Energy
- Demonstrate the flow of heat energy. Use your demonstration to explain in
your own words the ideas of heat, temperature, kinetic energy, calorie, and
the laws of thermodynamics.
- Give an example of each of the following forms of energy: heat, light,
mechanical, electrical, chemical, atomic. Prepare a table showing devices
for each form of energy that will convert it into another form of energy.
Describe the idea of tradeoffs in energy use.
- Make a color chart showing the world's known and estimated energy
resources. Explain how long each is expected to last based on today's best
estimates. Tell where you got your information.
- Do the following:
- Prepare charts showing:
- What energy sources supply the United States with its energy
- What portions of our energy is used by homes, business, industry,
and transportation
- What fuels are used to generate America's electricity
- Tell what is being done to make any three of the following produce
more energy. Include cost, pollution, and safety problems in your
explanation.
- Nuclear fission generators
- Nuclear fusion generators
- Cogeneration
- The sun
- The wind
- Geothermal
- The oceans
- Tell how our lives in the United States might be affected if energy
supplies could not meet our present demands.
- Show and explain to your counselor two articles from a current newspaper
or magazine about the use or conservation of energy. Tell why these articles
are important to the United States and why they are important to you.
- Conduct an energy audit of your home. Prepare a written report in two
parts:
- Describe ways that your family can use energy more wisely.
- Keep a record of what you have done to save energy for a 2-week
period.
- Find out about and describe in a notebook 10 different examples of energy
waste going on in your town. Suggest in each case possible ways to reduce
this waste. Find out and write in your notebook five examples you have
observed of pollution from energy use. Suggest in each case how this
pollution might be reduced.
- Give a talk titled "Energy: Why We Need It and How We Can Use It
Better." Use all of the materials you have prepared in requirements 1
through 7. Choose as your audience your counselor, a den of Cub Scouts, or
another group approved by your counselor.
All requirements taken from Boy Scout Requirements, #33215E, revised
2002.
© 2002 Boy Scouts of America