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Blue Star Activities - Home and Community

To create in a Cub a positive feeling of
family and community responsibility, as well as
personal self-reliance through opportunities to
develop home care skills and knowledge about various
community services. The Home and Community Activity
Area has three goals:
- To provide support to the Cub's family
by teaching skills related to home care, safety
and maintenance.
- To explore and appreciate the
challenges facing disabled people in the
community.
- To explore what services are needed to
support a community, and how a person would gain
access to these services if required.
Blue Star | Disability
Awareness | Family
Helper Family Safety | First
Aid | Guide | Home
Repair Law Awareness | Pet
Care Canadian Family
Care Award
Blue Star

To earn the Blue Star, choose and do any five (5) of
the A
Requirements and
any four (4) of the B
Requirements. These activities can be done
by yourself, or with your six, pack, family or
friends.
A Requirements
- Accept and carry out a home chore for one
month, such as washing dishes, cleaning your
room or caring for the family pet.
- With an adult, show how to make simple
repairs around your home.
- Discuss with your leader some safety rules
when home alone and in dealing with strangers.
- Show how to use a home telephone, a public
telephone, and a telephone book. Show you know
your own home telephone number and can find
emergency numbers in a telephone book.li>Send
and receive a simple message in Bliss symbols,
Braille , American Sign Language , or another
form of communication used by some disabled
people.
- Demonstrate basic first aid skills.
- Make use of two community resources such as
a library , museum , playground, recreation
centre, skating rink, swimming pool, etc., and
tell other Cubs how they can use them.
- On a map of your community, point out the
location of your home and three other
interesting places, such as your school, the
library, your place of worship, your Cub meeting
hall, etc.
- Describe the highway codes for pedestrians
and cyclists and explain why we have these
codes.
- Plan and prepare a party for a family, pack,
six or other group.
B Requirements
- Visit a national, provincial or local
government building such as a courthouse or city
hall. Tell about or make a scrapbook of your
visit.
- Visit a municipal service such as the police
or fire station, water works, sewage treatment
plant, etc. Tell about or make a scrapbook of
your visit.
- Visit a communications service, such as a
newspaper plant, telephone exchange, printing
press, radio or TV station, etc. Tell about or
make a scrapbook of your visit.
- Visit a transportation centre, such as an
airport, a railway station, bus depot, taxi
dispatcher, etc. Tell about or make a scrapbook
of your visit.
- Carry out out an accident and fire
prevention check of your home, garage, Cub
meeting place; or community. With your family, draw
an emergency escape plan for
your home.
- Make a list or point out in your meeting
place and community what services are available
for disabled people.
Disability Awareness Badge

To earn the Disability Awareness Badge, do any four
(4) of the following requirements
- Recognize the International Symbol of
Accessibility and point out places where this
sign is found.
- Discuss with your leader how building
entrances, water fountains, elevators, public
telephones and washrooms, and sidewalk corner
curbs can be made more accessible to persons in
wheelchairs.
- Visit your library and find out how books
are made available for visually impaired people.
- Meet with a social worker, agency
representative or knowledgeable adult as to what
services are available in your community to
people with various disabilities.
- Talk to your gym teacher, Parks and
Recreation department or leader about how
disabled persons participate and compete in
various sports.
- Talk to a representative from the phone
company; TV station or other knowledgeable adult
about what services are available for the
hearing impaired.
- Find out what American Sign Language (ASI)
is. Learn some sign language and how to sign
your name.
- Where possible, meet with a disabled person
and talk about that person's personal interests
and activities.
Family Helper Badge

To earn the Family Helper Badge, with the help of an
adult, do any seven of the following:
- Show how to use the kitchen stove or
microwave oven safely, and then make tea,
coffee, cocoa, soup or cook an egg.
- Set a table for a two course meal for your
family.
- Know how to load and operate a dishwasher,
of show the proper way to wash dishes by hand.
- Clean windows and mop a floor.
- Make a bed and clean and tidy a room.
- Vacuum a rug.
- Show the correct way to answer callers at
the door and on the telephone, and show how to
pass on a message.
- Wash and dry a load of laundry and iron your
neckerchief.
- Show how to recycle, compost and dispose of
household garbage.
- Sew on a badge and a button.
- Discuss how to properly dispose of household
toxic waste such as paint, oil, paint thinner,
old medicine, cleaners and batteries.
- Wash an automobile.
- Keep an entrance to a home clear of snow for
one month.
- Water a lawn or garden for one month.
Family Safety Badge

To earn the Family Safety Badge, complete the
following requirements:
- Help reduce the risk of fire and burns in
the home by checking that:
- Matches and flammable liquids are stored
properly and out of reach of small children
- Paint, paper and rags are away from heat
- Pot handles are turned toward the back
of the stove to prevent the pots being
knocked or grab bed by small children
- Your hot water tank is set below 54
degrees C (130 degrees F) to help prevent
scalding
- Show how to test and care for a smoke alarm.
- Help reduce the risk of poisoning in the
home by checking that:
- Poisons, cleaners and medicines are out
of reach of children. Show how to find
poison information on household products
labelled as poison,
- Food containers such as pop bottles are
not being used to store poisonous products
- Food is stored safely and handled
properly
- Know and draw the following hazardous
products symbols for poison, flammable,
explosive and corrosive. Find some products that
are labelled this way.
- Show how to lock and secure all windows,
doors and other entry ways into your home.
- Tell or demonstrate what to do if:
- The lights go out in your home
- A fuse blows or circuit breaker trips
- There is a broken water pipe
- There is a smell of natural gas
- The drains back up
- Help reduce the risk of falls in the home by
checking that halls, stairs, and walkways are
clear of objects.
- Do one of the following projects:
- Make a poster or display that show the
dangers of playing on or near train tracks ,
trestles, crossings and/or train yards
- Make a poster or display that shows the
dangers of touching power lines with a stick
or ladder, climbing on electrical power
poles, towers and substations, poking
electrical outlets and/or pulling toast out
of a toaster with a knife or fork
- Make a poster or display that shows the
dangers of playing around storm sewers,
construction sites, garbage dumps or
dumpsters, ice covered water or water areas,
vacant buildings, farm machinery, quarries,
old wells and/or unfriendly animals
- Make a list of emergency numbers, such as:
police, fire, ambulance, etc., and post it by a
phone in your home.
First Aid Badge

