• Home
  • About Us
    • Our Mission and Vision
    • The Youth Workin’ It Team
      • Shae Pepper, Managing Director
      • Stephen Pepper, Operations Director
    • Recommendations for the Youth Workin’ It Team
  • Youth Work Resources
    • How To Plan A Youth Retreat Book
    • 52 Scavenger Hunt Ideas
  • Contact Us

Youth Workin' It

Consultancy and Resources for Youth Workers and Organizations Worldwide

  • Youth Group Games
  • Session Plans
  • Fundraisers
  • Youth Retreats
  • Life Skills
  • Interview Skills
  • Scavenger Hunts
  • Would You Rather Questions
  • Program Administration
  • Policies & Procedures
  • Youth Participation
  • Group Agreement

A Parent’s Guide To Understanding Social Media – Book Review

February 15, 2013 By Stephen Pepper 2 Comments

A Parent's Guide To Understanding Social Media book reviewMark Oestreicher & Adam McLane – A Parent’s Guide To Understanding Social Media

4.5 / 5

This book is part of a series of ‘Parent’s Guide’ books published by Simply Youth Ministry (see our review of A Parent’s Guide To Understanding Teenage Guys). It’s written by Marko and Adam who are the founders of The Youth Cartel and have been involved in youth ministry for decades.

Initial Reaction

Before reading it, I’d questioned the wisdom of this book being published in the first place. The social media scene is changing all the time, so I figured any book published on the subject now could easily be irrelevant within a year or two.

The good thing is, Adam and Marko were clearly aware of this – they even make reference to this very problem in the book. This book therefore isn’t a guide to specific types of social media like Facebook and Twitter, although they do cover these two sites more than others, giving various stats about them and how young people are currently using them.

How To Parent

Instead, this book gives overarching ideas and principles for parents to guide them in how they can approach the subject of their child’s social media usage. There’s no scaremongering involved – the authors don’t sensationalize anything or make it seem like every teenager is posting naked pictures of themselves online.

They’re also very realistic about the fact that even if parents ban social media accounts, young people can easily find a way around them. It’s therefore much better for parents to help guide their children in how they should conduct themselves online (and off), particularly due to consequences that they may not have considered.

In fact, they even suggest that it can be counter-productive to install things like internet blocking software, going so far as to describe it as lazy parenting! Instead, parents should be proactively involved in how their children are using the internet.

Even though it offers suggestions for people on how they should parent, it’s not done at all condescendingly. Besides, if a parent’s reading this guide, there’s a good chance that they’re wanting guidance on how to parent when it comes to social media.

Practical Tips

Despite being a fairly short book (all the books in this ‘Parent’s Guide’ series are of a similar length), it has numerous useful tips that parents can put in place in their household.

This includes suggestions like:

  • Having computers in public areas in the house
  • Having access to your child’s accounts
  • Having all family members (i.e. parents too!) keep mobile devices in one central location overnight to charge

In my opinion, these are the types of extremely useful ideas that parents may not have thought of, so make the book worth getting for that reason alone.

Privacy

This guide also covers the all-important topic of online privacy and how young people’s actions now could come back to haunt them again in the future.

As mentioned earlier, this isn’t done in a scaremongering way, but is an important issue to address with youth as once something’s online, deleting it doesn’t mean that it’s gone.

Good For Both Christians & Non-Christians

Marko and Adam are both involved with youth ministry, so some small sections look at social media from a Christian perspective. However, it’s not at all preachy so I’d feel comfortable giving this book to parents who aren’t Christians.

All the underlying principles and ideas are valid whether or not you’re coming from a Christian perspective – we’ve therefore bought a copy for some friends of ours who have a teenage daughter.

Downsides?

Similar to the Teenage Guys book, the flow of the book isn’t always completely smooth due to the need of advising which of the authors is writing at a given point in time.

For example, you have sentences that read:

  • When I (Adam) fell…
  • When I (Marko) post…
  • Over the years I (Adam) have…

Like I mentioned in the other review, I’d personally have preferred it to be laid out slightly differently:

  • AM: When I fell…
  • MO: When I post…
  • AM: Over the years I have…

Again, this is my personal preference and doesn’t negate the great ideas and information that’s throughout the book.

I can therefore highly recommend this book for all parents of young people who are old enough to be using social media.

It’s also an excellent resource for youth workers. Even if you’re well versed in social media, the book will give you many ideas that you can pass on to parents. Better yet, get them a copy of this too!

Buy A Parent’s Guide To Understanding Social Media

Amazon – Paperback

Amazon – Kindle

Youth Cartel – Paperback

 

How To Use Vine For Youth Group Activities

February 14, 2013 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

Vine youth group activitiesFor this week’s session idea, we’ll be looking at how you can incorporate Vine in to some of your youth group activities.

What is Vine?

Vine is an app owned by Twitter that enables you to shoot short videos and upload them easily.

The distinctive thing about Vine is that your videos are restricted to 6 seconds in length and they loop over and over GIF-like.

The videos can either be 6 straight seconds of footage, or you can record several short clips (e.g. 6 x 1 second) that are automatically spliced together.

How Can I Get Vine?

At the time of writing, it’s only available on the Apple App Store, although it’ll no doubt come to Android soon enough.

How Can Vine Be Used In Youth Work?

There are a number of different ways you can incorporate Vine in to your youth group activities. Here are three suggestions:

1. Drama

Drama can be an excellent way to get young people exploring issues. Split your young people into smaller groups and give each of them a scenario – this could be relating to drugs, their faith, peer pressure, parents, school, etc.

