This
Is Cub Scouting
PERSONNEL
Cubmaster, six parents.
EQUIPMENT
A log board with six candles, a table.
ARRANGEMENT
The room lights are out. A candleholder with six candles, three blue and
three yellow, is ' on a table. The six parents each light a candle and
present their part of the ceremony.
lst Parent: Some people think Cub
Scouting is only for boys, but it isn't. Cub Scouting is for the family.
2nd Parent: Mothers and dads, as they
work in Cub Scouting with their boys, are able to maintain their natural
relationship with them, yet they come to see their boy's play and leisure
in a new light. The Cub Scout advancement program ensures closer
boy-parent relationships.
3rd Parent: Cub Scouts arc considerate of
others. They promise to help other people and to do their best. When
parents sign their boy's membership applications, they take as their
motto: We will help our son do his best.
4th Parent: Cub Scouting is an
introduction to the program of the Boy Scouts of America. Each part is
packed with challenges most appropriate to the boy's age, and leads to the
next phase. Thus, when our Cub Scouts join a Webelos den and earn the
Arrow of Light Award, they are prepared to enter Boy Scouting.
5th Parent: Cub Scouting in all its
phases operates to strengthen the family by living, playing, and growing
together.
6th Parent: Today your boy is a
second-grader. He has only a few more years of boyhood left before he
looks away from home for his growing interests. What you do together today
is important. Tomorrow may be too late.
Cubmaster: Will all parents pledge their
support to Cub Scouting? Now, join with the Cub Scouts in the Cub Scout
sign and repeat the Cub Scout Promise with me. I, [name], promise to do my
best, to do my duty to God and my country, to help other people, and to
obey the Law of the Pack.
Parents' Participation Promise
The success of pack leaders is often measured by the
extent to which parents support their Cub Scout sons and the pack program.
If leaders expect parents to meet their pack obligations,
leaders must make these obligations clear to the parents before their boys
become Cub Scouts.
The Parents' Participation Promise can be used as a part
of any Bobcat induction ceremony.
After the newly inducted Bobcats have repeated the Cub
Scout Promise, ask the parents to repeat the following promise:
I, [name], promise to do my best to help my son to be a
good Cub Scout, to encourage him to fulfill the Cub Scout Promise and obey
the Law of the Pack. I promise to assist him in his Cub Scout achievements
and electives; to cooperate with the den leader, Cubmaster, and pack
committee members; and to participate actively in Cub Scouting.
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