To earn the First Aid Badge, with the help of an
adult, complete the following requirements:
- Explain:
- The meaning of first aid
- The meaning of medical aid
- The three most important measures you
must learn to save a life
- Do the following:
- Demonstrate rescue breathing
- Demonstrate first aid for a severe wound
- Show how to care for an unconscious
person
- Show how to give first aid for a burn or
scald
- Show how to give first aid for a wound
that is bleeding
- Show how to stop a nose bleed
- Show what to do if your clothes or
another person's clothes catch fire
- Describe the signs of frost-bite and how
to treat it
- Describe what to do if an insect or
animal bites you or another person
- Explain how to prevent and treat
hypothermia and overheating Note: Direct
human contact (human to human) is not
required for Cubs practicing rescue
breathing. You can get more information from
the local office of St. John Ambulance or
The Canadian Red Cross that serves your
area.
Guide Badge

To earn the Guide Badge, complete the following
requirements:
- Show that you can politely give clear,
simple directions to someone asking his or her
way. Describe what you would do if a stranger
offered you a ride of asked you to come along to
show him or her how to get to a place.
- Describe how to call for fire fighters,
police or ambulance.
- Show on a map the route of your local bus,
or school bus or a direct route from your home
to the centre of your community.
- Describe how to get to the main highways
around your community.
- Describe or point out on a map the location
of as many of the following as are found in your
community:
- nearest mail box or post office
- police station
- hospital/doctor
- school
- drug store
- public telephone
- fire station or alarm box
- railway or bus station
- gas station
- hotel or motel
- block parent .
Home Repair Badge

To earn the Home Repair Badge, with the help of an
adult, do any seven of the following requirements:
- Show how to turn on and off the electric
power supply and the water supply in your home.
Explain how to turn off the gas supply if your
home uses gas.
- Replace a light bulb in a socket.
- Replace a tap washer.
- Lubricate a door hinge and/or lock.
- Finish a wood surface and stain.
- Properly prepare and paint a piece of wood
or metal.
- Help keep work areas, such as garage or
basement, clean and tidy for one month.
- Re-sod or reseed a worn out part of a lawn.
- Tell or show how to clear a stopped up sink
or toilet.
- Replace a doorknob or install any kind of
door or window lock.
Law Awareness Badge

To earn the Law Awareness Badge, complete the
following requirements:
- Talk to your six about the laws of the Wolf
Cub Pack and what they mean. What rules should
you have in your six so that everyone can enjoy
Cubs more? What might happen if your pack or six
did not have rules?
- Talk to one of your leaders about who makes
the laws in our country and why these laws are
important to us. Who is responsible for making
sure our laws are followed? Who can you ask for
help if you see a law being broken?
- For any Our of the following situations,
explain to your six what the laws are and why we
have them:
- Crossing private property
- Burning or damaging private property
- Traffic laws for bicycles, pedestrians
and automobiles
- Littering
- Hurting other people
- Taking what doesn't belong to you
- Polluting or damaging the environment
- Drinking and driving
- Taking illegal drugs. Talk about what
would happen in your neighbourhood if you
didn't have these laws
- Talk with your parents or guardian about the
following situations and decide what you would
do for any four of them:
- Someone breaks into or damages your
house
- Someone steals your bicycle
- A stranger asks questions about your
parents, neighbours, or yourself
- You see someone hurting or bullying
another person
- Someone asks you to break open a school
locker
- Someone offers you drugs, alcohol, or
cigarettes
- Someone dares you to shoplift.
Pet Care Badge

To earn the Pet Care Badge, complete the following
requirements:
- Keep and take care of a pet for three months
or, if this is not possible, help take care of
another persons pet for three months.
- Explain and obey local regulations for
keeping an animal as a pet.
- Read a book about your pet.
- Explain the care of the pet: shelter,
feeding, common illnesses and inoculations,
cleanliness, exercise, and training.
- Describe how to be careful around a strange
animal and what to do if you suspect it might
have a dangerous disease such as rabies.
- Explain how and why the pet became
domesticated. Hint: Requirement 6 works for
animals like cats, horses, and dogs. For some
animals (like snakes), it will be hard to learn
when they became domesticated, if they ever did.
If, for any reason, you can't care for a pet at
home, ask one of your leaders how you can
arrange to care for a pet elsewhere. Check the
library in your community or at school for books
on pets.
Canadian Family Care Award

To earn the Canadian Family Cares Award, complete
the following requirements:
- Earn the Blue Star.
- Earn the following Home and Community
related badges:
- Family Safety
- First Aider
- Disability Awareness
- Earn one other Home and Community related
badge.
- Help show other Cubs how to do a family care
skill of your choice.
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Chief Scout of
the World
Robert
Baden-Powell
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