
Merit Badge Award Page
List of Merit Badge Requirements
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PERSONAL MANAGEMENT
- Do the following:
- Choose an item that your family might want to
purchase that is considered a major expense.
- Write a plan that tells how your family would
save money for the purchase identified in
requirement 1a.
- Discuss the plan with your merit badge
counselor
- Discuss the plan with your family
- Discuss how other family needs must be
considered in this plan.
- Develop a written shopping strategy for the
purchase identified in requirement 1a.
- Determine the quality of the item or service
(using consumer publications or rating systems).
- Comparison shop for the item. Find out where
you can buy the item for the best price.
(Provide prices from at least two different
price sources.) Call around; study ads. Look for
a sale or discount coupon. Consider
alternatives. Can you buy the item used? Should
you wait for a sale?
- Do the following:
- Prepare a budget reflecting your expected income
(allowance, gifts, wages), expenses, and savings.
Track your actual income, expenses, and savings for
13 consecutive weeks. (You may use the forms
provided in this pamphlet, devise your own, or use a
computer generated version.) When complete, present
the results to your merit badge counselor.
- Compare expected income with expected expenses.
- If expenses exceed income, determine steps
to balance your budget.
- If income exceeds expenses, state how you
would use the excess money (new goal, savings).
- Discuss with your merit badge counselor FIVE of the
following concepts:
- The emotions you feel when you receive money.
- Your understanding of how the amount of money
you have with you affects your spending habits.
- Your thoughts when you buy something new and
your thoughts about the same item three months
later. Explain the concept of buyer's remorse.
- How hunger affects you when shopping for food
items (snacks, groceries).
- Your experience of an item you have purchased
after seeing or hearing advertisements for it. Did
the item work as well as advertised?
- Your understanding of what happens when you put
money into a savings account.
- Charitable giving. Explain its purpose and your
thoughts about it.
- What you can do to better manage your money.
- Explain the following to your merit badge counselor:
- The differences between saving and investing,
including reasons for using one over the other.
- The concepts of return on investment and risk.
- The concepts of simple interest and compound
interest and how these affected the results of your
investment exercise.
- Select five publicly traded stocks from the business
section of the newspaper. Explain to your merit badge
counselor the importance of the following information
for each stock:
- Current price
- How much the price changed from the previous day
- The 52-week high and the 52-week low prices
- Pretend you have $1,000 to save, invest, and help
prepare yourself for the future. Explain to your merit
badge counselor the advantages or disadvantages of
saving or investing in each of the following:
- Common stocks
- Mutual funds
- Life insurance
- A certificate of deposit (CD)
- A savings account or U.S. savings bond
- Explain to your merit badge counselor the following:
- What a loan is, what interest is, and how the
annual percentage rate (APR) measures the true cost
of a loan.
- The different ways to borrow money.
- The differences between a charge card, debit
card, and credit card. What are the costs and
pitfalls of using these financial tools? Explain why
it is unwise to make only the minimum payment on
your credit card.
- Credit reports and how personal responsibility
can affect your credit report.
- Ways to eliminate debt.
- Demonstrate to your merit badge counselor your
understanding of time management by doing the following:
- Write a "to do" list of tasks or activities,
such as homework assignments, chores, and personal
projects, that must be done in the coming week. List
these in order of importance to you.
- Make a seven-day calendar or schedule. Put in
your set activities, such as school classes, sports
practices or games, jobs or chores, and/or Scout or
church or club meetings, then plan when you will do
all the tasks from your "to do" list between your
set activities.
- Follow the one-week schedule you planned. Keep a
daily diary or journal during each of the seven days
of this week's activities, writing down when you
completed each of the tasks on your "to do" list
compared to when you scheduled them.
- Review your "to do" list, one-week schedule, and
diary/journal to understand when your schedule
worked and when it did not work. With your merit
badge counselor, discuss and understand what you
learned from this requirement and what you might do
differently the next time.
- Prepare a written project plan demonstrating the
steps below, including the desired outcome. This is a
project on paper, not a real-life project. Examples
could include planning a camping trip, developing a
community service project or a school or religious
event, or creating an annual patrol plan with additional
activities not already included in the troop annual
plan. Discuss your completed project plan with your
merit badge counselor.
- Define the project. What is your goal?
- Develop a timeline for your project that shows
the steps you must take from beginning to
completion.
- Describe your project.
- Develop a list of resources. Identify how these
resources will help you achieve your goal.
- If necessary, develop a budget for your project.
- Do the following:
- Choose a career you might want to enter after
high school or college graduation.
- Research the limitations of your anticipated
career and discuss with your merit badge counselor
what you have learned about qualifications such as
education, skills, and experience.
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