Everything in Cub Scouting is designed to have the Scouts active and excited. Activities are used to achieve the aims of Scouting — citizenship training, character development, and personal and mental fitness. Many of the activities happen right in the den and pack. The most important are the weekly den meetings and the monthly pack meetings.
Apart from the fun and excitement of Cub Scout activities, the Scout Promise, the Scout Law, and the Cub Scout sign, handshake, motto, and salute all teach good citizenship and contribute to a boy and girl’s sense of belonging. Want to learn a secret code? Want to learn about wild animals? If you’re a boy or girl in the kindergarten through fifth grades (ages 6 to 10), go Cub Scouting!
The Purposes of Cub Scouting
Cub Scouting has nine purposes:
- Positively influence character development and encourage spiritual growth.
- Help kids develop habits and attitudes of good citizenship.
- Encourage good sportsmanship and pride in growing strong in mind and body.
- Improve understanding within the family.
- Strengthen kids ability to get along with each other and respect other people.
- Foster a sense of personal achievement by helping develop new interests and skills.
- Show how to be helpful and do one’s best.
- Provide fun and exciting new things to do.
- Prepare youth to become Boy Scouts.
What is Cub Scouting?
In 1930 Scouting America launched a home- and neighborhood-centered program for kids 5 to 11 years of age. A key element of the program is an emphasis on caring, nurturing relationships between youth and their parents, adult leaders, and friends. Currently, Cub Scouting is the largest of the BSA’s three membership divisions. (The others are Scouts BSA and Venturing.)
Membership
Cub Scouting has program components for youth in kindergarten through fifth grades (or ages 7, 8, 9, or 10). Members join a Cub Scout pack and are assigned to a den, usually a neighborhood group of six to eight youth. Kindergartners (Lions) and first-graders (Tiger Cubs) meet twice a month, while Wolf Cub Scouts (second graders), Bear Cub Scouts (third graders), and Webelos Scouts (fourth and fifth graders) meet weekly.
Once a month, all of the dens and family members gather for a pack meeting under the direction of a Cubmaster and pack committee. The committee includes parents of youth in the pack and members of the chartered organization.
Volunteer Leadership
Thousands of volunteer leaders, both men and women, are involved in the Cub Scout program. They serve in a variety of positions, as everything fro unit leaders to pack committee chairmen, committee members, den leader coaches, and chartered organization representatives.
Like other phases of the Scouting program, Cub Scouting is made available to groups having similar interests and goals, including professional organizations, government bodies, and religious, educational, civic, fraternal, business, labor, and citizens’ groups. These “sponsors” are called charatered organizations. Each organization appoints one of its members as a chartered organization representative. The organization, through the pack committee, is responsible for providing leadership, the meeting place, and support materials for pack activities.
Who pays for it?
Groups responsible for supporting Cub Scouting are the youth and their parents, the pack, the chartered organization, and the community. The youth is encouraged to pay his own way by contributing dues each week. Packs also obtain income by working on approved money-earning projects. The community, including parents, supports Cub Scouting through the United Way, Friends of Scouting enrollment, bequests, and special contributions to the BSA local council. This financial support provides leadership training, outdoor programs, council service centers and other facilities, and professional service for units.
Advancement Plan
Recognition is important to youth and our programs. The Cub Scout advancement plan provides fun for the kids, gives them a sense of personal achievement as they earn badges, and strengthens family understanding as adult family members work with youth on advancement projects.
Activities
Cub Scouting means “doing.” Everything in Cub Scouting is designed to have the youth doing things. Activities are used to achieve the aims of Scouting – citizenship training, character development, and personal fitness. Many of the activities happen right in the den and pack. The most important are the weekly den meetings and the monthly pack meetings.
Camping
Age-appropriate camping programs are packed with theme-oriented action that brings Cub Scouts and Webelos Scouts into the world of imagination. Day camping comes to the youth in neighborhoods across the country; resident camping is at least a three-day experience in which Cub Scouts and Webelos Scouts camp within a developed theme of adventure and excitement. “Cub Scout Worlds” are used by many councils to carry the world of imagination into reality with actual theme structures of castles, forts, ships, etc. Cub Scout pack members enjoy camping in local council camps and council-approved national, state, county, or city parks. Camping programs combine fun and excitement with doing one’s best, getting along with others, and developing an appreciation for ecology and the world of the outdoors.
Publications
Volunteers are informed of national news and events through Scouting magazine (circulation 900,000). Scouts may subscribe to Scout Life magazine (circulation 1.3 million). Both are published by the Scouting America. Also available are a number of Cub Scout and leader publications, including the Wolf Cub Scout Book, Bear Cub Scout Book, Webelos Scout Book, Cub Scout Leader Book, Cub Scout Program Helps, and Webelos Leader Guide.
Learn more...
To learn more about Cub Scouting, or to find out how to start, join, or support a pack, contact the Council Resource Center to find a pack in your area or for more information.