Core Requirements:
Do the following five Requirements:
- Earn the Sports
Bronze Award.
- Complete the American Red
Cross Sport Safety Training course (or equivalent) and CPR training.
- Complete the Fitness for
Life program
A.
Complete the Fitness for Life program (Corbin and
Lindsey, published by Human Kinetics, 2002). Check with your Advisor to see if
your crew already has the book Fitness for Life. Ask your Advisor about
offering the program for you alone, you and some other Venturers, or even your
whole crew. You might find the book at your local library. You can order it
directly from Human Kinetics at http://www.humankinetics.com.
OR
B.
Complete the following requirements:
1
Make an appointment with your doctor for a complete
physical before beginning any physical conditioning program. Explain to your
doctor that you are preparing to undertake a 90-day physical fitness
improvement program.
2
Interview healthy older adults about their fitness
levels. As part of these interviews, you may want to ask such questions as:
- What kinds of cardiovascular activities do you
do?
- How have your fitness, diet, and physical
activity changed over the years?
- Are you more fit and/or active now than you were
five (10, 15, etc.) years ago?
Use this data to discuss with your crew and/or another group
the importance and benefits of using exercise throughout their lives.
3
Research and write an essay of 1,500 words or more, or
make a presentation to your school, a Cub Scout den or pack, a Boy Scout .
troop, or Venturing crew explaining what physical fitness is. Incorporate into
this essay or presentation all of the following:
- Aerobic capacity
- Endurance
- Body composition
- Flexibility
- Muscle strength
After you have completed your research and written your
essay or made your presentation, review your results with a fitness
professional or your coach or Advisor.
4
Based upon your essay or presentation on physical
fitness, develop a personal physical fitness improvement program and follow it
for a minimum of 90 days. After developing your program, review it with your
Advisor and/or coach. This fitness improvement program should include the
following guidelines:
- Exercise a minimum of three times each week.
- Complete the Venturing Weekly Exercise Plan and
Chart in appendix K. At the end of each week, review your calendar. Write down
the times when you seem to have the most/least energy. Note any environmental
conditions or changes in your personal health (cold, flu, fever, etc.) that may
have affected your performance. You may want to adjust your schedule.
- Share this information with your Advisor. You
may do some of your exercise workouts as part of your regular physical education
class at school.
Note: This may qualify as your personal improvement project
for the Venturing Gold Award.
5
Look though current magazines, articles, and/or videos
that feature exercises. Evaluate at least three exercises. Determine how these
exercises apply to personal fitness. What level of fitness is required to be
able to perform the exercise and what procedures and equipment are necessary
for successful completion? Present your findings to your crew and/or another
youth group.
6
Learn to calculate the number of calories a person
would need who is sedentary, moderately active, or active, for their particular
age. Keep a record for 10 days of your food intake and physical activity. How
might you adjust your food intake and physical activity to change your
percentage of body fat? Write a plan to maintain ideal levels of body fat.
Include in this plan the six factors that influence body fatness and share this
information with your Advisor and coach.
7
Examine three muscular development exercises and apply
biomechanical principles to each. List two reasons why these principles can
reduce injuries and discuss this information with your crew or other youth
group.
8
Based upon the human desire for peak performance,
examine and discuss the physical and psychological activities required for
success. As part of this discussion, review with your crew and/or another youth
group the following six specific needs (S-P-I-C-E-S) for a balanced approach to
achieve this desire:
- Spiritual
- Physical
- Intellectual
- Cultural
- Emotional
- Self-Responsibility
Note: S-P-I-C-E-S is supplied from the United States
Anti-Doping Agency, http://www.usantidoping.org
- Learn and Do Fitness
Assessments.
Administer the FITNESSGRAM physical assessment test to your crew, a Cub
Scout den or pack, a Boy Scout troop, another Venturing crew, or another
youth group. (The Cub Scout Wolf program has a requirement that each Cub
Scout to complete a similar type of activity.) See the "Physical
Assessment" chapter in the Quest Handbook.
