Wednesday, June 30, 2010

The Master Teacher

Sometimes in my haste to make a lesson interesting for my Young Women, I search for object lessons or handouts to use.  I need to remember that the Savior was the Master Teacher and His lessons are often all that is needed and certainly more powerful.  In a lesson on sacrifice, an example is given in the supplement of the widow of Zaraphath as told in 1 Kings 17:12-16 upon meeting the prophet Elijah.  It states: And she said, "As the Lord thy God liveth, I have not a cake, but an handful of meal in a barrel, and a little oil in a cruse: and, behold, I am gathering two sticks, that I may go in and dress it for me and my son, that we may eat it, and die.
And Elijah said unto her, Fear not; go and do as thou hast said: but make me thereof a little cake first, and bring it unto me, and after make for thee and for thy son." 
 
How much is a handful of meal?  I decided to find out.  I have a rather large hand and for me this measured to be about 1/3 of a cup.  I placed the measured amount in a plastic bag and took it to my class.  All that stood between this woman, her son, and starvation was this small measure of meal and some oil, yet in her faith she gave it to the prophet who promised her:  "For thus saith the Lord God of Israel, The barrel of meal shall not waste, neither shall the cruse of oil fail, until the day that the Lord sendeth rain upon the earth.  And she went and did according to the saying of Elijah: and she, and he, and her house, did eat many days. And the barrel of meal wasted not, neither did the cruse of oil fail, according to the word of the Lord, which he spake by Elijah."
 
A visual presentation of a just how much a handful represented was all that was needed as the Spirit testified of the truths of this lesson to the Young Women.  I felt it testify to me as well.  How wonderful to be taught by the Master!

deb
 

Monday, June 28, 2010

You Make a Difference

For a Young Women in Excellence evening, the Young Women chose someone in their life that they admired and desired to emulate, thereby choosing a "real-life hero" or role model.  Boundaries were set for the nominees such as ward members, mothers, teachers in school, seminary, or primary, members or non-members.  Invitations were sent by the girls chosen to be their Special Guest.  We tried to make this as nice an evening as possible.  Talks were assigned, divided between YW and leaders on Heroes in the Scriptures, everyday heroes, and the definition of heroism.  Thanks you cards or notes of appreciate were written and given to the Special Guests to read later.  One Young Woman from each class gave a short talk about what YW Value she sees in this Special Guest as a positive influence for her.

It was a fun night with  friends, neighbors, and old school teachers.  Everyone wants to know they make a difference!  The evening wrapped with a message from the YW President and a musical number by the girls followed by Hero sandwiches and punch. 

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Ten Value Projects - the Sequel

 More ideas for Value Projects:

1.  Learn to knit and make a hat (or some other needle craft).
2. Make a 72 hour kit for your car or your family car.
3.  Volunteer at the hospital.
4.  Organize, shop, and cook dinner for a week in your home.
5.  Volunteer at an animal shelter.
6.  Help make new tablecloths for the Young Women's table.
7.  Make a recipe file.
8.  Learn a new music piece, dance, instrument, or language.  if you don't read music, learn by memorization.
9.  Become certified in CPR and first aid.  If this is less than 10 hours, help with camp certification.
10.  Teach your dog a new trick or compete in a fair for 4H.

deb

Friday, June 18, 2010

Summer Time Fun

Now that the summer has arrived, the days are longer, fun always seems to be the order of the day for teenagers and adults.  BBQs come out and families head to the beach.  It's always fun to have a water game night for a Young Men/Young Women activity.  It is fun to have a night where the youth just enjoy themselves and learn how to interact in a safe place, with good games, and yummy treats.  Water relays are a great way to beat the heat and have a good time.  Challenge another ward's youth to a dodge ball tournament.  Find the ugliest thing you can to use as a booby prize to have the Bishop "display" in his office if his ward's youth loses!  Play Wiffle ball or have a scavenger hunt.  Have a swim party.  Top the night off with a Banana Split Rip.   Have the youth bring odd items to eat with.  Ever eat a banana split on a Frisbee with a toy shovel for a spoon?  I saw a group make one gigantic split on a big table without bowls just by putting the ingredients on some trash bags and letting the kids fix them the way they liked, all eating in one big area.  For a mixer, divide the group into pairs and have them fill out the following:

The Banana Split Exchange:
1. What is your favorite ice cream?
2. What is your favorite texture to eat?  Gooey.  Crunchy.  Soft/Fluffy.  Smooth.  Airy/Light. Other.
3. What is your favorite color to taste?  Pink. Brown.  White.  Green.  Other. 
4. Do you like your foods fancy or simple?  Fancy.  Simple.  Simply fancy.  Other.
5. Do you like nuts or cherries best?  Nuts.  Cherries.  Both.  None.
6. Do you like "splits" that taste all alike or each bite with a different taste?  Same.  Different.
7. What is your "pet peeve" about ice cream desserts?  Never enough.  Don't like certain flavors and which.  Don't like too much.  Other.

.......NOW - Make your friend his/her banana split!

