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BOY SCOUT RANK ADVANCEMENT
Scout
| Tenderfoot Scout | Second Class Scout
| First Class Scout Star, Life, Eagle
| Merit Badges Required for Eagle Scout Rank
| Merit Badges
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Personal
Management Merit Badge |
- Do the following:
- Lead a discussion with your family to identify one family
financial goal that must be saved for out of family income.
Choose a goal that has strong personal interest for both you and
your family (a family trip or vacation, a new VCR, or a family
car, for instance).
- Discuss the goal in detail (where to go on vacation, for
example, or what kind of car to buy), the cost of the goal, and
when you want to reach the goal.
- Discuss how your family could accumulate funds to reach this
goal, how the goal will affect the rest of the family budget,
and how you could help your family achieve the goal.
- Do the following:
- Prepare a personal budget or spending plan for three months,
including a "pay yourself first" savings plan. Keep
track of everything you buy. Balance all income with expenses
and savings at the end of each month.
- Share your three month budget with your merit badge counselor.
Explain how you determined discretionary income (income not
spent to meet fixed expenses), how much you saved, and what you
spent money on. Did you spend more or less than you budgeted?
- Do ONE of the following:
- Identify a personal financial goal and make a plan to achieve
that goal.
- Write down the goal you want to achieve. (This may be a
small, short term goal such as buying clothes, or it may be
a major, long-term goal such as saving for college.)
- Develop a financial plan to accomplish the goal. Determine
how much the goal will cost, how much time you have to reach
the goal, how you will earn money to pay for the goal, and
what adjustments you could make if you cannot reach the goal
in the desired time with the income you can earn.
- Discuss your plan with your counselor.
OR:
- Determine a spending/savings plan for living on your own.
- Choose a realistic job based on your age, skills,
education, and experience (working at a fast-food
restaurant, movie theater, or college library, for example).
Determine how much you would probably make per hour and how
many hours you would work each week. Determine your
spendable income (after taxes and other deductions are taken
out) for a month.
- Make a list of all basic monthly living expenses: rent,
food, transportation, clothing, telephone, etc. Ask family
or friends, or call sources to help determine costs.
- Compare projected income with projected expenses. Would
you have enough income to live on? Would any be left over
for fun? For savings?
- If expenses exceed income, determine what options you
would have for bringing the two into balance. Could you
reduce or eliminate expenses? Work more hours a week? Get a
higher-paying job?
- Discuss you final plan with your counselor.
- Do the following:
- Choose an item you would like to buy. Be specific. (For
example, identify the brand name of a pair of shoes you want, or
the title of a CD.)
- Comparison shop for the item. Find out where you can buy the
item for the best price. Call around; study ads. Look for a sale
or a discount coupon.
- Consider alternatives. Could you buy the item used? Should you
wait for a sale?
- Discuss your shopping strategy with your counselor.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Visit a bank. Ask a bank representative to explain checking
accounts, savings accounts, loans, and automated teller machines
(ATMs). Explain to your counselor the difference between a
checking account and a savings account. Discuss with your
counselor the minimum requirements to open and maintain the
accounts or to take out a loan.
OR:
- Visit another type of financial institution, such as a stock
brokerage firm or an insurance company. Ask a representative
what the firm does and how it works with consumers. Explain to
your counselor the differences in services offered by the
following types of financial professionals: financial planner,
stockbroker, insurance agent, accountant, tax preparer, banker,
estate planning attorney.
- Do the following:
- Explain the difference between saving for a goal and investing
for a goal.
- Explain the two basic methods of investing: loaned and owned.
- Explain the concepts of simple and compound interest and how
compound interest can be used to increase your savings and
investments more rapidly.
- Explain the concepts of yield, profit, and total return, and
how they are used to evaluate investment performance.
- Explain the basic features of the following types of
investments, including risks and rewards and whether they
involve lending or owning: bank savings accounts, certificates
of deposit, U.S. Savings Bonds, shares of stock, shares in a
mutual fund, real estate.
- Do the following:
- Explain what a loan is, what interest is, and how the
"annual percentage rate" measures the true cost of a
loan.
- Choose something you want to buy or do, but currently cannot
afford. Set up an imaginary loan so you can "achieve"
that goal. Identify the "principal" amount, interest
rate, and repayment schedule. Determine the total cost of the
loan (principal plus interest). Determine how it would affect
your total cost if you paid back the same amount every two
weeks, instead of once a month.
- Explain the differences between a charge card, a debit card,
and a credit card.
- Identify the factors that affect the costs of credit. Tell
which factors can be controlled.
- Explain credit reports and how personal responsibility can
affect your credit record.
- Describe ways to reduce or eliminate debt.
- Do the following:
- Explain the five ways to manage risk.
- Explain the six basic types of insurance and why someday you
might need one or more of them.
- Define the two major types of life insurance (term and
permanent) and compare their advantages and disadvantages.
- Do the following:
- Identify a job or career that interests you and do basic
research about it at your library or through other information
sources. Make a presentation to your troop or counselor about
the job or career. Your report should include:
- An explanation of your interest in the job or career (how
you learned of it, what about it that interests you, what
its job prospects are, and how you think the job or career
will change in the future)
- Any qualifications required (education, skills,
experiences) and how you might become qualified for the job
- The job's functions and responsibilities (the duties of
the job or career)
- The organizations, trade associations, professional
associations, governmental regulations, or licenses involved
in the career field
- Do ONE of the following:
- Prepare a personal résumé for the job.
OR:
- Interview someone in the job or career field and prepare a
summary of the interview.
- Discuss with your counselor your personal goals and ambitions
in life. Relate these to your intellectual, physical, spiritual,
and moral development. How has Scouting helped you in
accomplishing your goals and ambitions? Share your thoughts with
your family.
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