
ENGINEERING
These were the REQUIREMENTS
before the REVISIONS made on January 1, 2001.
To see the current requirements
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- Visit a construction site or manufacturing or processing
plant. Discuss engineering design and construction with
the engineer in charge. Ask to see engineering drawings
and have them explained. Tell what you learned about engineering
and the day-to-day work of an engineer from this visit.
- Visit another engineer (other than your counselor or
the person in requirement 1) in his office. Tell how the
work done there relates to the work done in the field.
- Explain the work of six of the following types of engineers:
civil, mechanical, chemical, electrical, industrial, agricultural,
aeronautical, mining, astronautical, metallurgical, nuclear,
biomedical, ceramic, petroleum.
- With your counselor's advice, select a subject for research
in engineering. Do research in publications and interview
experts. Tell what you learned and how you got the facts.
(Notes may be used.)
- Tell why measurements and calculations are important
in an engineer's work. Explain the difference between accurate
and precise measurements and calculations. Explain the values
of the metric system.
- Using an engineering college or university catalog,
learn what high school courses you could take to be admitted
into an accredited engineering college. Report to counselor.
Tell what "accredited college" means.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Show how the "engineering approach" to
problems works by laying out plans, step by step, for
your next campout. List alternative ideas on such items
as cost, campsites, and transportation. Tell why decided
as you did.
- Make an original piece of patrol equipment.
Draw plans for it. Show the plans to your counselor.
- Do TWO of the following:
- Transforming Motion. Show or tell how a car or truck
transmission transforms motion.
- Harnessing Electricity. Make a model of an electrical
device. A kit may be used. Or, make a list all electrical
appliances in your home and find out approximately how
much electricity each uses in 1 month. Tell five ways
to conserve electricity.
- Materials Science. Do experiments to show the differences
in strength and heat conductivity among wood, plastic,
and metal. Discuss with your counselor what you have
learned.
- Energy Conversion. Tell how a car or flashlight
battery converts chemical energy into electrical energy.
Do an experiment to show the value and potential of
solar energy. Explain your results. Tell about one way
to convert mechanical to electrical energy.
- Traffic Study. With the advice of your counselor.
Select a busy street or highway intersection in your
community. Make a study of the traffic flow there in
both heavy and light traffic period. Find out your community's
predicted population 5 years from now. Using all the
data, tell your counselor what could be done to improve
traffic flow 5 years hence.
- Build an engineering project for entry into a science-engineering
fair. Show it to your counselor.
- Study "Faith of the Engineer." Tell how this is like
the Scout Oath.
BSA Advancement ID#: 46
Pamphlet Revision Date: 2000
Requirements last updated prior to 2001
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