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Digital Immigrants and Digital Natives

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There is a seminal article written a while back called: Digital Immigrants and Natives by Marc Prensky, that has vast implications on how we teach, parent and disciple children and teenagers.

This post consists of notes from a lecture by Kristin Anderson @ Bethel Seminary back in 2007 (which, for conversations on the current digital landscape might put some of this content a little bit out-of-date, but still relevant for understanding).

Marc Prensky offers some helpful insight as we think about reaching out to this next generation. He differentiates between digital immigrants (anyone born before 1974) and digital natives (anyone born after 1974). He chooses 1974 because that is the year that Pong (the video game) was introduced.

By the time the average digital native (those born after 1974) graduates from high school the following will be true:

  • 10,000 hours playing video games
  • 200,000 e-mails
  • 10,000 cell phone hours
  • 20,000 hours watching TV (often channel surfing or watching programming such as MTV with fast moving images)
  • 500,000 commercials
  • less than 5000 hours reading!

The reality is that the brain is a malleable substance and that brains are actually altered based upon the input they receive. Prensky believes that these experiences have changed them. It changes the way they relate to each other, the way they see the world, and I would add, has implications for how we do children’s and family ministry!

Characteristics of Digital Immigrant versus Digital Native

Digital native:

  • twitch speed
  • parallel processing
  • random accessing
  • visuals are primary, text illustrates
  • play orientated
  • connected culture

Digital immigrant:

  • conventional speed
  • linear thinking
  • step by step
  • graphics are primary, visuals illustrated
  • work orientated
  • stand-alone culture

Digital immigrants will always have a bit of an “accent”!

Here are some examples (You know you are a digital immigrant if…):

  • Print out your e-mails and put them in a file
  • Do not use instant messaging, or if you attempt to use it find it very difficult to have several conversations simultaneously with people
  • Do not think of using the internet first
  • Think real life happens off-line, in contrast digital natives believe that real life happens both on line and off line

Digital natives have a very rich e-life!

These are the kind of things that digital natives are doing on line:

  • Communicating – e-mail and IM
  • Sharing – blogs and webcams
  • Buying and selling – e-bay
  • Exchanging music and movies – download sites
  • Creating – websites being designed by upper elementary children, parents for their newborns
  • Meeting other people – chat rooms
  • Gaming – solo games, one on one games, multiple player games
  • Learning – researching and exploring things that interest them
  • Myspace.com
  • Facebook.com
  • Youtube.com

Questions ???

How do we better minister and teach, informed by the reality that the children and some of their parents are digital natives and many of us are digital immigrants?

How do we reach out and partner with parents so that we have the greatest impact and kids develop an integrated faith?

What are the implications of ministering in a digital native culture?

A Reflection on “Crossing the Line of Faith”

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Recently I have been reviewing my notes from when I attended Bethel Seminary for a year and some of the children’s ministry classes I took. Here is a reflection I wrote in my notes when asked to think about what it means to “cross the line of faith” for children:

Family. Christians are the special people of God in this world. An act like baptism or coming forward, or a realization of God in your life that is an expression of faith and belief can be called justification by Jesus—demarcated as a member of the covenanted family of God in the way of Jesus. We then, live out that demarcation in light of the Holy Spirit’s presence in our lives.

We live as family members of a community of people who are committed to loving and serving the world as Jesus did. We do this together. Children, teenagers and adults can all do this together.

Helping to set the table is important in children’s spiritual formation at various times and in various ways throughout the year and throughout the years. It could be various expressions of faith:

  • creating of a sacred space
  • rituals
  • traditions
  • calls to commitment
  • reaffirming the commitment, etc.

All of these are ways to display to children what it means to be part of this special family of God made possible by Jesus and sustained by the Holy Spirit in our lives.

Maybe we need to spend less time worried about how to make kids part of the family and spend more time worried about living out our family values (according to Jesus and by the Holy Spirit) so as to almost attract kids, students, or adults to being a part of the family because it is so attractive the kind of life Jesus wants us to live.

Shouldn’t we be a different kind of people?

Shouldn’t we be the kind of people who stand up and make a difference in our world?

And other people take notice and think: “Wow. Those are church people. I wonder why they would sacrifice for that person. Or I wonder why they would help that person. Or I am so thankful that they stood up for me.”

Shouldn’t we be more focused on a kingdom of heaven impact on this world and less on making our club bigger?

