World Conservation Award - Venturing

The
World Conservation Award provides an opportunity for individual
Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts, Varsity Scouts, and Venturers to "think
globally" and "act locally" to preserve and improve
our environment. This program is designed to make youth members
aware that all nations are closely related through natural resources
and that we are interdependent with our world environment.
The Venturing version of the World Conservation
Award can be earned by Venturers and Sea Scouts.
A. Complete the Ecology elective for the Ranger
award:
1. Explain the basic natural systems, cycles, and changes over
time and how they are evidenced in a watershed near where you
live. Include the four basic elements, land use patterns, and
at least six different species in your analysis and how they
have changed over time. Discuss both biological and physical
components.
2. Describe at least four environmental study areas near where you live.
Include the reasons for selecting these areas, their boundaries, user groups,
past inventories, any outside forces that interact with them, and a list
of what things could be studied at each of them.
3. Plan a field trip to each of the above areas, including detailed plans
for conducting various investigations. Follow all of the requirements such
as trip permits, safety plans, transportation plans, equipment needs, etc.
4.
a. Under the guidance of a natural resources professional, carry out an investigation
of an ecological subject approved by your Advisor. Inventory and map the
area. Conduct a detailed investigation providing specific data for a specific
topic.
b. Document and present your findings to your crew, another crew, a Cub or
Boy Scout group, or another group.
5. Teach others in your crew, another crew, a Cub or Boy Scout group, or
another group how to carry out an ecological investigation. Use steps 3 and
4 above with the group so that they may also learn by doing.
B. Show the relationships of global events and conditions, both political
and environmental, to the areas that you described in steps 1 and 2 above.
C. Determine how conditions in your local area also appear in other areas
around the world.
D. Describe some of the interrelationships between people and our natural
resources that affect our global environment.
E. Teach others in your crew, another crew, a Cub Scout or Boy Scout group,
or another group about the interconnectivity that we all have with each other
and our environment.
This award is neither earned nor worn
by adult Scouters.
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