NOTE: Alternative requirements for those with special
circumstances are located in the Boy Scout Handbook.
SCOUT
RANK
REQUIREMENTS
(taken from USScouts.org)
- Meet age requirements: Be a boy who has
completed the fifth grade, or is 11 years old, or has earned the Arrow of
Light Award, but is under 18 years old.
- Complete a Boy Scout application and health
history signed by your parent or guardian.
- Find a Scout Troop near your home.
- (Troop
845 meets at Redeemer Lutheran Church, on Arch Road in Chesterfield)
- Repeat the Pledge of Allegiance.
- Demonstrate the Scout sign, salute, and
handshake.
- Demonstrate tying the square knot (a joining
knot).
- Understand and agree to live by the Scout
Oath or Promise, Law,
Motto and Slogan, and
the Outdoor
Code.
- Describe the Scout badge.
- Complete the Pamphlet Exercises: With your
parent or guardian, complete the exercises in the pamphlet "How to
Protect Your Children from Child Abuse: A Parent's Guide".
- Participate in a Scoutmaster conference. Turn
in your Boy Scout application and health history form signed by your parent
or guardian, then participate in a Scoutmaster conference.
[close
window]
TENDERFOOT
RANK
REQUIREMENTS
(taken from USScouts.org)
- Present yourself to your leader, properly
dressed, before going on an overnight camping trip. Show the camping gear
you will use. Show the right way to pack and carry it.
- Spend at least one night on a patrol or troop
campout. Sleep in a tent you have helped pitch.
- On the campout, assist in preparing and
cooking one of your patrol's meals. Tell why it is important for each
patrol member to share in meal preparation and cleanup, and explain the
importance of eating together.
- a. Demonstrate how to whip and fuse the ends
of a rope.
- b. Demonstrate you know how to tie
the following knots and tell what their uses are: two half hitches and the
tautline hitch.
- Explain the rules of safe hiking,
both on the highway and cross-country, during the day and at night. Explain
what to do if you are lost.
- Demonstrate how to display, raise,
lower, and fold the American flag.
- Repeat from memory and explain in
your own words the Scout
Oath, Law, Motto
and Slogan.
- Know your patrol name, give the
patrol yell, and describe your patrol flag.
- Explain why we use the buddy system
in Scouting.
- a. Record your best in the
following tests:
- Push-ups
- Pull-ups
- Sit-ups
- Standing long jump
- 1/4 mile walk/run
- b. Show improvement in the
activities listed in requirement 10a after practicing for 30 days.
- Identify local poisonous plants;
tell how to treat for exposure to them.
- a. Demonstrate the Heimlich
maneuver and tell when it is used.
- b. Show first aid for the
following:
- Simple cuts and scratches
- Blisters on the hand and foot
- Minor burns or scalds (first degree)
- Bites and stings of insects and ticks
- Poisonous snakebite
- Nosebleed
- Frostbite and Sunburn
- Demonstrate scout spirit by living the Scout
Oath (Promise) and Scout Law in your everyday life.
- Participate in a Scoutmaster conference.
- Complete your board of review
[close
window]
SECOND CLASS RANK
REQUIREMENTS
(taken from USScouts.org)
- a. Demonstrate how a compass works and how to
orient a map. Explain what map symbols mean.
- b. Using a compass and a map
together, take a 5-mile hike (or 10 miles by bike) approved by your
adult leader and your parent or guardian.*
- a. Since joining, have participated
in five separate troop/patrol activities (other than troop/patrol meetings),
two of which included camping overnight.
- b. On one of these campouts, select
your patrol site and sleep in a tent that you pitched.
- c. On one campout, demonstrate
proper care, sharpening, and use of the knife, saw, and ax, and describe
when they should be used.
- d. Use the tools listed in
requirement 2c to prepare tinder, kindling, and fuel for a cooking fire.
- e. Discuss when it is appropriate to
use a cooking fire and a lightweight stove. Discuss the safety
procedures for using both..
- f. Demonstrate how to light a fire
and a lightweight stove.
