AHG Merit Badge Help – Living in the USA #5

Recently our troop lost our Tenderheart Unit leader due to her husband being relocated with his job.  So, I have been promoted to Tenderheart Unit Leader.  I must admit, working with 1st and 2nd graders after spending so much time with high school girls is a pretty drastic change.  But we are having fun!!!

Right now we are working on the Living in the USA merit badge.  That means we all get to wear our cowboy boots and hats while learning about Texas.  Who says it doesn’t match the official American Heritage Girls uniform?  Cowboy boots go with everything!

Optional requirement #5, has us looking at the weather for our state, and discussing what we wear.  To help our troop complete this requirement, I created a worksheet that allowed them to write a sentence or two about the weather and color clothes on a doll.  One of my Tenderhearts drew her doll with her favorite purple sweater and a hat. And yes, that is a pompom on the hat.

I have altered the wording to remove the reference to Texas so that troops around the country could use the same page.  To download a copy of the worksheet, click on the image below.

If you are looking for additional merit badge helps for Living in the USA, check out these blog posts:

NOTE: The requirements have been simplified here. Please be sure to read the full text in the Girl Handbook to make sure you fully understand the requirements.

AHG Merit Badge Help – Cooking #26

I am currently working with a group of PiPa’s from my troop to help them complete the Cooking Merit Badge.  This badge covers an important life skill. I was surprised at how little these young ladies actually cook at home.  I am blessed with a teenage daughter who is an excellent cook and joyfully cooks dinner several nights each week.

Requirement #26 looks at common food allergies. The American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology has a great webpage (here), that explains what exactly a food allergy is, along with symptoms, and treatments.  Eight types of food cover 90% of all food allergies: eggs, milk, peanuts, tree nuts, fish, shellfish, wheat and soy.

Fortunately, or unfortunately (depending on how you look at it), our troop has several girls with food allergies.  My troop has done a great job of accommodating all of the different dietary needs at campouts making this requirement fairly easy for our girls to complete.

The easiest meals to accommodate allergies are the ones with the least number of ingredients – plain baked chicken, green beans, salad. The less processing the fewer number of allergens.

If your recipe box does not contain allergy friendly recipes, consider inviting someone with allergies to speak to the group and learn what they use as substitutions.

NOTE: The requirements have been simplified here. Please be sure to read the full text in the Girl Handbook to make sure you fully understand the requirements.

 

 

AHG Merit Badge Help – Our Feathered Friends #1

It’s Friday, so that means another badge help here at the Life of Momma B. Today I am looking at the Our Feathered Friends Merit Badge from the Science and Technology Frontier.

Spring is right around the corner, and all little girls love baby birds. Baby animals of any kind really.  Now is a great time to study Ornithology  (yes, that is my fifty cent word for the day).  The first requirement teaches the basic parts of a bird. 

To help you with this, I have drawn a basic diagram of a bird that can be labeled.  If you click on the picture below you can download a pdf worksheet for your Tenderheart to use.  And I did include an answer sheet.  The worksheet also includes basic definitions for all of the parts of the bird needed to complete requirement #1. 

If you are trying to complete this badge, I have also posted these requirements:

NOTE: The requirements have been simplified here. Please be sure to read the full text in the Girl Handbook to make sure you fully understand the requirements.

AHG Merit Badge Help – Dawn of Our Country #4

I am not sure which merit badge frontier I enjoy most. I learn so much from the Heritage Frontier.  But I do enjoy the creativity that goes with the Arts Frontier. And when the two overlap, I am delighted.

Today we are looking at the five-pointed star, also known as a pentagram, found on the American flag.  Can you imagine our flag with a six-pointed star instead of the five-pointed star? It just does not seem right.

According to legend, the original flag was designed with a 6 pointed star.  It was not until Betsy Ross, demonstrated how easily a 5 pointed star could be cut that it was even considered.

Continue reading “AHG Merit Badge Help – Dawn of Our Country #4”