- Sport Disciplines
Choose a sport from the list below or another sport approved by your
Advisor.)
- Develop a profile of a
typical athlete in your chosen sport, listing skills and attributes
necessary to be proficient. Examples: hand-eye coordination, running
speed, quick responses, heavy/light weight, tall/short.
-
- Develop a list of
equipment and facilities necessary for your chosen sport:
- Personal equipment
such as mouthpiece, helmet, or earplugs
- Team equipment such
foils, shooting jacket, or weights
- Team or sponsor
supplies or facilities such as targets, ammunition, playing courts, or
rivers
- Discuss the relative
importance equipment plays toward your success in that sport. (Certain
sports are equipment-intensive, such as bobsled and luge.)
- Tell how equipment
for this sport has improved or changed over time.
- Participate and show
proficiency in a sport of your choice.
- For your chosen sport,
give a sports clinic to a Cub Scout pack or den, Boy Scout troop, or
other youth group. Include a demonstration and skills teaching. You can
even include competition when possible.
Here are some suggested sports for requirement 5:
|
Cycling
|
Sailing
|
Field sports
|
Swimming
|
Field hockey
|
Water polo
|
|
Lacrosse
|
Underwater sports
|
Track and field
|
Synchronized swimming
|
Racquet. sports
|
Luge
|
|
Badminton
|
Winter ice sports
|
Handball
|
Bobsled
|
Racquetball
|
Curling
|
|
Squash
|
Ice hockey
|
Table tennis
|
Waterskiing
|
Tennis
|
Biathlon
|
|
Roller sports
|
Speed skating
|
In-line speed skating
|
Winter snow sports
|
Roller figure skating
|
Archery
|
|
Roller hockey
|
Skiing
|
Skateboarding
|
Snowboarding
|
Target sports
|
Shooting
|
|
Bowling
|
Darts
|
Dance
|
Disc sports
|
Equestrian
|
Diving
|
|
Fencing
|
Water sports
|
Martial arts
|
Canoe/kayak
|
Modern pentathlon
|
|
|
Orienteering
|
Rowing
|
Team handball
|
Other sports
|
|
|
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Electives:
You must complete at least one elective.
- History and Heritage of
Sports
Do all of the following:
- Study the history of
the Olympic movement. Learn when and how it started.
When did the United
States Olympic movement start?
When did the winter Olympics start and where?
What were the initial games in both summer and winter Olympics?
In what Olympic years were there no Olympics and why?
- Pick a sport you have
an interest in and learn the history of that particular sport.
Who started the sport and why?
How has the sport changed since its beginning?
What new equipment has been developed to make the sport more efficient?
- Make a presentation on
what you learned in requirements 1 and 2 above to your crew or a pack,
troop, other youth group, retirement home, etc.
- Sports Nutrition
Do all of the following:
- List at least five
complex carbohydrates and five simple carbohydrates. During a crew
meeting (or another activity approved by your Advisor and/or coach),
discuss with your crew why complex carbohydrates are nutritionally dense
and what that means to a sportsperson. Tell why fiber is considered a
complex carbohydrate and list some examples of fiber-rich foods. Serve
snacks that represent each carbohydrate, You could even make this a game
where people guess which snack went with each group.
- Interview a registered
dietician and talk about your favorite sport. Have the dietician help you
evaluate and develop a nutritional pro- gram that fits you (and/or your
team as a whole) and your sport.
- Make a presentation on
“Good Fats” and “Bad Fats.” Explain how they affect a teenager’s diet.
Include in your presentation information on saturated fats, unsaturated
fats, hydrogenated fats, and cholesterol. Use posters, overhead
transparencies, computer slide shows, charts, and relevant information
from your school health text book. Working with your crew, calculate fat needs
for yourself and the other members of your crew.
- Keep a three-day food
record of everything you eat and drink. If you put it in your mouth,
write it down. With the help of a health-care practitioner, determine if
you are eating enough protein, vegetables, fat, carbohydrates, and fiber.
