T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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923.1 | our story | ADISSW::HAECK | Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa! | Thu Mar 23 1995 17:55 | 24 |
| We tried volunteers. That fizzled. We have a very small parish and
many times there would be children from only one family in the nursery,
and sometimes it would be one of their parents in there with them so
that the other parent could attend the service.
Then we tried a woman who lived next door, but she proved to be
unreliable.
Our best success has come from a local day care/nursery/kindergarten.
A teacher in that school was willing to come in on a regular basis. I
think it helped the kids, especially the real young ones, to have the
same face every week. Also, being a professional, she was able to keep
things under more control. And as a bonus, she would plan quiet
activities for them, not just sit and watch. We had a few fizzles
using this method too. The first woman was reliable, but moved away.
The next was reliable too, but lasted only a short time because she too
moved away. The next only showed up once, phoned a few times but just
sort of faded away. The one we have now is not a teacher, she is the
teenage daughter of one of the teachers. But she shows up faithfully,
and although she doesn't have planned activities, she does read to and
color with and keep them quiet and happy.
I suppose it helps that a few of our members used that day care and
knew the staff, and one of our members works there.
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923.2 | college students are great | COOKIE::MUNNS | | Fri Mar 24 1995 12:44 | 11 |
| My wife managed our small church's nursery for a year. She found the
greatest success (and longevity) with paid workers from the local
colleges and supplemented this with teenage church volunteers.
The college students that are hired enjoy being with children -
something that they miss in the collegiate environment. They also
have great ideas for keeping the children entertained - books,
crafts, stories.
Pure volunteerism did not work well (unreliable) and newspaper
classified ads were a waste of time and money.
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923.3 | take them to church | STOWOA::SPERA | | Fri Mar 24 1995 13:20 | 5 |
| I know you didn;t ask but...
Take them to church. When the apostles objected, He said:"Suffer the
little children to come unto me." I give the same answer to christians
who complain....
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923.4 | | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:07 | 41 |
| We have a fairly large children's population at our church - there's
lots of families with multiple kids - so here's what works for us:
o We have a Nursery for the really young ones - up to about 3+ yrs
old. This is completely staffed by volunteers from the church -
some adults with some of the high school and junior high kids as
helpers. We take a rotation approach to being assigned, and I think
I get to go down there about once every 5-8 weeks, depending on how
it works out.
For the young kids - preschool through something (5th grade, I think),
they all attend church at the beginning, and before the sermon starts,
they go off to their own services.
[ There have been some parents who would have preferred a babysitting
service so they didn't have to be distracted by the kids in the early
parts of the service, but so far we have left it alone. We figured it
was a good way to help the kids acclimate to the church service -
eventually they will be sitting through the entire service, and they
need to get used to it somehow.. ]
o There is a pre-elementary-school children's church for kids from
about 4 through kindergarten. This is a tough transition age-wise
because some kids are home schooled, and some start kindergarten
later than others, so its very flexible in regards to who qualifies
to attend this one. They average 25-30 kids down there every week.
This is also staffed by volunteers who lead the lessons for a couple
of weeks per year, roughly.
o For the older kids - 1st grade through somewhere around 5th or 6th
grade, there is a junior church service. They have lots more kids
in that room - I think its around 50+, but I'm not sure. We have
one couple who has run this ministry for a while now, but we are
working on getting a team of people for backup and ultimately to
take over when they decide to step down.
Feel free to contact me offline if you have any questions..
Regards,
- Tom
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923.5 | | POWDML::AJOHNSTON | beannachd | Fri Mar 24 1995 14:25 | 21 |
| At our church, the service is structured so that the lessons and sermon
come before the offertory and Eucharist. So the littles are brought in
during the offertory to attend communion. Prior to that they are in
nursery and children's church, depending upon age and attention span.
The nursery is staffed by a paid person supplemented by volunteers on a
rotation. Children's church is done by volunteer parishioners who
choose to do this as part of their worship.
