The Webelos and Arrow of Light Elective Adventures
This page lists the elective adventures that may be earned by either Webelos or Arrow of Light Scouts
After the Cub Scout has completed an Adventure, he is awarded the adventure's pin at the next Pack meeting.
Adventures in Science
Complete Requirements 1-3.
-
An experiment is a “fair test” to compare possible explanations. Draw a picture of a
fair test that shows what you need to do to test a fertilizer’s effects on plant growth.
- Visit a museum, a college, a laboratory, an observatory, a zoo, an aquarium, or other facility that
employs scientists. Prepare three questions ahead of time, and talk to a scientist about his or
her work.
- Complete any four of the following:
- Carry out the experiment you designed for requirement 1.
- If you completed 3a, carry out the experiment again but change the
independent variable. Report what you learned about how changing the variable
affected plant growth.
- Build a model solar system. Chart the distances between the planets so that the model
is to scale. Use what you learn from this requirement to explain the value of making a
model in science.
- With adult supervision, build and launch a model rocket. Use the rocket to design a fair
test to answer a question about force or motion.
- Create two circuits of three light bulbs and a battery. Construct one as a series circuit
and the other as a parallel circuit.
- Study the night sky. Sketch the appearance of the North Star (Polaris) and the Big Dipper
(part of the Ursa Major constellation) over at least six hours (which
may be spread over several nights). Describe what you
observed, and explain the meaning of your observations.
- With adult assistance, explore safe chemical reactions with household materials.
Using two substances, observe what happens when the amounts of the reactants
are increased.
- Explore properties of motion on a playground. How does the weight of a person affect
how fast they slide down a slide or how fast a swing moves? Design a fair test to answer
one of those questions.
- Read a biography of a scientist. Tell your den leader or the other members of your den
what the scientist was famous for and why his or her work is important.
Aquanaut
Complete Requirements 1-4 and at least two others.
-
State the safety precautions you need to take before doing any water
activity
- Discuss the importance of learning the skills you need to know before
going boating.
- Explain the meaning of “order of rescue” and demonstrate the reach and
throw rescue techniques from land.
- Attempt the BSA swimmer test.
- Demonstrate the precautions you must take before attempting to dive
headfirst into the water, and attempt a front surface dive.
- Learn and demonstrate two of the following strokes: crawl, sidestroke,
breaststroke, or elementary backstroke.
- Invite a current or former lifeguard, or member of a rescue squad, the U.S.
Coast Guard, U.S. Navy, or other armed forces branch who has had
swimming and rescue training to your den meeting. Find out what training
and other experiences this person has had.
- Demonstrate how to correctly fasten a life jacket that is the right size for
you. Jump into water over your head. Swim 25 feet wearing the life jacket.
Get out of the water, remove the life jacket, and hang it where it will dry.
- If you are a qualified swimmer, select a paddle of the proper size, and
paddle a canoe with an adult’s supervision.
Art Explosion
Complete Requirements 1-3. Requirement 4 is optional.
-
Visit an art museum, gallery, or exhibit. Discuss with an adult the art you saw. What
did you like?
- Create two self-portraits using two different techniques, such as drawing, painting,
printmaking, sculpture, and computer illustration.
- Do two of the following:
- Draw or paint an original picture outdoors, using the art materials of your choice.
- Create an object using clay that can be fired, baked in the oven, or air-dried.
- Create a freestanding sculpture or mobile using wood, metal, paper-mâché, or found or
recycled objects.
- Make a display of origami or kirigami projects.
- Use a computer illustration or painting program to create a work of art.
- Create an original logo or design. Transfer the design onto a T-shirt, hat, or other object.
- Using a camera or other electronic device, take at least 10 photos of your family, a pet,
or scenery. Use photo-editing software to crop, lighten or darken, and change some of
the photos.
- Create a comic strip with original characters. Include at least four panels to tell a story
centered on one of the points of the Scout Law. Characters can be hand-drawn or
computer-generated.
- Choose one of the following methods to show your artwork:
- Create a hard-copy or digital portfolio of your projects. Share it with your family and members of your den or pack.
- Display your artwork in a pack, school, or community art show.
Aware and Care
Complete the following Requirements.
-
Develop an awareness of the challenges of the blind or visually impaired
through participation in an activity that simulates blindness or visual impairment.
