News To Me!

Kurt on April 8th, 2009

I asked myself this morning as I was channel surfing the wide assortment of news shows if it is possible to be addicted to the news. I decided it isn’t. I’m not an addict, but I do like news.  So a new, semi-regular, feature here on my blog will be “News To Me!” where I will link to a few news stories that catch my eye.  Commentary may or may not be provided.

GM Plans to Partner With Segway.  Huh?

Some Communities Are Printing Their Own Currency. This makes sense to me.

Remember This Guy?  A year for chucking a shoe….good thing he missed!

Random Randomness

Kurt on April 7th, 2009

The Weekend: I wasn’t there this weekend, but all indications are that it was a great weekend. Attendance was very low, but the service went great I was told. It was the second week in a short series. We now take a one week break for Easter. We cancel our youth services on Christmas and Easter so families can worship together.

Sunday and Yesterday:My cousin, Tamal, passed away about a week ago after being in and out of a coma for the past 10 months. Sunday, family and friends gathered in Brentwood area (just up the street from OJ’s old pad….weird) for a gathering. My uncle (Tamal’s dad, my mom’s younger brother) had asked beforehand if he could come home from the gathering with us and stay for a day.  So Sunday night and all day yesterday was spent with uncle Gerow who I really haven’t seen much in the past 5 years or so. We talked a lot about faith, the church, organized religion, Christ’s main message and tea. Actually we talked a whole lot about tea. Uncle Gerow was married for years to a Japanese woman (Tamal’s mom) and has completely embraced the Japanese culture and all things tea related. To be honest, I was a bit hesitant about the 24 hours we were to spend together, but it turned out to be a wonderful time.

BELIEVE:The reason I wasn’t at church was because I was speaking at Believein Atlanta. Believe is a fast-paced (6 general sessions in less than [...]

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Time Machine

Kurt on April 1st, 2009

If you’ve read my book Controlled Chaos (recently revised and updated as Middle School Ministry Made Simple) or if you have ever heard me speak about junior high ministry you are familiar with my insistence that one of the best things a junior high youth worker can do is to walk down junior high memory lane from time to time.

The reality is that as we age and the farther away from our own junior high experience we get, the more likely we are to forget what it’s actually like to be in junior high. For this reason, I think it’s wise to do a few things once a year or so:

- Visit your old junior high school. Drive around the perimeter, walk the halls if possible and maybe even drop in to see one of your favorite teachers (of course this won’t work for me as all of my junior high teachers can only be found in retirement homes….).

- Browse your junior high yearbook. Look at pictures, read what people wrote when they signed it.

- Walk you old stomping grounds. Go to the mall you hung out at, go to the field where you played little league, visit the Taco Bell you and your friends frequented.

I try to do most of these exercises at least once a year, and when I do I’m surprised at how many memories come flooding back. I’m reminded of my struggles, my fears, my insecurities, my hopes, my successes etc. And ultimately I’m reminded [...]

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Homeward Bound

Kurt on March 31st, 2009

Rachel and I both grew up in Whittier, California, an area about 45 minutes north of where we currently live and one that has seen some fairly dramatic changes over the years.  Today for our date day (I took an extra day off this week due to the absolutely crazy schedule our youth ministry team kept last week with the PDYM conference) I decided I wanted to go on a “Whittier Tour” and spend the day driving through our hometown. We spent about 2.5 hours visiting various child-hood and young adult-hood stomping grounds.  Not that you care (unless you are familiar with Whittier…) but here were our major stops.

- Granada Middle School: While it’s technically in La Mirada, it was where I spent grades 6-8

- Bretheren Christian School: Rachel’s junior high

- Cal High: My High School. Cal is short for California….such a great school they named our state after it!

- La Serna High: Rachel’s High School

- My childhood home on Chadsey and my teen years apartment on Mulberry.

- Rachel’s childhood homes (4 or 5 different ones!)

- First Family Church: This was the highlight of the day! This is the church where I came to Christ in high school, it’s where Rachel grew up, it’s where we met, married and spent the first 6 years of junior high ministry on staff. The church has gone through some really, really exciting changes in the past few years and it was so fun to tour around with the new Pastor and some of the [...]

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Weekend Wrap Up

Kurt on March 30th, 2009

Lesson:Week one of our two week ‘mini series’, “Sunday Old School” (Rahab)

Attendance: Lower than average.

Music:Music was great! It was an all junior high band led by a high school student. As a closer, they played a very cool version of Jesus Loves Me.

Volunteer Involvement: Felt a little lower than usual. Maybe coming out of our ‘School Wars’ series they were ready for a break.

Student Involvement: Lower than average. Other than the band, students weren’t used much.

“Fun Factor”:Different than usual, but high. We really played up the old school sunday school theme and played older games, sang older songs etc. It’s not something that would work very often, but for a two-week series it seems fun.