God wants nothing less than his kingdom come and his will be done on earth as it is in heaven.

God Helps Those in Need | Personal Reflection

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My parents both modeled a powerful example of what being like Jesus looks like:

When I was a toddler and a preschooler, my Dad was stationed in West Berlin, Germany (he was in the Air Force).

My parents used to own a VW van that broke down a lot, but they used it to transport various people to church. One time is vivid in my mind: I remember a woman breastfeeding her baby as we bumped down the road to church with a blanket over her. I remember thinking (or now as I ponder backwards) how neat it was that my parents would take a van load of people to church with them. I don’t know why they did or how they did. All I remember was that one time with the breastfeeding lady in the van. I think I classified her as needy. Maybe all of them as needy.

This experience helped form my image of God by my parents modeling for me as a young child what it meant to help other people when they were needy.

God helps those in need.

The Great Commission

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According to Scripture, what is our job description as followers of Jesus (Matthew 28:19-20)?

  1. Go and make disciples
  2. Baptize them in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit
  3. Teach them to obey everything I have commanded

And then Jesus left.

The Great Commission [y3_w25]

Story Lesson (790.15kb, pdf)
Audio File (12.95mb, mp3)
Video Link (2.19.12 @ vimeo.com)
Video Link (2.22.09 @ vimeo.com)

The Resurrection of Jesus

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Only a few times in recorded history do dead people come back to life again. A couple of times in the Old Testament and a few times during the ministry of Jesus in the New Testament.

Being resurrected was not a new thing… it had been done before. What makes the resurrection of Jesus so special? Well Jesus was the only one who died, came back to life, and stayed alive. You see everyone else who came back to life eventually died again. Jesus is the only one in human history that came back to life and is still alive!

Resurrection of Jesus [y3_w24]

Story Lesson (503.7kb, pdf)
Audio File (10.7mb, mp3)
Video Link (2.12.12 @ vimeo.com)
Video Link (2.15.09 @ vimeo.com)

3 Powerful Ways to Form Faith in Your Family

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When I was at Bethel Seminary a few years ago, in my Introduction to Children and Family Ministries class, the professor talked about 3 powerful ways to form faith in our families.

She got this information from the Search Institute:

  1. Talking with Mom or Dad about faith: These are informal conversations that happen in the course of everyday life.
  2. Participating in family devotions, bible reading or prayer: This is an intentional time of setting aside time (everyday, 3-4 times per week, or at the minimum once per week) to read the Bible and pray together as a family.
  3. Being involved in family service projects: Serving alongside of each other as you enact the kingdom of God in our world.

Our Notification-Driven, Technological and Digital World

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Sometimes you just want the noise to stop!

A very creative video depicting our digital-saturated, over-notified world…

Video description @ Vimeo:

One day I got an email, an sms, a phone call, a Facebook message and two tweets all within about 5 seconds of one another. This video is a re-manifestation of my brain’s interpretation of that event. #trustory

HT TUAW
source Vimeo

Linda’s Surprise B-Day Party!

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Lori secretly organized a surprise birthday lunch for our Office Manager @ Hayward Wesleyan, Linda, for a significant milestone birthday.

I don’t know if she was surprised or not, but when she walked into the room, she turned around and almost walked out!!

Happy Birthday, Miss Linda!

source YouTube

A Look Into Emotions and Depression by Analyzing Facebook Posts

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Fascinating. Facebook is like a HUGE snapshot of human life/interaction and it seems to offer an easily quantifiable look into people’s behaviors, patterns, etc.

Here’s a look into how emotions and what people post about and interact with on the social media giant:

via Youth Ministry Media

“Show Jesus” by Jamie Grace [music video]

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Over on Google+ a friend of mine shared this music video. I instantly liked it and have been playing it in our house this past week and now the girls love it!

I’m thinking this song might make a great theme song for our Kids Camp this summer…?

HT Josh H.
source YouTube

Do you have reasons NOT to go to church?

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There are some reasons (maybe better put as excuses) that people have to not go to church. Not very good reasons, but they do have them:

HT All Pro Dad
source YouTube

Are Jerks the Future of the Internet? A Cyberbullying Infographic

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Our community has been trying to address bullying in a proactive sort of way… at the very least we are trying raise awareness of it and tackle it in the places that awareness shines a light on.

Below is an infographic about bullying online:

HT Church Mag
source Online Counseling Degrees