Alternatively, participate in an activity that simulates the challenges of being deaf
or hard of hearing.
- Engage in an activity that simulates mobility impairment. Alternatively, take
part in an activity that simulates dexterity impairment.
- Engage in an activity that simulates mobility impairment. Alternatively, take
part in an activity that simulates dexterity impairment.
- With your den, participate in an activity that focuses on the acceptance of differences in
general.
- Do two of the following:
- Do a Good Turn for residents at a skilled nursing facility or retirement community.
- Invite an individual with a disability to visit your den, and discuss what activities he or
she currently finds challenging or found challenging in the past.
- Attend a disabilities event such as a Special Olympics competition, an adaptive sports
event, a performance with sign language interpretation, or an activity with service dogs.
Tell your den what you thought about the experience.
- Talk to someone who works with people who have disabilities. Ask that person what
they do and how he or she helps people with disabilities.
- Using American Sign Language, sign the Scout Oath.
- With the help of an adult, contact a service dog organization, and learn the entire
process from pup training to assignment to a client.
- Participate in a service project that focuses on a specific disability.
- Participate in an activity with an organization whose members are disabled.
Build It
Complete the following Requirements.
-
Learn about some basic tools and the proper use of each tool. Learn about and
understand the need for safety when you work with tools.
- With the guidance of your Webelos den leader, parent, or guardian, select a
carpentry project and build it.
- List the tools that you use safely as you build your project; create a list of materials needed to
build your project. Put a check mark next to the tools on your list that you used for the first time.
- Learn about a construction career. With your Webelos den leader, parent, or guardian, visit a
construction site, and interview someone working in a construction career.
Build My Own Hero
Complete Requirements 1-3 plus at least one other.
-
Discover what it means to be a hero. Invite a local hero to meet with your den.
- Identify how citizens can be heroes in their communities.
- Recognize a hero in your community by presenting him or her with a “My Hero
Award.”
- Learn about a real-life hero from another part of the world who has helped the world be a
better place.
- Learn about a Scout hero.
- Create your own superhero.
Castaway
Complete Requirements 1 and 2.
-
Complete a. and your choice of b. or c.
- On a campout or outdoor activity with your den or family, cook two
different recipes that do not require pots and pans.
- With the help of an adult, demonstrate one way to light a fire without using matches.
- Using tree limbs or branches that have already fallen or been cut, build a shelter that
will protect you overnight.
- Do all of the following:
- Learn what items should be in an outdoor survival kit that you can carry in a small bag or box that easily fits in a day pack. Assemble your own small survival kit, and explain to your den leader why the items you chose are important for survival.
- With your den, demonstrate two different ways to treat drinking water to
remove impurities.
- Discuss what to do if you become lost in the woods. Tell what the letters “S-T-O-P”
stand for. Tell what the universal emergency signal is. Describe three ways to signal for
help. Demonstrate one of them. Describe what you can do you do to help rescuers
find you.
- Make a list of four qualities you think a leader should have in an emergency and why
they are important to have. Pick two of them, and act them out for your den. Describe
how each relates to a point of the Scout Law. Describe how working on this adventure
gave you a better understanding of the Boy Scout motto.
Earth Rocks!
Complete all Requirements.
-
Do the following:
- Explain the meaning of the word “geology.”
- Explain why this kind of science is an important part of your world.
- Look for different kinds of rocks or minerals while on a rock hunt with your family or your den.
- Do the following:
- Identify the rocks you see on your rock hunt. Use the chart in your handbook that shows the three kinds of rocks and describes minerals to determine which types of rocks you have collected.
- With a magnifying glass, take a closer look at your collection. Determine any differences
between your specimens.
- Share what you see with your family or den.
- Do the following:
- With your family or den, make a mineral test kit, and test rocks according to the Mohs scale of mineral hardness.
- Record the results in your handbook.
- Identify on a map of your state some geological features in your area.
- Do the following:
- Identify some of the geological building materials used in building your home.
- Identify some of the geological materials used around your community.
Engineer
Complete at least Requirements 1 and 2. Requirements 3 and 4 are optional.
-
Pick one type of engineer. With the help of the Internet, your local library, or an
engineer, discover three things that describe what that engineer does. (To use the
Internet, be sure that you have a current Cyber Chip or that you have permission
from your Webelos den leader, parent, or guardian.) Share your findings with your
Webelos den.
