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Engaging Faith

Practical Lesson Ideas and Activities for Catholic Educators
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How Are Students Using Technology?

Technology has become an integral part of the life of all students these days. Between laptops, iPods, smart phones, tablets/iPads, social networks, TV, and video games, students spend hours plugged in to something. So how does that affect the way young people learn? In the infographic below, you will see statistics of a number of surveys of college students. Though high school students will differ in many areas, you can imagine how their responses would not be so far off. Try surveying some of your classes to get an idea of how they feel about these issues. Via: OnlineEducation.net The question is: Do you embrace technology and harness its power to reach young people OR resist these new changes and try to convince students to learn in traditional ways?

Lesson Be-Attitudes

Sr. Kieran Sawyer, SSND, shares some eight "Lesson Be-Attitudes" that bear repeating and review as you begin to plan for the upcoming semester or lesson planning and lesson sharing. Be Prepared Study carefully the material presented. Visualize each activity in your mind, "seeing" step by step how it will happen. Be sure you have clear understanding of the purpose and expected outcome of each. Think through the input sessions, outline them and prepare your own note cards to use in presenting them. Be Yourself Use the ideas in Teacher Manuals and other support material creatively. Make the material your own. Think about it; pray about it; if possible, talk about it with colleagues. Add your own examples, substitute other activities, shorten or lengthen sessions. The program should come across to the participants as yours, not as something you have borrowed from a manual. Be Organized Have a definite plan of action for the entire lesson. Be especially clear about directions for assignments and discussion. Have all the materials you will need ready for quick distribution. Be Flexible Be ready to adjust your well-organized plan at a moment's notice. Some parts of the lesson may take longer or shorter than expected; some won't apply to the direction that the lessons is taking. Always have more material planned than you think you will need. Keep your eye on the clock; if you're running short of time, shorten or drop something—but never drop the opportunity for prayer! Be Open Listen to what the students have to say and encourage them to listen to one another. Accept their opinions, but at the same time be ready to challenge them—always respectfully—on positions that are inconsistent, erroneous, or unclear. Clarify with a presentation of Church teaching. Be Firm Maintain an orderly, controlled atmosphere, even during discussions. Do not allow the participants to be disrespectful to you or to one another. Let them know that you expect adult conduct from them. Be Happy Enjoy your students. Enjoy their exuberance as well as their thoughtfulness and serious sharing. Let them know that you like being with them. Be-lieve Above all, believe that God is involved in the lives of the students. Believe that the action of grace precedes, accompanies, and follows all of your efforts with them. Believe in the faith and good will of the families and parishes from which your students come. And finally, believe in the students with whom you are privileged to share the living faith of Christ.

The Summer Is "Big Picture Time"

It’s difficult to say whether students or teachers look forward to summer vacation more—perhaps a secret best kept from the students. Summer is a time for rest, but the distance from the classroom also offers a chance to step back from the everyday demands of teaching and look at the big picture. With a little breathing room, we can evaluate our classrooms, teaching, and students in a fresh light. Meditating on the big picture questions, especially through prayer, fortifies us for the year ahead. Below are some of the questions I am asking myself during summer vacation, coupled with some lines from the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Questions of Christian Witness “From the beginning, the first disciples burned with the desire to proclaim Christ, [saying], “We cannot but speak of what we have seen and heard” (CCC, 425). What made the early apostles burn with desire to share Christ? What had they seen and heard? How can I cultivate this desire in my own teaching? “Whoever is called 'to teach Christ' must first seek “the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus” (CCC, 428). How might Christ be calling me to deepen my faith life? (For example:studying a particular aspect of the faith, embracing prayer, fasting or almsgiving, participating in service work, participating in the sacramental life, offering my daily work to God.) What gifts and fruits of the Holy Spirit do I feel particularly blessed with as a teacher, and are there any that I need to pray for? In what ways am I most thankful for my life as a Christian? How does my teaching reflect my gratitude? Identify a successful lesson, class discussion, activity or assignment from the past year. What made it successful? How do my lesson plans, activities and assignments illuminate the truth and beauty of the Catholic-Christian life? How do I help my students in recognizing and cultivating their own desire for Christ? How do I teach about more than information to be learned, but a life to be lived? How do I incorporate spiritual, relational, moral, or vocational issues that are immediately relevant to students into the class? “Being in the image of God the human individual possesses the dignity of a person, who is not just something, but someone. … And he is called by grace to a covenant with his Creator, to offer him a response of faith and love that no other creature can give in his stead” (CCC 357). How do my interactions with students reflect that they are uniquely lovable in the eyes of God? In Closing Perhaps you don’t have time to consider all these questions in depth. Feel free to focus on one or two you feel are most important. Journal about them, pray about them, discuss them with colleagues, and keep them in mind in preparation for next year. Enjoy the rest of your summer! Barbara Jane Sloan Holy Spirit Preparatory School Atlanta, GA 7th Grade and 11th/12th grade Theology

