Fall 2007/Pasadena
YF500
Clark

YF500: FOUNDATION OF YOUTH MINISTRY. Chapman Clark.


DESCRIPTION: This course gives an overview of contemporary culture, especially as it affects youth ministry, and provides foundational and historical youth ministry concepts, models, and philosophies. In addition, a broad spectrum of ministry programs and issues will be addressed, such as "the changing family," recruitment and care of volunteers, organizing a ministry program, missions and service, outreach to adolescents, camping, etc.

LEARNING OUTCOMES: Students will (1) understand cultural trends that influence and affect adolescents and their families; (2) develop a comprehensive theology and philosophy of youth ministry and know how to obtain and use tools to implement these; (3) understand the different ministry needs of early, middle, and late adolescents, especially in relation to families; (4) create multi-generational relational programs and curriculum that enable discipleship and Christian nurture within a theologically driven framework of congregational ownership and assimilation.

RELEVANCE FOR MINISTRY: From a human perspective, the future of the church rests in the hands of the next generation. How those in power pass on the Christian faith to children and adolescents will determine the shape of the church for years to come. Understanding the nature of human and spiritual development, how to read a culture, how to solicit support and adult ownership and how to develop programs and models that reach an adolescent subculture will honor God by preparing them for service in the kingdom.

COURSE FORMAT: Lectures, class discussion, and presentations by guest experts will make up the class time. Each student will complete a detailed final project. The class will meet for ten three-hour sessions.

REQUIRED READING:

Clark, Chap. Hurt: Inside the World of Today's Teenagers. Baker Academic, 2004.

________. The Youth Worker's Handbook to Family Ministry. Zondervan/Youth Specialties, 1997.

Clark, Chap, Kendra Dean and Dave Rahn. Starting Right: A Practical Theology of Youth Ministry. Zondervan/Youth Specialties, 2001.

Fields, Doug. Purpose Driven Youth Ministry. Zondervan/Youth Specialties,1998 (390 pages).

250 pages of recommended reading (or other reading approved by the professor).

RECOMMENDED READING:
Lambert, Dan. Teaching That Makes a Difference: How to Teach for Holistic Impact. Zondervan/Youth Specialties, 2004.

Mueller, Walter. Understanding Today's Youth Culture. Rev. ed. Tyndale, 1998 (260 pages).

Nichols, Sharon L. and Thomas L. Good. America's Teenagers--Myths and Realities: Media Images, Schooling, and the Social Costs of Careless Indifferences. Lawrence Erlbaum, 2004.

Olson, G., D. Elliot and M. Work. Youth Ministry Management Tools. Zondervan/Youth Specialties, 2000.

Rice, W. Junior High Ministry. Rev. ed. Zondervan/Youth Specialties, 1998.

Robbins, Duffy. This Way to Youth Ministry: An Introduction to the Adventure. Zondervan/Youth Specialties, 2004.

Stevenson, D. and Barbara L. Schneider. The Ambitious Generation: America's Teenagers, Motivated but Directionless. Yale University Press, 1999.

ASSIGNMENTS: (1) Five 2-3 page reflections on the readings (25%). (2) A midterm on the lectures (40%). (3) A 15-page final project which reflects a programmatic interpretation of the course content (35%).

PREREQUISITES: None.

RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM: Meets MDiv core requirement in Christian Formation & Discipleship (MIN 4) or Ministry Foundations requirement (MIN F) for other master's degrees. Required course for MDiv concentration in Youth, Family & Culture; and for MA in Youth, Family & Culture.

FINAL EXAMINATION: None.

This ECD is a reliable guide to the course design but is subject to modification. (7/07)