- g. On one campout, plan and cook
over an open fire one hot breakfast or lunch for yourself, selecting foods
from the four basic food groups. Explain the importance of good
nutrition. Tell how to transport, store, and prepare the foods you
selected.
- Participate in a flag ceremony for
your school, religious institution, chartered organization, community, or
troop activity.
- Participate in an approved (minimum of one
hour) service project.
- Identify or show evidence of at
least ten kinds of wild animals (birds, mammals, reptiles, fish, mollusks)
found in your community.
- a. Show what to do for
"hurry" cases of stopped breathing, serious bleeding, and internal
poisoning.
- b. Prepare a personal first aid kit
to take with you on a hike.
- c. Demonstrate first aid for the
following:
- Object in the eye
- Bite of a suspected rabid animal
- Puncture wounds from a splinter, nail, and
fishhook
- Serious burns (second degree)
- Heat exhaustion
- Shock
- Heatstroke, dehydration, hypothermia, and
hyperventilation
- a. Tell what precautions must be taken for a
safe swim.
- b. Demonstrate your ability to jump
feet first into water over your head in depth, level off and swim 25 feet on
the surface, stop, turn sharply, resume swimming, then return to your
starting place. **
- c. Demonstrate water rescue methods
by reaching with your arm or leg, by reaching with a suitable object, and by
throwing lines and objects.** Explain why swimming
rescues should not be attempted when a reaching or throwing rescue is
possible, and explain why and how a rescue swimmer should avoid contact with
the victim.
- Participate in a school, community,
or troop program on the dangers of using drugs, alcohol, and tobacco, and
other practices that could be harmful to your health. Discuss your
participation in the program with your family.
- Demonstrate scout spirit by living
the Scout Oath (Promise) and Scout Law in your everyday life.
- Participate in a Scoutmaster
conference.
- Complete your board of review.
* If you use a wheelchair,
crutches, or if it is difficult for you to get around, you may substitute
"trip" for "hike".
** This requirement may be
waived by the troop committee for medical or safety reasons.
[close
window]
FIRST CLASS
RANK
REQUIREMENTS
(taken from USScouts.org)
- Demonstrate how to find directions during the
day and at night without using a compass.
- Using a compass, complete an orienteering
course that covers at least one mile and requires measuring the height
and/or width of designated items (tree, tower, canyon, ditch, etc.)
- Since joining, have participated in ten
separate troop/patrol activities (other than troop/patrol meetings), three
of which included camping overnight.
- a. Help plan a patrol menu for one
campout -- including one breakfast, lunch, and dinner - that requires
cooking. Tell how the menu includes the four basic food groups and
meets nutritional needs.
- b. Using the menu planned in
requirement 4a, make a list showing the cost and food amounts needed to feed
three or more boys and secure the ingredients.
- c. Tell which pans, utensils, and
other gear will be needed to cook and serve these meals.
- d. Explain the procedures to follow
in the safe handling and storage of fresh meats, dairy products, eggs,
vegetables, and other perishable food products. Tell how to properly
dispose of camp garbage, cans, plastic containers, and other rubbish.
- e. On one campout, serve as your
patrol's cook. Supervise your assistant(s) in using a stove or
building a cooking fire. Prepare the breakfast, lunch, and dinner planned in
requirement 4a. Lead your patrol in saying grace at the meals and
supervise cleanup.
- Visit and discuss with a selected
individual approved by your leader (elected official, judge, attorney, civil
servant, principal, teacher) your Constitutional rights and obligations as a
U.S. citizen.
- Identify or show evidence of at
least ten kinds of native plants found in your community.
- a. Discuss when you should and
should not use lashings
- b. Demonstrate tying the timber
hitch and clove hitch and their use in square, shear, and diagonal lashings
by joining two or more poles or staves together.
- c. Use lashing to make a useful camp
gadget.
- a. Demonstrate tying the bowline
knot and describe several ways it can be used.
- b. Demonstrate bandages for a
sprained ankle. and for injuries on the head, the upper arm, and the
collarbone.
- c. Show how to transport by
yourself, and with one other person, a person:
- from a smoke-filled room
- with a sprained ankle, for at least 25
yards.
