DISABILITIES AWARENESS
- Visit an agency that works with the
physically, mentally, emotionally, or educationally disabled people. Collect
publications about the agency's activities on behalf of its members. Learn
what is being done through training, employment, and education of their
members.
- Speak to a person with a disability or
read an article or book about a person with a disability and report to your
counselor what you learned about that person's experiences in dealing with a
disability.
- Spend fifteen hours within a
three-month period in one of the following ways:
- Visit a Cub Scout pack or Boy
Scout troop that works with Scouts with disabilities. Learn about their
activities, assist the leaders, and work with the members of the group.
- Enlist the help of your unit
leader and the parents or guardians of someone with a disabling
condition and invite the disabled individual to join your troop, team,
or post. Help him or her become a participating member.
- Locate and study literature about the
accessibility or nonaccessibility of public or private places to disabled
individuals. Observe and discuss with your counselor the accessibility or
nonaccessibility for disabled people in the following:
- Five places with good
accessibility
- Five places with poor
accessibility
- Your school, church, synagogue, or
mosque
- Your Scout camping site
- Display in a public place the material
you have collected for the other requirements of this merit badge so that
others can be made more aware of citizens with disabilities.
- Make a commitment to your merit badge
counselor as to what you will do in the future for people with disabling
conditions. Discuss how your awareness has changed as a result of what you
learned.