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20 Youth Work Hashtags On Twitter

April 24, 2012 By Shae Pepper 2 Comments

Youth Work HashtagsQ: I’ve just started using Twitter and am still getting to grips with hashtags. What different youth ministry and youth work hashtags are there?

A: As it sounds like you’re aware, hashtags are used on Twitter to identify your tweets with a certain topic, group or genre. This helps you and other people to search for tweets related to that topic simply by searching for the hashtag.

By using youth ministry or youth work related hashtags, you can increase the chance that your tweets get seen be a wider audience than just your existing followers. This can help people to discover (and subsequently follow) you, increases the chance of a question you have being answered, etc.

When using hashtags, always remember your # symbol first and don’t put spaces in between words. i.e. neither youthmin nor #stu min are correctly used hashtags.

Anyway, to answer the question, here is a list of 20 youth ministry and youth work hashtags:

  1. #youth
  2. #youngpeople
  3. #YP (short for Young People)
  4. #youthministry
  5. #youthmin
  6. #stumin (short for Student Ministry)
  7. #uthmin
  8. #kidmin (short for Kid’s Ministry
  9. #fammin (short for Family Ministry)
  10. #cathym (short for Catholic Youth Ministry)
  11. #youthwork
  12. #teens
  13. #globalyouth
  14. #ywchat (short for Youth Work Chat. This hashtag is a way for youth workers and youth pastors to chat about whatever’s on their mind or heart – sometimes it’s personal stuff, sometimes it’s professional)
  15. #youthworker
  16. #youthpastor
  17. #youthgroup
  18. #youthretreat
  19. #YourYouthGroupEventOrProject (so don’t really put that hashtag – use whatever is applicable for you, such as #GroveUMCLockin or #OKCYCTraining). As youth participate in the lock-in, sponsored bike ride training, etc, they can update using their special hashtag and everyone can keep up with what’s going on with that event or project.
  20. #socent (stands for Social Enterprise – not always used in the youth work field, but might be applicable depending on the work that you do)

Don’t forget – the hashtag still counts towards the 140 characters you’re allowed in any tweet. If you’re pushed for space, it may therefore be better to use a hashtag like #uthmin instead of #youthministry as this saves 7 characters.

Question: What youth ministry or youth work hashtags do you prefer? Are there any hashtags we’ve missed off the list? We’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below.

You can also connect with us by:

  1. Signing up to receive our posts via email
  2. Following us on Twitter
  3. Liking us on Facebook
  4. Signing up to our RSS feed

 

Top 5 Youth Work Q & A Posts

April 3, 2012 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

Top 5 youth work Q & A postsEvery Tuesday, we answer questions that are often asked by youth workers. In case you’ve missed any of them, here are our Top 5 Youth Work Q & A posts so far this year:

1) Creating vs Buying Youth Work Curriculum – In this post, we explore whether it’s better to create or buy youth work curriculum, or whether both have their place.

2) Group Facilitation Skills – This has a list of three techniques you can use when facilitating group discussions to ensure that all youth participate.

3) Encouraging Diversity In Youth Work – Here are four ways that you can make your youth work programs more diverse.

4) Setting up a Facebook or Twitter Account Step-By-Step – If you’re not already on Facebook and/or Twitter, this post gives step-by-step instructions on how to set up accounts, including screenshots for every step of the process.

5) Adult To Youth Ratios – On this post, we explored what adult to youth ratio your youth work programs should have.

Don’t miss out on future Youth Work Q & A posts (or any of our other posts) by connecting with us in the following ways:

  1. Signing up to receive our posts via email
  2. Following us on Twitter
  3. Liking us on Facebook
  4. Signing up to our RSS feed

 

Job Interview Techniques – Youth Work Session Plan Idea

January 12, 2012 By Shae Pepper Leave a Comment

Youth work session - job interview techniques
Are your youth all a-twitter about their interview?

When preparing youth for the ‘real world’, one type of skill that cannot be overlooked is job-readiness. Not only resumés, CVs or on-the-job training, but job interview techniques and skills. How to dress, what questions might be asked and ideas to help youth stand out against many others competing for the same role.

One important skill to master for job interviews is saying just the right amount of information. It’s important to educate youth about being concise, teaching them how to find the balance between sharing too little and over-sharing.

Today’s youth work session plan is a fun and challenging activity using the idea of 140 characters from the social media site, Twitter. This resource is designed to help youth answer common interview questions in 140 characters – the amount of characters allowed in each ‘Tweet’. It helps them distill their experience, talents and passions into a few brief sentences.

While it’s unlikely that they’ll only need 140 characters worth of information in a job interview, it’s a good tool to help youth focus on the most important qualities to share about with each question.

You can download the “Retweetable Interview Resource” to use for your own youth work session – let us know how it goes!

Question: How do you help youth improve their job interview skills?  We’d love to hear your ideas in the comments below.

You can also connect with us by:

  1. Signing up to receive our posts via email
  2. Following us on Twitter
  3. Liking us on Facebook
  4. Signing up to our RSS feed

 

3 Free Online Tools To Help Your Youth Work

January 11, 2012 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

One of the worst parts of the job for many youth workers is administration. Keeping track of paperwork, having everything you need for each youth work session and just generally staying on top of anything that doesn’t involve time spent with youth – all areas that can cause stress for youth workers.

So today, we’ve got a list of three free online tools and how you can use them to simplify your youth work program administration and your youth worker life overall:

 

1) Dropbox

Youth Work DropboxThink of Dropbox as a hard drive available to you no matter where you are. No more emailing documents to yourself, no more carrying around (and losing) USB flash drives. Your important youth work documents are all backed up in the cloud, there for you to download even if you’re at home and you’d saved the document at work.

