January 2008 Cub Scout Roundtable Issue   | 
                     
                    
                       Volume 14, Issue 
						6 
                      February 2008 Theme | 
                      Theme: 
						Chinese New Year  
                          Webelos:  
                                Scholar & Engineer   
  Tiger Cub 
 
         
          			Requirement 4   | 
                     
                                    
 
 
TIGERS 
Baloo Archives 
Achievement 4, How I Tell It  
This requirement is about 
Communication.  Getting our Tigers to talk with others and be positive in what 
they say.  They may learn how to carry on conversations and a little about mass 
communication.   
Tigers can learn there are 
many modes of communication – when we talk, write, dance, sing or draw 
pictures.  We communicate too with our faces when we frown or smile and our 
bodies with how we stand or move our arms. 
Our uniforms and beads (on 
our Tiger totems) and patches communicate information about who we are and what 
we like to do. 
Adults communicate 
through newspapers, magazines, books (Harry Potter) television and radio.  Be 
open to showing all these to your Tigers to help them Search, Discover and 
Share. 
Achievement 4 Family Activity  
4F - At a family 
meal, have each family member take turns telling the others one thing that 
happened to him or her that day. Remember to practice being a good listener 
while you wait for your turn to talk.  
Mealtime conversations 
should be kept positive.  Sharing your day’s activities could be become a 
regular family activity.  Try to do this at a meal when everyone is there.  
Sharing amongst family members is always good so try to keep doing it even if 
only a few members are present.  
The requirement helps promote Family 
Understanding, one of the Ten Purposes of Cub Scouting!! 
This requirement involves doing a Character 
Connection on Respect.  There are three elements to every Character Connection.  
A Tiger must first know what is correct, then practice doing it and finally 
commit to doing it in the future.  If you want more info on Character 
Connections there is a BSA Bin Item 13-323A or go to Bill Smith’s Virtual 
roundtable at -
http://www.wtsmith.com/rt/chardev.html  
For the Respect Character Connection – 
Know – Have the Tiger discuss how he can 
show respect while talking with others.  How to listen respectfully.  How he may 
interrupt and still be respectful. 
Practice – Have him participate in a 
family conversation (The one for this requirement would be great!!)  Then 
discuss how he and others showed respect. 
Commit – Have him discuss how it felt to 
be respected while he talked and how he felt showing respect o others.  Have him 
make a list of three things to remember to help him talk respectfully. 
Achievement 4 Den Activity  
4D - Play "Tell It 
Like It Isn't"  
This is the old “Whistling Down the Alley” game 
where the boys line up and pass a secret along.  By the time it gets to the end, 
it usually is different than the start.  The more boys the more fun.  
The Adults should join in, too, to make the line longer.   
After the game discuss how things your Tiger may 
hear may not always be accurate. That messages change as they are passed from 
person to person.  Discuss, too, how unkind words (gossip) can do harm and is 
often untrue.  Cubs should only try and say things that are true.  Honesty
is a core value of Cub Scouting. 
Achievement 4 Go and See It  
4G - Visit a television station, radio 
station, or newspaper office. Find out how people there communicate with others.
 
This is very easy.  Where I live we have a great 
radio station, WJBR (www.wjbr.com) 
that invites Scouts up to tour.  Then, if the Den wants to, they tape them 
saying the Pledge of Allegiance.  Every day at 7:00 AM, they play a tape of a 
group (school class, Den, Troop, Club).  They even came to my roundtable 
and had us one morning saying the Pledge.  I really like it when 
I hear a Tiger Den; they are so honest and excited. And most say it correctly – 
saying “One Nation Under God” as a continuous phrase without a pause. Of course 
it helps that the morning DJ, Michael Waite, grew up in Indiana, the Heartland 
of America, and his assistant, Mr. Rhoads is an experienced Philmont trekker!!  
I have heard the Pledge said on several other area stations so maybe there is 
one by you. 
Our local newspaper encourages tours.  When my 
son’s Den went for Communicator, they inserted a picture of the Den on the front 
page and ran enough copies so each Scout could get one!!  
                
                
                
                  
                     
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