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Required to be done before class: None
Can be done before or after class: Requirements 2, 9
Required to be done after class: None Merit Badge Requirements:
- 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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