You still retain the original documents on your hard drive, but they’re backed up on Dropbox’s servers so even if your computer crashed, you haven’t lost all your important work. I’d almost made this mistake with the youth work book we’re working on – my laptop crashed a few months back and I thought we’d lost it all. I’ve now backed it up on Dropbox so even if that happened again, all isn’t lost.

You can log in to your Dropbox account from any computer, or via an app downloaded to your phone, so you really do have access to your saved documents anywhere with an internet connection.

Dropbox comes with 2GB of storage free, with more space available if you’re willing to pay for it. If you use this link to sign up, you get a bonus 250MB of storage (as do I).

 

2) Evernote

Youth Work EvernoteEvernote describe their service as allowing “users to capture, organize, and find information across multiple platforms. Users can take notes, clip webpages, snap photos using their mobile phones, create to-dos, and record audio.”

This is somewhat similar to Dropbox in that you can make a list on Evernote and then have access to it anywhere – at work, home, on your phone, etc.

This is perfect for youth workers in so many ways:

  • See an article online relating to youth work that you want to come back to? Clip it using the Evernote browser plugin.
  • Have a great idea for a youth work session that you don’t want to forget? Make a note.
  • Planning an event? Make a list of everything you need to do, so that you can keep track of the list via their app on your phone.

I use Evernote a lot for grocery shopping lists, as I used to make lists on paper but forget to take them when I would go to Wal-Mart. I always remember my phone though, so I just make my lists on Evernote now and check the list via their app. One of the best parts of Evernote lists are that you can easily add check boxes (UK – tick boxes), so as you complete each task/put Diet Coke in the shopping cart/call the first of twenty youth, you just press the check box and it marks that line as complete.

I also use it to make notes to myself when I have a sudden flash of inspiration, as it gets annoying when you have a great idea, only to remember a few hours later that you’d had a great idea but can’t remember what it was!

 

3) ifttt

Youth Work IFTTTifttt has been around for about a year, although it’s now starting to really take off. ifttt stands for If This, Then That and is an ingenious solution for linking up all kinds of online services.

You set up “tasks” to be performed automatically whenever there’s a trigger. So when this trigger is actioned (the “If This” part), ifttt will take care of the resulting action (the “Then That” part). This may sound confusing at first, but there are many ways this can help youth workers:

  • Craigslist – You’re keeping tabs on Craigslist for a cheap sofa for your youth room, but are getting tired of searching everyday. You can arrange for ifttt to email you when a sofa matching your price range is listed. To do this, you do a search on Craigslist inputting your search parameters (e.g. search for “sofa”, in “furniture”, maximum price “$50” and copy and paste the URL into ifttt. Select the email address you want to be notified to and voila – no more manually searching every day.
  • Weather – Need to make sure you’re at the office/church on time in the morning because of a meeting? Set an alert to be notified if there’s rain or snow forecast the day before, so you can set your alarm to go off earlier.
  • Meetings – Do you tend to forget about meetings until 1/2 hour after they start? Save the meeting times on Google Calendar, then use ifttt to send you a text or email 15 minutes before it’s due to start.

There are plenty of other uses for ifttt – check out their Recipes list where people have shared their own tasks to give others inspiration as to what can be done. My favorite is “Call my phone when I send ifttt a text so that I can escape whatever I’m doing“. Genius!

Question: how would you/do you use Dropbox, Evernote or ifttt to help with your youth work? Let us know in the comments below

You can also connect with us by:

  1. Signing up to receive our posts via email
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  3. Liking us on Facebook
  4. Signing up to our RSS feed

 

Social Media Privacy Settings In Youth Work

October 18, 2011 By Shae Pepper Leave a Comment

Social media privacy settings in youth work
What’s the Facebook setting for this kind of protection?

Q: I want to use Facebook and Twitter to interact with the youth in my program, but I’m concerned about the privacy settings, for my youth and myself. How do I set/change them?

A. I’d planned to write a long article with a bunch of screen shots, but then I came across an article that already covered the top 10 privacy settings you want to know about on Facebook and it includes screen shots and descriptions. I’ve read through it and in all honesty, for current Facebook users it’s a good resource. You can find it here.

When it comes to privacy concerns on Facebook the biggest piece of advice I can offer is this: Just because it’s on Facebook doesn’t make it real- check with the source: Facebook Help.

I regularly find my news feed full of panic stricken users concerned about Facebook’s changes causing privacy setting changes. The best thing you can do is go to Facebook Help and read for yourself. For example, this recently happened with the introduction of the Ticker.

The Ticker doesn’t share any more information than you allowed to be shared on your wall; it just showed it in real time for your friends, so they could see it more easily than going onto your wall to read about it. However, there were many of my Facebook friends (who I love and are very well meaning), and I’m sure yours too (maybe even you), who were very concerned that it was changing your privacy settings.

As with all things, go directly to the source. I searched ‘Ticker’ ‘Privacy’ in Facebook Help and found this answer right away. It’s OK to be concerned about your privacy online and that of your youth, but take the time (sometimes it’s a very quick fix) to educate your youth (and yourself) on how they can:

a) take control of their privacy settings, and

b) educate themselves on changes that Facebook is making and how it might affect them.

Twitter offers an easy-to-read article about protecting tweets, which is one of the main privacy controls on Twitter.

Question: How do you/can you educate your youth (and other youth workers) about social media privacy settings? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

You can also connect with us by:

  1. Signing up to receive our posts via email
  2. Following us on Twitter
  3. Liking us on Facebook
  4. Signing up to our RSS feed

 

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