Have them put together a 6 second skit that relates to the topic. Some ideas include:

  • Exploring the consequences of an action, particularly if it relates to an issue that youth deal with
  • If you’re a Christian youth group, have them act out a scene or concept from the Bible. Pick one that requires them to condense the story or theme (e.g. Fruits of the Spirit, one of Jesus’ miracles, etc)
  • How they feel about something – this could give them an opportunity to explore their emotions in a way they may not feel comfortable talking about normally

The good thing about restricting the filming to 6 seconds is that it gets the youth to work on the skill of being concise (similar to the Retweetable Interview resource).

This in turn causes them to think more deeply about whatever topic you’ve chosen, as they have to convey a story in its most basic form and get to the root of an issue or action. This is particularly beneficial if you’re getting them to consider consequences of their actions.

2. Film Festival

Put together a youth group Vine Film Festival based on either the activities suggested above or one of your own ideas. Once all the videos have been recorded, play them to the whole group who can then decide which one of the videos was the best.

You could also get this pack of 12 award trophies as prizes for the winning team.

3. Promotion

Record short clips of your youth group activities that can be used to promote your youth group. You could video:

  • The culmination of a messy game that just loops over and over
  • The young people worshiping
  • 6 x 1 second clips of various different activities to give an idea of all the different fun stuff you do

Privacy

Be aware that videos recorded using Vine are public. Therefore, if your young people appear in them and you’re going to be using the footage on things like Facebook, your youth group’s website, etc, have their parents sign a form agreeing to this. See our post about photo release forms to give you an idea of what to include.

You can adjust the settings so that the video is private, but this means videos can only be viewed using the Camera Roll on your phone.

Anything Else I Should Know?

Due to the proliferation of a certain type of questionable video content when the app was first launched, they changed the rules so that you have to be 17 to download the app.

If you’re trying to use the app for filming youth group activities and you’re working with under 17s, you have a couple of options:

1. Only use your phone / the phone(s) of your volunteers – If you have young people use your phone to do the filming, make sure they’ve supervised so that they don’t access any of the aforementioned questionable material.

2. Use the regular video recording function on your phone – You can still restrict the recording to 6 seconds if the aim is for the youth to be concise. It does mean though that the video won’t loop unless someone does some editing after the recording.

Question: How would you use Vine for youth group activities? Let us know 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

 

How To Get Fresh Youth Work Ideas Every Day

June 22, 2012 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

Youth work ideasWhen you work with young people, it can be hard to come up with youth work ideas all the time. That’s why we provide free youth work ideas, resources, session plans, games, recommended reading and more – 6 days a week.

How do you keep up with this though? It can be a pain remembering to visit a site every day to see what’s new, so here are four easy ways you can have these youth work ideas come straight to you:

1) Get Posts By Email

The easiest method is to join all the other people who receive our posts by email every day. You get just one email a day that contains that day’s post(s). We don’t spam you, sell your email info or do anything else dodgy – you just get our posts plus insider updates of any new resources or services that we provide.

Just click on this link and enter your email address to sign up for our daily email. You’ll get an email from Feedburner – make sure you click on the confirmation link in that email in order to have the posts sent to you. This is to ensure no one can sign you up for emails you don’t want to receive.

2) Like Us On Facebook

Most people have a Facebook account and go on there every day. Like us on Facebook and you’ll get our updates each day with information about our new posts and any other Youth Workin’ It news.

3) Follow Us On Twitter

If you’re on Twitter, we’d love for you to follow us. You’ll get all of our tweets which include links to that day’s youth work ideas.

4) Subscribe To Our RSS Feed

You can sign up to our RSS feed using this link. If you’re not sure what RSS means, there’s an explanation here. Simply put, RSS is a way of collating new blog posts, news stories and more all in one place for your convenience.

Personally, I use Google Reader to keep up to date with the blogs I’m interested in. I’m signed up to about 65 blogs, so whenever they post something new, it shows up in my feed reader. It’s so much easier than having to remember to visit all these sites – all the information comes to me instead.

So if you want to get free youth work ideas every day, do 1, 2, 3 or all 4 of the above options and you’ll never be short of ideas again.

 

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

 

Next Page »

501 Would You Rather Questions

501 Would You Rather Questions

52 Scavenger Hunt Ideas

52 Scavenger Hunt Ideas cover

How To Plan A Youth Retreat

How To Plan A Youth Retreat cover

Categories

Best Of Youth Workin' It
Book Reviews
Guest Post
Spotlight on Youth
Types Of Youth Work
Would You Rather Questions
Youth & Society
Youth Group Activities
Youth Group Fundraiser
Youth Group Games
Youth Retreat
Youth Work Program Administration
Youth Work Q & A
Youth Work Session Plan Ideas
Youth Worker Stuff
Youth Workin' It Stuff

Tags

Administration Balloons Boundaries Budget Christmas Communication Facebook Food Food Games Global Issues Global Youth Work Goal Setting Group Development Group Games Guest Posts Interview Skills Life Skills Parents Planning Policies and Procedures Relationships Relay Games For Teenagers Scavenger Hunt Ideas School Self-Esteem SMART Social Media Strategic Planning Team Building Twitter Up Front Games Volunteering Volunteers Water Games For Youth Would You Rather Youth Behavior Youth Cartel Youth Group Bonding Youth Participation Youth Retreat Center Youth Retreat Themes Youth Scavenger Hunt Youth Work Definition Youth Work Resources Youth Work Training

Search Youth Workin’ It

All Content © Copyright 2011-2025, Stephen & Shae Pepper, youthworkinit.com