Creative Twist:Instead of me telling the story of Rahab and then teaching, we had a team member dressed up like an old man in a rocking chair reading a version we wrote. It was very true to the biblical account and we just added a few funny jokes and pictures here and there. Then, later in the service I taught for about 12 minutes.

Conferences, I Think You Are Neat

Kurt on March 28th, 2009

It makes sense that one of the first items cut from church budgets in these tough times is conference attendance. By the time you add up travel, hotel, food, rental car and conference registration, the cost of a conference can be close to a thousand dollars. But I think attending some sort of conference every year is important enough to figure out how to make it happen even in tough times.

CONFERENCES ARE IMPORTANT BECAUSE…

- They are like camp for youth workers.

- You rub shoulders with other men and women “in the trenches” who share the same passion and challenges you do.

- You get ongoing training that is very specific to youth ministry.

- If you go with from your church, you get to spend some incredible team time together.

- You get to “decompress” for a few days while also refreshing your soul.

A FEW IDEAS TO CUT CONFERENCES COSTS:

- Pick a conference that is within driving distance. Nowadays, there are so many great conferences to choose from that you shouldn’t have any trouble finding one fairly nearby.

- Buy food at a grocery store and go back to your hotel for meals instead of eating out.

- Try to find a “host home” instead of staying at a hotel. Lots of conferences work alongside local churches to help find you a host home if you can’t afford a hotel. If the conference doesn’t do this, call a few of the local churches to see if they have people in their congregation who open their [...]

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Weekend Update….On Tuesday

Kurt on March 24th, 2009

Yesterday was a bit busy so here is an update from last weekend in our junior high ministry:

SERIES: Our final week of “School Wars”, a series built around school competition. We had no worship music for the entire series, we focused on the school competition aspect of the series and each week we shared a gospel message via video.  It was the first time we had ever done a team-based competition and we learned a few things….primarily that the vast majority of our students really liked the change even if they didn’t particularly love the competition part. Tons of students brought first-time guests.

ATTENDANCE: Our attendance for the final week of “School Wars” was really big….our biggest of the year.

VOLUNTEER INVOLVEMENT:High. Lots of volunteers stayed for multiple services to help run games, organize the teams, greet guests, etc.

STUDENT RESPONSE: High. We started a subscription to Poll Everywhere, an amazing text-based survey service. We decided to take a risk and ask the students to give us their feelings toward School Wars. The questions came up on the screen and we instantly saw their live responses. Their options were: “Loved It”, “It Was Okay” and “Didn’t Like It”. The overwhelming majority (about 80%) said they loved it, about 15% said it was okay and about 5% said they didn’t like it.  If you can afford the service, some type of live text-based survey program holds a TON of potential in your junior high program.

NEXT UP:This week we are starting a short, two-week [...]

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No Wonder Texans Are So Tough

Kurt on March 20th, 2009

Apparently, a high school in Texas was allowing students to settle disputes by putting them in a steel cage and letting them fight it out. I love this quote by the principal…the person in charge of quality education:

“That’s barbaric. You can’t do that at a high school. You can’t do that anywhere,” Mr Moten said. “Ain’t nothing to comment on. It never did happen. I never put a stop to anything because it never happened.”

“Ain’t nothing to comment on….”!  Oh, Texas.

Do You Read GROUP Magazine?

Kurt on March 19th, 2009

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When I jumped into junior high ministry over 20 years ago, one of the first things I did was subscribe to GROUP magazine and I’ve been a subscriber off and on (mostly on) ever since.  Each issue is crammed full of a really good mix of educational/philosophical articles and super practical ministry ideas that you can plug directly into your setting.

A subscription costs about $30.00 per year and is, in my oppinion, the best thirty bucks you can spend. Where else can you get encouragement, tips and tricks, ready-to-use ideas and food for thought delivered to your door for only $30.00?  If you follow the link above and scroll to the bottom of the page, there is an offer for a free issue of GROUP so you can check it out for yourself.

Input Welcome.

Kurt on March 18th, 2009

For too long the junior high ministry I lead has had a teaching strategy that feels too loose. In essence our plan has been this: 1) Identify four or five key things we want to teach each year and make sure we cover those. 2) rotate from a felt need/topical series to an expository/bible education series every month.  While that has served us well, we are in the process of re-tooling our strategy. Here is what we have landed on so far as a two year plan:

- 1/3 of our lessons will be on key christian education/doctrine issues that we are still in the process of narrowing down to approximately 33 lessons, most of which will be in three-week series form.

- 1/3 of our lessons will be on the topic of “Junior High Survival Skills” (what we call this category in house….students won’t know this is what we call it). These are topics we know our students need…they may not know they need them, but we do! We are still in the process of narrowing down to approximately 33 lessons that will include jr. high survival skills such as making wise choices, peer pressure, friendship, sex and dating etc.

- 1/3 of our lessons will be “felt need”. What are students talking about? What is going on in culture right now that we need to address? Is there world news and issues that we can look at from a biblical perspective etc. These 33 lessons can’t really be listed ahead of [...]

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