Choctober

Kurt on October 4th, 2007

Today we are shooting videos for ‘Choctober’. Every October for the past several years we turn octocter into choctober and build the majority of our programming around chocolate. Chocolate games, chocolate prizes etc.

This year, three of us from three different churches are filming videos together that we can show in our junior high ministries. Dumb, chocolate themed contests that will most likely end in some horrific amount of chocolate being consumed, thrown or dumped on us.

Same Sex Middle School Classes

Kurt on October 3rd, 2007

There certainly are a lot of intriguing reasons for it.

www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/09/30/ap/national/main3312765.shtml

thoughts?

Meet N Greet

Kurt on October 2nd, 2007


In a previous post, I mentioned that last night was our annual Small Group Meet N Greet.

We started this tradition a few years ago in the hopes that, because all of our small groups meet off site, we could provide a formal opportunity for parents to meet our leaders and each other at the church campus a week before groups started meeting in homes. We had become surprised at how many of our leaders mentioned they were having a hard time meeting the parents because they’d pull up to the house, slow down to about 10 miles an hour and shove their kid out the door. We thought the Meet N Greet would help our leaders meet each parent and put a parental ‘face’ to each student.

It has proven more successful than we ever imagined. At the meet n greet, students find out what group they’ve been assigned to (most already know because they’ve been called ahead of time by their leader), they get their student notebooks, their C-group t-shirt, maps to the host home etc. We typically have almost 100% attendance.

I took this picture of part of our worship center from the stage.

It was a great night and we were able to meet a ton of parents.

Weekend Wrap Up

Kurt on October 1st, 2007

Lesson Topic: Week One of our Series: Get Out Of My Face! (dealing with conflict)
‘Fun Factor’:
Above Average
Volunteer Involvement: Below Average
Music: Average
Lesson Quality: Above Average
Length of Lesson: 23.5
Student Response: Above Average

I was really excited about this series heading into it, and I think the first week went well. I used week one to set up the issue of conflict and talked about the reality that most people don’t handle it well. I set the stage for next week’s lesson on how to properly deal with it.

We seem to be having fewer and fewer weekend volunteers showing up which is disturbing. Not sure if they are easing back into the Fall or if we’ve simply managed to lose a few. It’s definitely something we need to take a closer look into.

Music was ‘average’ not because of quality, but because of who was leading. Once every couple of months, we have an all student band of high schoolers leading in Junior High. I love giving them the opportunity, and they do a great job. It’s just that I hate not having junior highers leading music! But it is fun to see the older students come and ‘give back’ to our ministry.

Exciting Progress

Kurt on September 28th, 2007

The grand opening of our Student Zone is slated for this coming June. Even though we’ve been assured that this date is fairly accurate, I’ve been hesitant to get my hopes up.
But, seeing the building beginning to get wrapped in insulation brings a shot of optimism.

I spent quite a bit of time yesterday brainstorming operating hours, ways the building will help us reach our community, etc. I’m beginning to get excited.

But, it’s also a really strong reminder that buildings and programs don’t change lives. To suddenly rely on our student zone or hope that it is some sort of silver bullet for our ministry would be a huge mistake. Even when we move into this incredible facility, our ministry focus will be the same: Connecting students to caring adults who can help point them closer to Jesus.

No building can do that!

Training Day

Kurt on September 27th, 2007

Right now I’m sitting in a room as people trickle in for our annual, mandatory, sexual harassment training day. A certain episode of The Office comes to mind.

Speaking of the office….can’t wait for tonight’s season premiere. My family is taking my dad to the LA County fair so I’ll watch it late tonight.

Open Season

Kurt on September 26th, 2007

Our small group season has officially opened. We start about a month into the school year to allow our kids to get back into the groove of homework, etc.

Last night, we kicked off with the first of two small group leader training nights (we offer two for convenience…leaders pick one). About 1/3 of our leaders are brand new this year and a good chunk of those leaders have moved up from our children’s ministry. Our children’s ministry has an INCREDIBLE small group program and each year we get leaders who want to continue leading the same students they’ve had through out elementary school.

Next Monday night we will have our annual ‘Meet N Greet’ which allows students and parents to meet their leaders, get maps to the host home etc. It’s the only time all year that all the small groups and their parents get together at one time. It really is a major event for us.

Finally, the following week we begin meeting as groups in homes. This year feels like it’s shaping up to be a great one.

Weekend Wrap Up

Kurt on September 24th, 2007

Attendance: Average
Lesson Topic: One Hit Wonder: How To Stick Out
‘Fun Factor’:
Above Average
Volunteer Involvement: Above Average
Music: Above Average
Lesson Quality: Above Average
Length of Lesson: Not sure….
Student Response: Above Average

This weekend, Allison and Bethany tagged-teamed the lesson. Next week, we kick off what I think will be an interesting, but challenging series: “Get Out Of My Face…how to handle conflict”

On a side note…we spent most of the weekend painting my daughter’s room. When she was about 5, we painted it a sand color and decorated it in a Hawaii theme. It was more our idea than hers, and she never really loved it. She’s been asking for a room makeover for several years and we finally got around to phase one which was the paint. She wanted all white with one blue wall. I took the picture because I’ve never seen her room this clean and thought I’d enjoy the moment.

Sometimes It’s All In The Presentation

Kurt on September 21st, 2007

I spent some time browsing through this booklet produced by the U.S. Department of Education for parents of young teens. There’s actually a whole lot of good stuff. Unfortunately, there’s also a whole lot of really goofy looking illustrations. So bad, in fact, that I had a hard time getting past it.

It made me think about the ‘look’ of certain things in my ministry that I feel are really important. Are some things taken less seriously, or is my ministry deemed unprofessional, out of date, untrustworthy etc. simply by how aspects of it look?

Summit Update #1

Kurt on September 18th, 2007

Not sure if there will be a Summit update #2, but…

After being delayed in the twin cities for over an hour trying to catch my connecting flight to Grand Rapids, and driving about 2 hours to the camp, we arrived last night to catch the tail end of dinner. Kind of a bummer when the three hosts of an event show up 90 minutes late!

The camp we are staying at is fantastic. Spring Hill feels massive (not sure what the actual acreage is) and has tons of cool features. Paintball, a really nice skate park, lake, pool, two sets of really long zip lines, rope courses, etc. They even have an old WWII Bomber that they’ve turned into guys dorms. I gotta think it would be a perfect place for a junior high camp. In fact, Marko came here to camp when he was in junior high. That was certainly before the paintball, and skate park. Come to think of it, the WWII Bomber was probably still dropping bombs somewhere!

A great group of about 40 or so ‘middle school only’ youth workers are here. Last night, we spent 90 minutes simply going around the circle introducing ourselves and putting possible discussion subjects on the ‘board’. I think we’ve got the potential for some really lively and insightful dialogue.