- Learn to follow engineering design principles by doing the following:
- Examine a set of blueprints. Using these as a model, construct your own set of blueprints or plans to design a project.
- Using the blueprints or plans from your own design, construct your project. Your project
may be something useful or something fun.
- Share your project with your Webelos den and your pack by displaying the project at a
pack meeting.
- Explore other fields of engineering and how they have helped form our past, present, and
future.
- Pick and do two projects using the engineering skills you have learned. Share your projects with
your den, and also exhibit them at a pack meeting.
Fix It
Complete Requirements 1-4.
-
Put a Fix-It Toolbox together. Describe what each item in your toolbox can be used
for. Show how to use three of the tools safely.
- Be ready. With the help of an adult in your family, do the following:
- Locate the electrical panel in your home. Determine if the electrical panel has fuses or breakers.
- Determine what sort of heat is used to heat your home.
- Learn what you would do to shut off the water for a sink, a toilet, a washing machine, or
a water heater. If there is a main shut-off valve for your home, show where it is located.
- Describe to your Webelos den leader how to fix or make safe the following circumstances with
help from an adult:
- A toilet is overflowing.
- The kitchen sink is clogged.
- A circuit breaker tripped, causing some of the lights to go out.
- Let’s Fix It. Select and do eight of the following. You will need an adult’s supervision for each of
these Fix-It projects:
- Show how to change a light bulb in a lamp or fixture. Determine the type of light bulb and how to properly dispose of it.
- Fix a squeaky door or cabinet hinge.
- Tighten a loose handle or knob on a cabinet or a piece of furniture.
- Demonstrate how to stop a toilet from running.
- Replace a furnace filter.
- Wash a car.
- Check the oil level and tire pressure in a car
- Show how to replace a bulb in a taillight, turn signal, or parking light, or replace a
headlight in a car.
- Help an adult change a tire on a car.
- Make a repair to a bicycle, such as adjusting or lubricating the chain, inflating the tires,
fixing a flat, or adjusting the seat or handlebars.
- Replace the wheels on a skateboard, a scooter, or a pair of inline skates.
- Help an adult prepare and paint a room.
- Help an adult replace or repair a wall or floor tile.
- Help an adult install or repair a window or door lock.
- Help an adult fix a slow or clogged sink drain.
- Help an adult install or repair a mailbox.
- Change the battery in a smoke detector or a carbon monoxide detector, and test its
operation.
- Help an adult fix a leaky faucet.
- Find wall studs, and help an adult hang a curtain rod or a picture.
- Take an old item, such as a small piece of furniture, a broken toy, or a picture frame, and
rebuild and/or refinish it. Show your work to an adult or your Webelos leader.
- Do a Fix-It project agreed upon with your parent.
Game Design
Complete all Requirements.
-
Decide on the elements for your game.
- List at least five of the online safety rules that you put into practice while using the
Internet on your computer or smartphone. Skip this if your Cyber Chip is current.
- Create your game.
- Teach an adult or another Scout how to play your game.
Into the Wild
Complete at least six of the following Requirements.
-
Collect and care for an “insect, amphibian, or reptile zoo.” You might have crickets,
ants, grasshoppers, a lizard, or a toad (but be careful not to collect or move
endangered species protected by federal or state law). Study them for a while and then
let them go. Share your experience with your Webelos den.
- Set up an aquarium or terrarium. Keep it for at least a month. Share your experience with your
Webelos den by showing them photos or drawings of your project or by having them visit to see
your project.
- Watch for birds in your yard, neighborhood, or town for one week. Identify the birds you see,
and write down where and when you saw them.
- Learn about the bird flyways closest to your home. Find out which birds use these flyways.
- Watch at least four wild creatures (reptiles, amphibians, arachnids, fish, insects, or mammals) in
the wild. Describe the kind of place (forest, field, marsh, yard, or park) where you saw them. Tell
what they were doing.
- Identify an insect, reptile, bird, or wild animal that is found only in your area of the country. Tell why it survives in your area.
- Give examples of at least two of the following:
- A producer, a consumer, and a decomposer in the food chain of an ecosystem
- One way humans have changed the balance of nature
- ow you can help protect the balance of nature
- Learn about aquatic ecosystems and wetlands in your area. Talk with your Webelos den leader
or family about the important role aquatic ecosystems and wetlands play in supporting life
cycles of wildlife and humans, and list three ways you can help.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Visit a museum of natural history, a nature center, or a zoo with your family, Webelos den, or pack. Tell what you saw.