- d. Tell the five most common signs
of a heart attack. Explain the steps (procedures) in cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR).
- a. Tell what precautions must be
taken for a safe trip afloat.
- b. Successfully complete the BSA
swimmer test.*
- c. With a helper and a practice
victim, show a line rescue both as tender and rescuer. (The practice
victim should be approximately 30 feet from shore in deep water.)
- Demonstrate scout spirit by living
the Scout Oath (Promise) and Scout Law in your everyday life.
- Participate in a Scoutmaster
conference.
- Complete your board of review.
*This requirement may be waived by the troop
committee for medical or safety reasons.
[close
window]
STAR RANK
REQUIREMENTS
(taken from USScouts.org)
- Be active in your troop and patrol for at
least 4 months as a First Class Scout.
- Demonstrate scout spirit by living the Scout
Oath (Promise) and Scout Law in your everyday life.
- Earn 6 merit badges, including 4 from the
required list for Eagle.*
___________________________________(required for Eagle)*
___________________________________(required for Eagle)*
___________________________________(required for Eagle)*
___________________________________(required for Eagle)*
____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
- While a First Class Scout, take part in service
projects totaling at least 6 hours of work. These projects must be
approved by your Scoutmaster.
- While a First Class Scout, serve actively 4
months in one or more of the following positions of responsibility (or carry
out a Scoutmaster-assigned leadership project to help the troop):
- Patrol leader, assistant
senior patrol leader, senior patrol leader, troop guide, OA
troop representative, den chief, scribe, librarian, historian, quartermaster, bugler,
junior assistant Scoutmaster, chaplain aide, or instructor.
- Participate in a Scoutmaster conference.
- Complete your board of review.
[close
window]
LIFE RANK
REQUIREMENTS
(taken from USScouts.org)
- Be active in your troop and patrol for at
least 6 months as a Star Scout.
- Demonstrate Scout spirit by living the Scout
Oath (Promise) and Scout Law in your everyday life.
- Earn 5 more merit badges (so that you have 11
in all), including any 3 more from the required
list for Eagle.
___________________________________(required for Eagle)*
___________________________________(required for Eagle)*
___________________________________(required for Eagle)*
____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
- While a Star Scout, take part in service
projects totaling at least 6 hours of work. These projects must be approved
by your Scoutmaster.
- While a Star Scout, serve actively 6 months in
one or more of the positions of responsibility listed in requirement 5 for
Star Scout above. (or carry out a Scoutmaster-assigned leadership project to
help the troop).
- Take part in a Scoutmaster conference
- Complete your board of review.
[close
window]
EAGLE RANK
REQUIREMENTS
(taken from USScouts.org)
- Be active in your troop and patrol for at
least 6 months as a Life Scout.
- Demonstrate Scout spirit by living the Scout
Oath (Promise) and Scout Law in your everyday life.
- Earn a total of 21 merit badges (10 more than
you already have), including the following:
- First
Aid
- Citizenship
in the Community
- Citizenship
in the Nation
- Citizenship
in the World
- Communications
- Personal
Fitness
- Emergency
Preparedness OR Lifesaving
- Environmental
Science
- Personal
Management
- Swimming
OR Hiking OR Cycling
- Camping,
and
- Family
Life *
- While a Life Scout, serve actively for a
period of 6 months in one or more of the following positions of
responsibility:
- Patrol leader, assistant
senior patrol leader, senior patrol leader, troop guide, OA
troop representative, den chief, scribe, librarian, historian, quartermaster, junior
assistant Scoutmaster, chaplain aide, or instructor.
- While a Life Scout, plan, develop, and give
leadership to others in a service project helpful to any religious
institution, any school, or your community. (The project should benefit an
organization other than Boy Scouting.) The project idea must be approved by
the organization benefiting from the effort, your Scoutmaster and troop
committee and the council or district before you start. You must
use the Eagle
Scout Leadership Service Project Workbook, BSA publication No. 18-927A,
in meeting this requirement.
- Take part in a Scoutmaster conference.
- Successfully complete an Eagle Scout board of
review.
[close
window]