Webelos

If a boy has completed the third grade and has earned the Bobcat Badge, he may start earning the Webelos rank. He needs a Webelos handbook, Webelos neckerchief, and Webelos neckerchief slide. He will also need a blue Cub Scout Uniform or brown Boy Scout uniform. This part of the boy scout trail is intended to take one school year, preparing the scout to begin his Webelos adventures after he completes his Webelos requirements.

Webelos Meaning:
We‘ll Be Loyal Scouts

Webelos Goal:
Prepare a Cub Scout to be a Boy Scout

Webelos is for fourth grade boys to prepare to join a Boy Scout troop while learning outdoors skills and participating in many adventures. A well-run group of Webelos is a gradual change from being an ‘adult-run’ den to being a ‘scout-run’ patrol ready to fit right into an adventurous Boy Scout troop. This migration requires the parents and den leaders to give the scouts more and more control, decision-making power, and responsibility as they progress in skills, abilities, and maturity.

Webelos Advancement
Webelos Scouts do adventures described in their Webelos handbook that advance them towards their Webelos rank. By completing seven adventures, the Webelos rank is earned.

Webelos Rank Requirements:

Complete each of the following Webelos required adventures with your den or family:
Cast Iron Chef
Duty to God and You
First Responder
Stronger, Faster, Higher
Webelos Walkabout
Complete two Webelos elective adventures of your den or family’s choosing from this list:
Adventures in Science
Aquanaut
Art Explosion
Aware and Care
Build It
Build My Own Hero
Castaway
Earth Rocks!
Engineer
Fix It
Game Design
Into the Wild
Into the Woods
Looking Back, Lookin Forward
Maestro!
Moviemaking
Project Family
Sportsman
With your parent or guardian, complete the exercises in the pamphlet How to Protect Your Children From Child Abuse: A Parent’s Guide and earn the Cyber Chip award for your age.*

* If your family does not have Internet access at home AND you do not have ready Internet access at school or another public place or via a mobile device, the Cyber Chip portion of this requirement may be waived by your parent or guardian.

There are a few major changes between the lower ranks of Cub Scouts and the Webelos and AOL ranks.

Advancement Sign Off – each Webelos scout is supposed to take his handbook to the den leader or assistant den leader for sign off when a requirement is completed. This is a change from having a parent sign off every activity. This change prepares the scout to have a Scoutmaster sign off each advancement requirement in Boy Scouts. There is more responsibility put on the scout to remember and bring his handbook to meetings and get it signed. His den leader will also enter his advancement information into our Pack’s advancement tracking software, known as Packmaster.

Webelos Adventure Pins – Tiger, Bear and Wolf scouts earned belt loops. Webelos earn pins which can be displayed on the Webelos Colors device. The Webelos Color device will be given to them when they earn their first pin. This moves closer to the Boy Scout merit badge system where recognition items are displayed on a sash.

More Electives – Webelos have two elective adventures and Arrow of Light has three electives. Individual scouts may complete different adventures at different times. This change gives the scout more control over his advancement and lets him choose areas he enjoys more.

Camping – Webelos and AOL dens Camp! Cub Scouts can camp as a pack, but Webelos and AOLs should go out as a den as much as possible to give the scouts opportunities to learn and use their new skills. Each Webelos and AOL scout needs to have an adult responsible for him on each camping trip.

Patrols – a patrol is just another name for the den but it does have some significance. Boy Scouts are organized into Patrols, each with their own name, flag, yell, leader, and emblem. As Webelos or AOLs, a den can begin to operate as a patrol and select an emblem for their uniform, make up a yell, name, and flag. This can really get the scouts to become a team. Taking their flag along on a campout or hike and announcing themselves with their yell is pretty fun.