Nine Textbook Reading Strategies That Will Engage Your Students

If you use one of the Ave Maria Press Teacher Wraparaound Editions, you'll notice that most of the time we suggest that teachers assign reading for class as homework to free up valuable class time. The problem, as most teachers know, is that it is a challenge to get the kids to actually do the reading. This list of textbook reading strategies should go a long way in helping students read and comprehend their textbooks. The strategies should give students concrete ways in which they can engage with the textbook. 1. Pre-assessment Before you assign the reading, have students take a quick quiz or complete a writing prompt that takes a pre-assessment of their understanding of the material. Not only will it allow you to get a handle on what you will need to teach when you cover the reading, it will give students a context for the reading ahead of time. As a follow-up assignment. Give the pre-assessment to them as bell work the next class session and have them correct their mistakes. 2. Pre-reading: Skim the Reading Assignment All to often we tend to just start reading without any idea where the text is going. Encourage students to skim the headings and sub-headings of a reading assignment before they read. This will give them a context for the reading itself. 3. Pre-reading: Examine the Pictures Ave Maria Press textbooks have engaging and symbolic pictures that connect to the text. Have students examine the pictures in the text and form predictions about what they are going to read. 4. Pre-reading: Predictions and Questions In addition to skimming and examining the pictures of the text, have the students go a step further and write out predictions or questions about what they think the text is about. After they complete the reading assignment, have them critique their predictions or answer their questions. 5. Outline the Reading Assignment One of the best ways to take notes on a reading assignment is to outline it. Have the students start by copying the headings and sub-headings or paraphrasing them on a sheet of paper or word processing document. While they read, they should jot down the key points made in each section. Encourage students to have 2+ details under each sub-heading. 6. Summarize each Heading or Section In addition to just completing the reading, have the students write a 1-2 sentence summary of each section of the reading assignment. Point out what specific headings from the textbook you want them to summarize to avoid confusion. 7. Highlight or Underline the Key Points One of the many reading skills that need real development is highlighting and underlining. Beginners tend to highlight everything to the point that a page is bleeding to death in yellow, pink, and green ink. Don't let your students do this. Highlight parts of the text that you want to come back to later. If something is important, you should highlight the key phrases that illustrate the whole point. The more particular you about what you highlight, the more important you will view the highlighted text when you review the textbook. 8. Complete a Directed Reading Guide Some of the most popular classroom resources we share with Ave Maria Press textbooks are the Directed Reading Guides. These worksheets are filled with questions, fill-in-the-blank statements, True or False statements, and essay prompts that relate directly to the reading. Either use these worksheets or create your own so students can engage in the text. 9. Re-read the Textbook Reading Assignment When they finish the reading assignment, challenge them to spend an additional 2-3 minutes (that's it!) on re-reading the most important sections of the assignment. This re-reading should be more like skimming since the text will still be very familiar and fresh in their minds. This is one of the best ways to increase comprehension and it only takes a few minutes.

Summer Fun for Youth Groups

Here are three simple, summer games for some added fun for your parish youth groups (and a few extra adaptations). Enjoy! Miniature Golf What’s Needed money for admission for 18 holes of miniature golf transportation to the miniature golf course several small prizes to award to the teens (e.g., candy, ribbons, etc.) Description A trip to the local miniature golf course remain a popular outing for teens. Call the local miniature gold course and inquire about a group discount. Once at the course, divide the teens into foursomes and let them begin playing. Tell them you will be offering a few special prizes at the end of eighteen holes, but don’t tell them for what. Remind them to write down their scores. As the foursomes return, collect their scorecards. Award several prizes for things like: low score on hole 7 most holes in one low team (foursome) score low individual score high score on hole 11 high team score high individual score Some courses offer a discount on replays. You may want to have the group go through again just for fun! Swim Party/Inner Tube Water Polo What’s Needed a recreation center or house with a pool food for a cookout several large rubber inner tubes or similar flotation devices a plastic ball (basketball size) two lounge chairs set up as goals Description Summer is the time for a pool party. Check with local schools or recreation centers to find out how you might go about reserving a pool for your group. Or, inquire in the parish if someone with a pool might be willing to sponsor such an event. Include a cookout as part of the festivities. Divide the cost of the event among the teens. Mostly the teens will be able to entertain themselves with swimming, eating and playing regular pool games like “Marco Polo.” If there is a diving board, you may suggest that they toss the plastic ball to a person jumping, diving, or flipping off. They can enjoy watching for the most acrobatic catches. Inner tube water polo is played by setting up two lounge chairs on their sides at opposite ends of the pool (on the pavement, not in the water). Divide the group into two teams, with each person sitting in the inner tube against the wall near their own goal. Say “go” and throw the plastic ball to the middle of the pool. Players from both teams paddle to the ball. The team that retrieves it begins its assault on the other goal. A point is awarded for any ball that hits on the seat part of the chair, but the player has to have thrown the ball from the inner tube. You can permit lots of rough stuff as long as the players remain in their inner tubes at all times. If there are not enough inner tubes to go around adapt with other kinds of floating devices. Cookout Games What’s Needed food for the cookout items for the games (see below) Description: This event works for groups just getting acquainted. Reserve a place at a local park with cookout grills or any place with a large field. Keep the food cooking and available throughout the event so that teens can eat whenever they want during the activities. Here are standard games that always seem to work well in groups with both boys and girls: Softball. This is a game for the entire group. If you don’t want to require the teens to bring gloves, play with a larger, spongier ball so that they will be able to catch it with their hands. Old towels work just fine for bases. Capture the Flag. This remains a popular game, especially when it is played in a large open space. Divide the area into two sides. Put flags (towels) toward the rear of each side. One goalie for each team is permitted to guard the flag. Also reserve a jail on each side. This is the area for the capture opponents. The object of the game is to retrieve the opponents’ flag without being touched. Those who are touched are sent to the opposing team’s jail. The teens can fill you in on the other details. Frisbee Football. This is played like regular football as teams move toward their opposing team’s end zone. In this game, a Frisbee is used instead of a football. One team starts with the “ball” at its own twenty yard line. Teammates pass from one teammate to another all the way down the field. There is no running after a catch and opponent have to back at least three feet off the passer. A dropped Frisbee gives the ball to the other team. Steal the Bacon. This game is similar to the old playground game of the same name except a water balloon is placed in the middle of the circle of participants. Give each person a number. When you call two numbers, those players race to the center of the circle for a balloon. The person who gets their first is allowed to douse the opponent before he or she gets back to the circle. Toward the end of the afternoon, a plain old water balloon fight would be great.

