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10 Superpower Would You Rather Questions

May 29, 2013 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

Superpower Would You Rather Questions
Image courtesy of tobit_e, Flickr

This week we’re starting a new series where we’re giving you ideas of Would You Rather questions you can use with your youth group.

As we mentioned when we explained how to play it, this is a great game that helps with getting to know your young people better.

Each week, the questions will be based on a certain theme or topic. We’ll give 10 question ideas, along with how you can use the game to lead in to some other activities. This week’s theme is superpowers.

10 Superpower Would You Rather Questions

Would you rather…

  1. be able to see through walls or hear things from miles away?
  2. be able to fly or be invisible?
  3. be the world’s fastest runner or swimmer?
  4. be able to walk through walls or breathe underwater?
  5. be able to teleport or see into the future?
  6. be able to walk through walls or create fire at will?
  7. be able to read someone’s mind or make them forget things?
  8. be able to run 100 mph or drop from any height and land on your feet without getting hurt?
  9. be able to jump as high as a skyscraper or climb up the outside of one like Spiderman?
  10. be able to move objects with your mind or make them disappear?

Discussion Questions / Other Activities

501 Would You Rather Questions
Get the book – 501 Would You Rather Questions
  • What superpower would they love to have the most?
  • (Follow up question from the previous one) In Spiderman, there’s the well-known line of “With great power comes great responsibility”. If they had that superpower, how could they use it to benefit others?
  • Although they don’t have superpowers, each of them has unique abilities and talents. Get them to list some of these and then work out how they can use these to help others.
  • You could also use this session plan idea about using skills to help others.
  • For Christian youth groups, the Would You Rather questions could be tied in with a session about spiritual gifts.

Questions: What other superpower questions could be used in a game of Would You Rather? Also, what other youth group activities could this theme be tied into? We’d love to hear your ideas in the comments below.

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How To Play Would You Rather

May 22, 2013 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

How to play Would You Rather
Would You Rather… be Rudolph or Santa?

We’re starting a new series where we’re going to be providing a set of Would You Rather questions each week. Before we do that though, we thought it’d be best to provide some instructions on how to play Would You Rather.

Why It’s Great

It’s one of the best youth group games out there for many reasons:

  • You don’t need any resources, so it’s perfect for times when you have a few spare minutes with young people and need an on-the-spot activity
  • There’s no preparation, other than coming up with questions to ask (and we’re doing that for you!)
  • You get to know young people better
  • The questions can be given a theme that will lead in to your main session, thereby helping open up discussions

How To Play

501 Would You Rather Questions
Get the book – 501 Would You Rather Questions

As we mentioned above, Would You Rather is simple to play. All you have to do is get the group together and ask them a question where they have to choose between two answers that you specify.

For example, you might ask “Would you rather watch movies for 48 hours or play video games for 48 hours”. Once they’ve decided which they’d prefer, have them indicate what their choice is in some way (see below for some ideas on how to do this). Important: everyone has to pick one or the other – ‘both’ or ‘neither’ aren’t options!

Options

You can play this as a rapid-fire activity where you ask question after question once they’ve all made their choice.

Alternatively – and this is what we tend to prefer – after each question, ask one or two of the young people to explain why they chose the option they picked. It doesn’t have to be super serious, but it’s a great way to get to know how they think and why some things are more important to them than others.

The beauty of Would You Rather is that there’s no right or wrong answer – it’s based purely on their preference. Your young people should therefore feel a little more comfortable sharing why they chose what they did, seeing as their answer can’t be ‘wrong’.

How To Indicate Choices

The easiest way to have the young people indicate their choice is by having them stand to the left for one option and to the right for the other.

If you play this fairly often though, shake it up a bit by having them make their choices in different ways:

  • Stand on one leg for one option and touch their nose for the other
  • Sit down for one option and lay on the floor for the other
  • Stick their tongue out for one option and wave their hands over their head for the other
  • Use two different colored post-it notes, sticking one color on their forehead for one option and the other color on their chin for the second choice

Tip

If you have any indecisive players, put a time limit on how long they have to make a choice.

Question: What other tips do you have for how to play Would You Rather? We’d love to hear your ideas in the comments below.

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3 Ways To Get New Or Hard To Reach Youth Talking

November 29, 2011 By Shae Pepper 1 Comment

How to talk to new or hard to reach youth

Q: How do I talk to new youth or ones who don’t seem to want to talk to anyone?

A: Sometimes they’re new, sometimes they’re hard to reach, there might be cultural differences, language differences, racial differences, gender differences or the most obvious, an age difference. Or, they may just not be happy about being in your program.

Generally speaking though, I’ve found the world over that youth just want a genuine person who actually cares about them in their lives. Next time you have a new or hard to reach youth and you’re feeling nervous try these three ideas:

1) Turn it back to them

Sometimes a youth is nervous or unhappy about being in your program and can come across shy or even hostile. Whatever they say, just go with it.

I walked into a room one time to meet a new youth and she wouldn’t look at me. She sat with her back entirely to me. I came in, greeted her and sat next to her, turning my body, with open body language to her. When I had the chance, I asked what school was like – she replied ‘boring.’ I didn’t let this distract me; I simply turned and said, ‘Health class was always really boring for me, what class is the least boring if you had to pick one?’ She replied, ‘Science I guess’.

But from there I had an in – we talked about Science which led to talking about all sorts of likes and dislikes, things she found boring or not. By the end of the meeting she was facing me, smiling and talking easily.

2) Start with ‘Would You Rather’

You can get it as a book, a card game or a board game. I’ve used this on many a minibus journey to get to know youth and get them talking. It may be harder to try if there’s a language barrier, but you could take initiative and come up with picture cards or try getting some translation help with some of the questions. Tread carefully with Google Translate and other translation software or you might be asking their ‘pie to chicken run for himself’.

3) Ask about their interests

School is an easy starting point but many young people don’t like school (see story above!), so start with things they like to do with their free time. However, try to know your general pop/youth culture so you can speak intelligently about it. If you think Eminem melts in your mouth and not in your hand, you might want to brush up a bit.

The key is to be genuine. Youth have a built in BS-radar when it comes to adults. They know those that really care, even if they’re a bit out of date, unusual or lame, and they’ll be drawn to you over a ‘cool’ adult who ultimately doesn’t want a real relationship with them. Even if they don’t love everything about you, they will respect that you care and it will matter to them.

Question: How do you get to know new or hard to reach youth in your programs? Let us know in the comments below.

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