The best hour of their week
2014 Seminar
The best hour of their week
Dave Fenton, Tamar Pollard, Andy Gawn, Helen Buckley, Rory Bell, Robin Barfield
Showing all 6 results
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Hitting a moving target?
Rory Bell
Children are constantly changing, growing, developing and maturing. Hear more about this process so that your Bible teaching meets the children where they are at.
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Teaching the bits you never do/Teaching boys
Robin Barfield
There are lots of areas of the Bible we never teach to children; anything which has no story we avoid like the plague! In the first half of this seminar we will think about how we teach these many sections and why its really important to give it a go. / Boys are challenging in church and yet it is critical that we win them for the Gospel. In the second half of the seminar we will consider how boys have been created and some strategies for communicating truth to them.
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Hitting a moving target?
Rory Bell
Children are constantly changing, growing, developing and maturing. Hear more about this process so that your Bible teaching meets the children where they are at.
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How to make stories live/handing them to youth ministry
Dave Fenton, Helen Buckley
Come to this practical workshop and think about how to engage children through visual ideas and other story-telling techniques. In the other half of the session we’ll look at the move from children to youth ministry. It was once said – ‘we lose children in the gaps not the groups’. How can we stop that happening and achieve a seamless flow from 0 to 18?
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Preparing and structuring a Bible talk for children
Andy Gawn
So, you’ve been asked to teach a Bible passage to children. How do you start? What needs to be included? How do I make it engaging? And once you’ve got your head round the contents of your Bible talk to children how do I put it all together? This seminar is for those with no, or little, experience of children’s talks but want to get stuck in.
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The place of children in the church/All-age worship
Dave Fenton, Tamar Pollard
Within an all-age church family how should children be thought of? Should they be a major factor in any planning and activity?