Start with Curiosity

Req 1 — Reading Energy Stories

1.
Do the following:

This requirement has two connected parts. First, you find one energy-related source and talk about what catches your attention. Later, after finishing the rest of the badge, you come back to that same source and explain what you understand better now.

Requirement 1a: Find a source and ask better questions

1a.
With your parent or guardian’s permission, use the internet to find a blog, podcast, website, or an article on the use or conservation of energy. Discuss with your counselor what details in the article were interesting to you, the questions it raises, and what ideas it addresses that you do not understand.

A good source for this requirement does not need to be perfect or advanced. It just needs to give you something real to react to. You might choose a news article about electric vehicles, a podcast about power outages, a website about solar panels, or a post about saving energy at home. The point is not to become an instant expert. The point is to notice what stands out, what seems important, and what you still do not understand.

When you read or listen, pay attention to specific claims. Does the source say one fuel is cheaper? Cleaner? More reliable? Does it mention efficiency, waste, storage, pollution, imports, or jobs? Those are clues that the source is talking about trade-offs. Energy stories are almost never about just one thing.

The best counselor discussion usually starts with details, not opinions. Instead of saying, “It was interesting,” say, “I noticed the article said most of the cost of running an appliance depends on how long it operates, not just how powerful it is.” That gives your counselor something concrete to talk through with you.

Choose a strong source

Pick something that gives you enough to discuss
  • Recent enough to matter: Energy technology and prices change, so choose something fairly current when possible.
  • Specific topic: “How home insulation saves money” is easier to discuss than a vague article about “the environment.”
  • Credible publisher: Government agencies, science organizations, news outlets, and educational sites are better than random social posts.
  • A little challenging: It should raise at least one question you cannot answer yet.

What to bring to your counselor conversation

Make a short set of notes as you read or listen:

Requirement 1b: Revisit the source after the badge

1b.
After you have completed requirements 2 through 8, revisit your source for requirement 1(a). Explain to your counselor what you have learned in completing the requirements that helps you better understand the article.

This is where the badge comes full circle. After you work through forms of energy, efficiency, home audits, waste, charts, energy systems, and careers, you return to the same source with a much stronger mental toolbox. You will probably notice that words like conversion, efficiency, losses, renewable, nonrenewable, cost, and trade-off now mean something more precise than they did at the start.

Suppose your original source was about electric vehicles. After Requirement 2, you can explain conversions from stored chemical energy in a battery to electrical energy to mechanical motion. After Requirement 3, you can talk about losses in the whole system. After Requirement 4 and 5, you might notice how charging habits or idling behavior connect to energy waste. After Requirement 6, you might understand where the electricity comes from. After Requirement 7, you can compare EVs to other energy systems with more confidence.

Your goal is not to say the source was right or wrong in every detail. Your goal is to explain what you understand better now and how the badge changed the way you read it.

EIA — Energy Explained A reliable starting place for clear explanations of major energy topics, from fuels and electricity to conservation and prices. Link: EIA — Energy Explained — https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/

You have practiced reading about energy like a scientist instead of just a headline-skimmer. Next, you will dig into one of the biggest ideas in the whole badge: how energy changes form.