Happy summer.

deb

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Girls' Camp

Twenty or so years of camp beads really add up.  I like to use lanyard string  to give the Young Women to hold their beads.  It lasts longer, keeps clean and they can bring them every year to add the new ones.  I go to yard sales in the spring to scope out unusual beaded necklaces.  I often use the Oriental Trading and US Toys catalogs to buy any item that can be strung on a lanyard.  The beads are given as handouts for a lesson or rewards for participation and chores.  One year our lesson was on being "Fishers of Men" so I bought some key chains with fish fobs, removed the key chain, and used the cute little fish.  Little locks, charms, and small spools also work well.  Wooden beads from the craft store can be written on or painted and make a nice addition.  One lesson this year is "Let Your Light so Shine" and I will be giving out glow-in-the-dark beads thinking it would be a fun twist on the the theme. 

deb

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Incentives

Throughout the year, I like to buy or save inexpensive or free items in a box and place them in a gift bag to give the girls for Christmas.  My daughter is quite the coupon shopper and often gets a "buy this/get this" deal.  I also have an Avon lady who sells lip glosses and bath items for under $1 at various times throughout the year.  I try to make sure I have enough to give all the girls in the Young Women's program.  Invariably, I will have one or two little lotions left with no place to go. Last week, I pulled out an old basket and filled it with the various odd items I had such as lotions, nail files, highlighters, picture frames, candles, and sample items that were in the box.  On Sunday, each girl that brings her Scriptures to class will get to choose an item from the basket after the class period is over.  I won't bring it every week but enough that, hopefully, their Scriptures will accompany them to class regularly.

deb

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Journals - Lesson 16

Writing in a journal is a personal experience.  Some are better at it than others.  Some put deep thoughts in it, some doodle, some write only a few lines.  Lesson 16 encourages us to keep a record.  We are given examples of famous prophets in the scriptures who have kept their records to our benefit in these latter days.  The lessons help teach the Young Women how and what to journal.  I think it helps to learn of other famous people who kept a record of their lives such as  Anne Frank, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, Louisa May Alcott, and Helen Keller. 

Personalize journaling for the Young Women.  I brought a few examples of journals that the girl could make on a Tuesday night or at home to make their journals fun and more "them."  The new Young Women beta site will make it easier to journal their Personal Progress experiences on the computer rather than hand write. We made a journal from a Mead Composition Book and covered each side entirely with a sheet of foam board and decorated them with foam stickers for Girls' Camp.  Another was embellished with ribbons.  For the artists in the group, altered book journals are very creative and fun.  You can find some very good examples at www.jennysartspace.com/ and http://altjournaljourney.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Ten Value Project Ideas

Any new task or desire to change can be made into a Value Project.  Is your YW taking Spanish in High School for the first time?  Is she learning to play a new piano piece for a recital.  Set the goal and count it.  Much of our lives revolves around goal setting even if we do not realize it.  Here are some more ideas:

1.   Organize a blanket drive for an animal shelter.
2.   Learn a sport as a spectator or participant. (Do you know what it means to be "in the pocket" in football?)  Take up jogging, yoga, surfing, etc.
3.   Participate in a school event for band, drama, choir, dance.
4.   Read a classic novel (Something you have not read before.  Must be 10 hours and a short synopsis-not a school assignment.)
5.   Get involved in a local election as a volunteer.
6.   Adopt a highway or street.
7.   Work as a tutor at school.
8.   Make a YW or Ward cookbook.
9.   Help organize care packages for the troops.
10.  Research colleges for after graduation. 


deb

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Great Service Project Idea

A Christian based group of women have begun a project to make dresses for little girls in orphanages in Africa made out of pillowcases. It began with a few women returning from a mission in Malawi and has grown to include donations throughout 49 states in the US. These dresses are being distributed in 13 countries across Africa. What a wonderful cause!! Young Women can do this! This is a great idea for a Tuesday night (or multiple Tuesday nights) activity. It's purpose is to provide Hope and a sense of Individual Worth to girls throughout Africa. See the full info at http://www.littledressesforafrica.org/blog/. This would also make a wonderful Value Project.

deb

Friday, June 4, 2010

Lesson 21 - VIRTUE vs Sustaining Missionaries Through Letters




Lesson 21 is entitled: Sustaining Missionaries Through Letters. The resource guide that accompanies Lesson 21 suggests that be saved for a midweek activity and be substituted with a lesson on Virtue using Elaine S. Dalton's "Return to Virtue" from the Ensign. I decided to take that tack and discuss virtue.

We repeat our YW Theme each week but do these girls really understand what Divine Nature is as compared to Individual Worth? What does Choice and Accountability mean? What is integrity and what is virtue?

Virtue is from the Latin VIRTUS meaning Strength. We talked about moral courage and strength of character. Virtue is an old-fashioned word; one not used much today. Our YW often only associate this in the chastity sense not in the moral excellence sense. I used the 13th Article of Faith and Proverbs 13:10 talking about trust and a sense of what is right and what is wrong as well as chastity.

As my handout, I jumped on the washer necklace craze and made them each one that said VIRTUE on it. I used a 1/2 in. washer with a heart charm and a gold-colored (virtue color) bead. I had to buy the stamp set from Harbor Freight (about $5) and I bought the necklace (rawhide) from JoAnns for about $2. A ribbon could easily be substituted. I had almost all these items in my home.

I was concerned they would not want to wear a necklace that said VIRTUE on it but they loved them. The charms made a little tinkling sound which always makes jewelry, even homemade, more fun. I made them all identical as well so there would be no preferences. I told them to tell anyone who asked, their necklace meant STRENGTH.

deb