- Create a video of a wild creature doing something interesting, and share it with your
family and den.
Into the Woods
Complete at least Requirements 1-4 and one other.
-
Identify two different groups of trees and the parts of a tree.
- Identify four trees common to the area where you live. Tell whether they are native to
your area. Tell how both wildlife and humans use them.
- Identify four plants common to the area where you live. Tell which animals use them and for what
purpose.
- Develop a plan to care for and then plant at least one plant or tree, either indoors in a pot or
outdoors. Tell how this plant or tree helps the environment in which it is planted and what the
plant or tree will be used for.
- Make a list of items in your home that are made from wood and share it with your den. OR: with
your den, take a walk and identify useful things made from wood.
- Explain how the growth rings of a tree trunk tell its life story. Describe different types of tree
bark and explain what the bark does for the tree.
- Visit a nature center, nursery, tree farm, or park, and speak with someone knowledgeable about
trees and plants that are native to your area. Explain how plants and trees are important to our
ecosystem and how they improve our environment.
Looking Back, Looking Forward
Complete all Requirements.
-
Create a record of the history of Scouting and your place in that history.
- With the help of your den leader, parent, or guardian and with your choice of media, go on a virtual journey to the past and create a timeline.
- Create your own time capsule.
Maestro!
Complete Requirements 1 and 2.
-
Do a or b:
- Attend a live musical performance.
- Visit a facility that uses a sound mixer, and learn how it is used.
- Do two of the following:
- Make a musical instrument. Play it for your family, den, or pack.
- Form a “band” with your den. Each member creates his own homemade musical
instrument. Perform for your pack at a pack meeting.
- Play two tunes on any band or orchestra instrument.
- Teach your den the words and melody of a song. Perform the song with your den at your den or pack meeting.
- Create original words for a song. Perform it at your den or pack meeting.
- Collaborate with your den to compose a den theme song. Perform it at your pack
meeting.
- Write a song with words and music that expresses your feelings about an issue, a
person, something you are learning, a point of the Scout Law, etc. Perform it at your den
or pack meeting, alone or with a group.
- Perform a musical number by yourself or with your Webelos den in front of an audience.
Moviemaking
Complete all Requirements.
-
Write a story outline describing a real or imaginary Scouting adventure. Create a
pictured storyboard that shows your story
- Create either an animated or live action movie about yourself. Your movie should
depict how you live by the Scout Oath and Law.
- Share your movie with your family, den, or pack.
Project Family
Complete the following Requirements.
-
Interview a grandparent, another family elder, or a family friend about what life was
like when he or she was growing up.
- With members of your family or a family friend, discuss some of your family
names, history, traditions, and culture. Do one of the following:
- Create a family tree of three generations.
- Make a poster or Web page that shows the places that some of your family
members came from.
- Choose a special celebration or holiday that some of your family members
participate in, and create either a poster, picture, or photo slideshow of it.
- Show your understanding of your duty to family by creating a chart listing the jobs that you and
other family members have at home. Choose three of the jobs you are responsible for, and chart
them for two weeks.
- Select a job that belongs to another family member, and help that person
complete it.
Some examples would be to create a grocery shopping list for the week, to take out
trash for a week, to do the laundry for your family one time, to prepare meals for
your family for one day, or to complete some yard work.
- With the help of an adult, inspect your home and its surroundings. Make a list of hazards or
security problems you find. Correct one problem you found, and tell what you did.
- Complete one of the following:
- Hold a family meeting to plan an exciting family activity. The activity could include:
- A family reunion
- A family night
- A family outing
- Create a list of community service or conservation projects that you and your family can do
together, and present it to your family. Select one project, plan it, and complete it with
members of your family.
Sportsman
Complete all Requirements.
- Show the signals used by officials in one of these sports: football, basketball,
baseball, soccer, or hockey.
- Participate in two sports, either as an individual or part of a team.
- Complete the following requirements:
- Explain what good sportsmanship means.
- Role-play a situation that demonstrates good sportsmanship.
- Give an example of a time when you experienced or saw someone showing good
sportsmanship.
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