY (Bear Handbook, Page 222)
- Practice holding a camera still in one position. Learn to push the
shutter button without moving the camera. Do this without film in the
camera until you have learned how. Look through the viewfinder and see
what your picture will look like. Make sure that everything you want
in your picture is in the frame of your viewfinder.
- Take five pictures of the same subject in different kinds of
light.
- Subject in direct sun with direct light.
- Subject in direct sun with side light.
- Subject in direct sun with back light.
- Subject in shade on a sunny day.
- Subject on a cloudy day.
- Put your pictures to use.
- Mount a picture on cardboard for display.
- Mount on cardboard and give it to a friend.
- Make three pictures that show how something happened (tell a
story) and write a one sentence explanation for each.
- Take a picture in your house.
- With available light.
- Using a flash attachment or photoflood (bright light).
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- NATURE CRAFTS (Bear Handbook, Page 226)
This elective is also part of the Cub Scout
World Conservation Award.
- Make solar prints of three kinds of leaves.
- Make a display of eight different animal tracks with an eraser
print.
- Collect, press, and label ten kinds of leaves.
- Build a waterscope and identify five types of water life.
- Collect eight kinds of plant seeds and label them.
- Collect, mount, and label ten kinds of rocks or minerals.
- Collect, mount, and label five kinds of shells.
- Build and use a bird caller
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- MAGIC (Bear Handbook, Page 230)
- Learn and show three magic tricks.
- With your den, put on a magic show for someone else.
- Learn and show four puzzles.
- Learn and show three rope tricks.
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- LANDSCAPING (Bear Handbook, Page 236)
- With an adult, help take care of your lawn or flower beds or help
take care of the lawn or flower beds of a public building, school, or
church. Seed bare spots. Get rid of weeds. Pick up litter. Agree ahead
of time on what you will do.
- Make a sketch of a landscape plan for the area right around your
home. Talk it over with a parent or den leader. Show which trees,
shrubs and flowers you could plant to make the area look better.
- Take part in a project with your family, den, or pack to make your
neighborhood or community more beautiful. These might be having a
cleanup party, painting, cleaning and painting trash barrels, and
removing weeds. (Each time you do this differently, it counts as a
completed project.)
- Build a greenhouse and grow twenty plants from seed. You can use a
package of garden seeds, or use beans, pumpkin seeds, or watermelon
seeds.
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- WATER AND SOIL CONSERVATION (Bear Handbook, Page 240)
This elective is also part of the Cub Scout
World Conservation Award.
- Dig a hole or find an excavation project and describe the
different layers of soil you see and feel. (Do not enter an excavation
area alone or without permission.)
- Explore three kinds of earth by conducting a soil experiment.
- Visit a burned-out forest or prairie area, or a slide area, with
your den or your family. Talk to a soil and water conservation officer
or forest ranger about how the area will be planted and cared for so
that it will grow to be the way it was before the fire or slide
- What is erosion? Find out the kinds of grasses, trees,
or ground cover you should plant in your area to help limit erosion.
- As a den, visit a lake, stream, river, or ocean
(whichever is nearest where you live). Plan and do a den project to
help clean up this important source of water. Name four kinds of water
pollution.
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- FARM ANIMALS (Bear Handbook, Page 244)
- Take care of a farm animal. Decide with your parent the things you
will do and how long you will do them.
- Name and describe six kinds of farm animals and tell their common
uses.
- Read a book about farm animals and tell
your den about it.
- With your family or den, visit a livestock exhibit at a county or
state fair.
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- REPAIRS (Bear Handbook, Page 246)
- With the help of an adult, fix an electric plug or appliance.
- Use glue or epoxy to repair something.
- Remove and clean a drain trap.
- Refinish or repaint something.
- Agree with an adult in your family on some repair job to be done
and do it. (Each time you do this differently, it counts as a
completed project.)
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- BACKYARD GYM (Bear Handbook, Page 250)
- Build and use an outdoor gym with at least three items from this
list.
- Balance board
- Trapeze
- Tire walk
- Tire swing
- Tetherball
- Climbing rope
- Running long jump area.
- Build three outdoor toss games.
- Plan an outdoor game or gym day with your den. (This can be part
of a pack activity). Put your plans on paper.
- Hold an open house for your backyard gym.