Also determine the amount of sugar, sodium, and hydrogenated fat
consumed. Resources for determining these amounts are available at your
local library.
- People who do not eat
meat are called vegetarians. Vegetarians can be categorized into three
different groups. In a discussion with your Advisor and/or coach, name
those three groups and explain their differences and similarities. In an
interview with a registered dietician or nutritionist, ask questions
about the complete protein requirements of a vegetarian and how they make
sure they are achieving these daily requirements. Using this information,
put on a presentation, tabletop display, or other such activity approved
by your Advisor and/or coach for a Boy Scout troop or Cub Scout pack.
- Drug Free Sports
Complete requirements 1 or 2 and two additional subcategories, OR complete
requirements 3 and 4.
- Research two classes
or categories of prohibited substances in
Olympic sport, as listed in the Olympic Movement Anti-Doping Code (this
information can be found at http://www.usantidoping.org).
Develop a paper (minimum 1,000 words) or a presentation that thoroughly
addresses the following questions:
- What legitimate
medical purposes is the substance used for?
- What health risks are
associated with using and/or abusing the substance?
- How are other people
and competition affected if an athlete cheats by using a prohibited
substance?
- What consequences
does an athlete in the sport you identified face when they have been
found cheating?
- What is the best
training program for an athlete who wants to excel at the sport you
chose (e.g., nutrition, workouts, etc.)?
OR
-
- Attend a health class
that is at least 15 hours long that focuses on drug-free sport and
making decisions about not using drugs in sport. This course could be
conducted through your local school, community education system,
college/university, sports or athletics, or an on-line course. Then
develop your own multi- session drug-free sport health curriculum that
you could teach to a youth group.
- In consultation with
your Advisor, do two of the following subcategories:
1
Develop a “fair play,” drug-free sports campaign
poster with a slogan and image. Identify at least one facility (sport group,
school, church, or community place) at which to post your pro- motional work.
Near the poster, include a box to hold a smaller version (handout) that people
can take with them.
2
Using a decision-making model, help a group of
youth learn how to make a good decision about not using drugs. This should
include having them identify a number of issues involved, including health
risks and ethics.
3
Develop an ethical controversy related to drug
use in sport. Lead/facilitate an ethics forum with your crew based upon the
ethical controversy you have developed.
4
Contact a professional in anti-doping and gather
educational information about drug-free sport. Summarize and share the
information and resources you gathered.
5
Research the history of doping or use of
performance-enhancing drugs in sport. Create a timeline summarizing when
certain drugs were used, what the drugs were, what the perceived benefit was,
and what risks athletes put themselves in by using those drugs.
6
Using resources from the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency
or another credible current anti-doping source, list all prohibited classes or
categories of substances and prohibited methods of doping in Olympic sport (see
http://www.usantidoping.org). Briefly
identify what the drugs do to the body for each substance class or category. In
500 words, write about why doping is prohibited in sport.
OR do both of the following:
-
- With a properly
trained crew Advisor, coach, or teacher, attend and complete a national
or statewide-recognized course, such as Character Counts-Pursuing
Victory With Honor, or ATLAS (Athletes Training and Learning to Avoid
Steroids). For details on these two programs, please refer to the Web
sites listed below and to the Venturing Leader Manual.
AND
- Develop and deliver a
presentation on drug-free sports to a youth school or sport group.
Design a pamphlet or handout that supports the presentation. You can
also use materials available from the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.
- Communications
Complete requirements 1, 2 OR 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 OR 8.
- Take a
communications-related training course consisting of at least 15 hours of
training and education. This course could be conducted through your local
school, community education system, local hospital, college/university,
or your own Venturing crew. It could be an official coaching, referee,
sport official, and/or athletic trainer program. It could cover such
topics as mass communication, sportswriting, technical writing, newspaper
editing, film and/or video production, journalism, or coaching. At the
conclusion of the training course, review with your Advisor the
information and skills taught in this communications course and how they
relate to either a particular sports program and/or health and physical
fitness in general.