A Review of Memorize.com for the Religion Classroom

I recently came across a great, free online tool at memorize.com. I wasn't sure what to make of it at first, but I asked around on Twitter and got some great feedback. I tested it out and hope teachers will find some great uses for it in the religion classroom. Memorize.com allows you to create study materials for quizzes and tests. Just enter in a term/definition or question/answer. One of the coolest tools is the ability to create a diagram quiz. This is great for visual learners and maps. I created to short samples, one from Jesus Christ: His Mission and Ministry, the book designed for the second course in the USCCB Curriculum Framework, and a map quiz from our Old Testament textbook. Here is a quick look around at memorize.com and these two quizzes:

The Church: Assembly Required

Sunday, June 11 is Pentecost Sunday. In honor of the "birthday of the Church" read the following text to the students. Then ask then to write down as many answers as they can to the questions that follow. Tell them that besides the person's name they should write on other pieces of information they know about the person. Lead a discussion about the people they wrote about who make up the Church. Then highlight these meanings of Church: The Church is a community of Catholics who assemble to worship. The Church is a local gathering of Catholics, a fellowship of believers in Christ. The Church is the universal community of those who believe in Jesus Christ. Introduction Have you ever received a gift that came labeled “Assembly Required”? Before you could really appreciate and enjoy the gift, you had to put it together. The Church is a gift, a gift that requires assembly. The word church means assembly—a convocation of people who believe in Jesus, his Father, and the Spirit. To appreciate and enjoy who we are, we join together. We assemble. When it comes to being Church, assembly is always required. From the beginning of his ministry, Jesus assembled people. After Jesus died, was raised from the dead, and returned to God, Jesus’ friends assembled. In their assemblies they prayed, remembered Jesus, and broke bread as he taught them. At every Eucharist the Church assembles. We come together from every walk of life, every culture, and every race. Rich and poor, young and old, healthy and sick, we all come together as one family to give glory to God, to make present God’s saving deeds fulfilled in Jesus, and to promise to treat all others like family. At Eucharist we assemble to express, renew, and deepen our faith in Jesus and in one another. In our assembly, we see ourselves as people who continue Jesus’ mission of bringing God’s love to others, the Church gets re-created, and we become what we celebrate. We become the Body of Christ, called to draw others to our assembly. Assignment: The Church Assembly Answer these questions about your Church assembly. Where did you assemble for worship on Sunday? (place and time) Who led the assembly in prayer? Who led the assembly in song? Who sat behind you? Who read from the Old Testament? Who proclaimed the Gospel? Who brought the bread and wine to the altar table? Besides your family, whom did you greet during the Sign of Peace at Mass?

SMART Board Tutorial: Using Tabs with Interactive Questions and Answers

SMARTBoards are not glorified LCD projectors. If you are able to use the SMARTBoard Notebook software properly, you will find yourself ditching PowerPoint for a new kind of direct instruction. One of the many features offered in SMART Notebook, is the ability to create tabs with answers hidden behind an image or outside of the screen. This is a great way to add some interactivity to your presentations. It also provides students with the opportunity to come up to the board and move things (and we all know how much they love to play with the SMART Boards). (Click to watch SMART Board Tutorial: Using Tabs with Interactive Questions and Answers.) Creating Tabs with Interactive Questions and Answers Add an image to hide the answer. Add a tab or create one yourself. Replace the label of the tab (i.e. Pull) for a question or word. Type the answer to the question or the definition of the word. Arrange the question tab and the answer and group them. Lock the image that will hide the answer and bring it to the front if necessary. Move the tab so that the answer is hidden behind the image. Click on the image below to download the sample SMART Notebook file with the tabs in the video: For more edtech tips like this, visit Ave Maria Press tech tips.