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- SWIMMING (Bear Handbook, Page 254)
There is something about this elective that
is different from any other. That is this rule: whenever you are
working on the Swimming elective, you must have an adult with you who
can swim.
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- Jump feetfirst into water over your head, swim 25 feet on the
surface, stop, turn sharply, and swim back.
- Swim on your back, the elementary backstroke, for 30 feet.
- Rest by floating on your back, using as little motion as possible
for at least one minute.
- Tell what is meant by the buddy system. Know the basic rules of
safe swimming
- Do a racing dive from edge of pool and swim 60 feet, using a
racing stroke. (You might need to make a turn.)
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- SPORTS (Bear Handbook, Page 260)
- In archery, know the safety rules and how to shoot correctly. Put
six arrows into a 4-foot target at a distance of 15 feet. Make an
arrow holder. (This can be done only at a district/council day or
resident or family camp.)
- In skiing, know the Skier's Safety and Courtesy Code. Demonstrate
walking and kick turn, climbing with a side step or herringbone, a
snowplow stop, a stem turn, four linked snowplow or stem turns,
straight running in a downhill position or cross-country position, and
how to recover from a fall.
- In ice skating, know the safety rules. From a standing start,
skate forward 150 feet; and come to a complete stop within 20 feet.
Skate around a corner clockwise and counterclockwise without coasting.
Show a turn from forward to backward. Skate backward 50 feet.
- In track, show how to make a sprint start. Run the 50-yard dash in
10 seconds or less. Show how to do the standing long jump, the running
long jump, or high jump. (Be sure to have a soft landing area.)
- In roller skating (with conventional or in-line skates), know the
safety rules. From a standing start, skate forward 150 feet; and come
to a complete stop within 20 feet. Skate around a corner clockwise and
counterclockwise without coasting and show a turn from forward to
backward. Skate backward 50 feet. Wear the proper protective clothing.
- Earn a new Cub Scout Sports pin. (Repeat
three times with different sports to earn up to three Arrow Points.)
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- SALES (Bear Handbook, Page 266)
- Take part in a council- or pack-sponsored, money-earning sales
program. Keep track of the sales you make yourself. When the program
is over, add up the sales you have made.
- Help with a garage sale or rummage sale. This can be with your
family or a neighbor, or it can be a church, school, or pack event.
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- COLLECTING THINGS (Bear Handbook, Page 268)
- Start a stamp collection. You can get information about stamp
collecting at any U.S. post office.
- Mount and display a collection of emblems, coins, or other items
to show at a pack meeting. This can be any kind of collection. Every
time you show a different kind of collection, it counts as one
requirement.
- Start your own library. Keep your own books and pamphlets in order
by subject. List the title, author, and subject of each on an index
card and keep the cards in a file box, or use a computer program to
store the information.
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- MAPS (Bear Handbook, Page 270)
- Look up your state on a U.S. map. What other states touch its
borders?
- Find your city or town on a map of your state. How far do you live
from the state capital?
- In which time zone do you live? How many time zones are there in
the U.S.?
- Make a map showing the route from your home to your school or den
meeting place.
- Mark a map showing the way to a place you would like to visit that
is at least 50 miles from your home.
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- AMERICAN INDIAN LIFE (Bear Handbook, Page 272)
- American Indian people live in every part of what is now the
continental United States. Find the name of the American Indian nation
that lives or has lived where you live now. Learn about these people.
- Learn, make equipment for, and play two American Indian or other
native American games with members of your den. Be able to tell the
rules, who won, and what the score was.
- Learn what the American Indian people in your area (or another
area) used for shelter before contact with the Europeans. Learn what
American Indian people in that area used for shelter today. Make a
model of one of these shelters, historic or modern. Compare the kind
of shelter you made with the others made in your den.
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- LET'S GO CAMPING (Bear Handbook, Page 276)
- Learn about the ten essential items you need for a hike or
campout. Assemble your own kit of essential items. Explain why each
item is "essential."
- Go on a short hike with your den, following the buddy system.
Explain how the buddy system works and why it is important to you to
follow it. Tell what to do if you are lost.
- Participate with your den in front of the pack at a campfire.
- Participate with your pack on an overnight campout. Help put up
your tent and hlp set up the campsite.
- Participate with your den in a religious service during an
overnight campout or other Cub Scouting event.
- Attend day camp in your area.
- attend resident camp in your area.
- Earn the Cub Scout Leave No
Trace Award.
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