Older children attend the entire service. There are no set ages for any
of this; but, generally, very young infants are with their parents
throughout the service, older babies and toddlers are in nursery,
children's church seems to start between 2 & 3, and children start
feeling children's church is really infantile between 5 & 6.
We have tons of children, most of whom attend late service. We have a
few parishioners who feel that young children have no place at worship
until they can sit still, know the responses,and make their first
communion. Over the years, these individuals have either learned to
live with it or decided to attend early service.
Annie
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923.6 | | ADISSW::HAECK | Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa! | Fri Mar 24 1995 18:38 | 14 |
| re: .3 (STOWOA::SPERA)
I can see that being an answer to someone who complains about children
in general in church. I do not think it is always the answer to the
parent of an energetic child. As such a parent I know that I get a lot
less out of a service when the children are with me in the pew.
a funny story: When we were little, like most siblings, my sister and
I could be quite obnoxious while riding in the car. On one Sunday when
we were particularly frustrating, my mother skipped Communion. After
the service the vicar, himself a father of 5, asked her why. She replied
that she had been ready to kill us and didn't think that was the proper
frame of mind to go to the communion rail. His reply:
You should have come up and thanked God you didn't kill them.
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923.7 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Aspiring peddlehead | Mon Mar 27 1995 10:00 | 24 |
|
We've got a fairly large church, with an average of 250
people at each of the two morning services.
Our nurseries are fully volunteer. This year, we've had
one person who is a regular in a particular room. That person
usually works the nursery for one service and attends the
other. This gives the kids a sense of stability. An additional
volunteer (or two) helps in each room. Right now, the rooms
are divided into "under 1", 12-18 months, 18 months to 2 years,
and 2-3 years. From 3 years on, they attend Sunday School.
Some volunteers work every 4 weeks (by choice); the rest
of us work every 6 weeks. Since we've got two kids in
different rooms, my husband volunteers in my daughter's room,
and I in my son's.
We have on woman who coordinates all the volunteers and schedules.
A schedule is sent out every 3 months, and a reminder card
arrives around Wednesday of the week you are to work.
It has worked out very well, and seems to get better each year.
Karen
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923.8 | Some add'l thoughts | GENRAL::WILSON | | Mon Mar 27 1995 19:30 | 21 |
| Our church is similar to .7
We ask that our volunteers serve once a month and we publish a
quarterly schedule. For instance, I serve in the nursery every 2nd
Sunday each month...that makes it easy to remember!
We do not have an exact age limit for separating the very young ones.
We ask that our nursery is for "babies" only, up to the crawling stage.
Once they can walk we move them into the "toddler" room, as walking
"babies" can cause damage to crawling ones!! And of course we allow
lee-way for babies who are just taking a few steps and can be mowed
down by 18 month olds!
We also have teens assisting our "regular" volunteers. But we have
noticed that while their heart is in the right place, the experience is
not always there. So we have rules that our nursery is adult
volunteers only, while teens are welcome to help in the toddler (and
older) rooms. (Obviously this has to be handled delicately!) We also
ask our teen volunteers to sit on the floor or in a chair when holding
the toddlers, as they can be quite squirmy. Some might consider this
picky, but we've had a few near misses!!
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923.9 | mother of an energetic one | STOWOA::SPERA | | Tue Mar 28 1995 09:51 | 16 |
| re: .6
I'm there with you. Mine sat in the aisle as an infant, did liturgical
dances in the pew when she was old enough to stand, and, at not quite
4, is continuing to challenge me in church and at the dinner table.
Last Sunday, she was jumping off the altar steps.
I guess I'm lucky that I'm in a parish where priests and parishoners
allow that children come to the 9:00 Mass. The paster has told people
who complain to try the 12:00...
I continue to have faith that at some point she will internalize the
rules and will be quiet, pay attention, pray, etc. She does remind me
when we are in church to pray for my recenetly deceased father and she
says she'll pray, too. So God is taking care of some of this.
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