- Read at least two
books approved by your Advisor related to a particular sports program of
your choice. Some suggested topics are sports injuries, anti-doping,
disabled sports organizations, the U.S. Olympic Committee, the
International Olympic Committee, etc. Prepare and submit a written report
of not less than 1,000 words on each of these books. The two reports
should cover the following items:
- Why did you pick
these books over other written material?
- What are the
important communication principles and concepts related to the sport
that you picked?
- What are specific
ways you can apply these principles in your own sporting activities
and/or crew events?
Present your report to your Advisor and/or crew for review.
- Interview two or more
individuals (coaches, trainers, referees, umpires, college or university
sports information directors, sports-writers, reporters, photographers,
amateur and/or professional players, therapists, etc.) associated with a
particular sport you have an interest in. Prepare an oral and/or written
report of at least 1,000 words to your crew and/or another youth group
you are associated with detailing the information obtained from these
interviews.
- Make a tabletop
display, an oral presentation, or a videotape production for your crew,
another crew, a Cub Scout den or pack, Boy Scout troop, or another youth
group on the importance of communication in sports. This presentation
should emphasize the role(s) that effective communication plays in
accurately participating in any sporting event or program.
-
- Take part in the BSA
Ethics in Action program* and participate in at least one sports-related
ethical controversy. Some examples are:
- Amateur athletics
- Drugs and steroids
- Parental involvement
- Coaching in youth
sports
- Gambling and betting
on sporting events
- Racial/sexual
discrimination/biases
- Sportsmanship: A
dying concept?
- *For details on the
BSA Ethics in Action program, please refer to the information provided
in the Venturer Handbook and the Venturing Leader Manual (Chapter 9).
- Conduct at least one
sports-related (separate from the one used in 5(a) ethical controversy
activity and/or ethics forum.
- Along with your crew
or another youth group, participate in two cooperative games (one in each
category)
- Outdoor activity
game
- Indoor activity game
- Prepare a sports
communication pamphlet, athletics-related product, or promotional piece
emphasizing your local BSA council and/or district sporting event, local
school sporting event, or community activity. Some examples are a media
and recruiting guide, sports schedule poster and/or schedule card, game
program, pre- season and post-season media guide, school sports club
newsletter, alumni update, game notes for local and/or regional news
media, audio/video presentation, or Web site. Include visual as well as
written forms of communication in your final product. Have two
individuals (one with expertise in this particular sport) review the
material and provide written critiques of your work. Make whatever
suggested improvements may be suitable based upon this input. Share this
information with your Advisor and crew. Then actively promote the event
and/or sport with this product.
- Research the role the
media has in a specific sport. Provide an oral report and explain to your
Advisor or crew the positive and negative impact the media may have on
this particular sport and how a person can deal with the perceived
conflicts that may arise.
- Research the
education requirements necessary for a communications/sports journalism
major at your local college and/or university. Prepare a tabletop display
or presentation for your crew or another youth group detailing the
classes, internships, and career paths available to graduates in this
particular major.
- History and Heritage of
the Disabled Sports Movement
- Study the history of
the disabled sports movement (Paralympics).
Learn how it started.
When did the disabled sports movement start?
When and where would you find competitions for disabled athletes?
What disabled sports games are included in the summer and winter
Paralympics?
- Pick a disabled sport
you have an interest in and learn its history.
Who started that disabled sport and why?
How has the sport changed since its beginning?
What specialized equipment is used by disabled athletes?
- Using what you
learned in requirements 1 and 2 above, plan and run a disabled sports
awareness clinic for your crew, a Cub Scout den or pack, Boy Scout troop,
other youth group, etc. Examples:
- Wheelchair
basketball,
- goal ball for blind
athletes,
- sledge hockey, or
- murder ball (rugby
for quadriplegics).
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