How To Speak To Students By Mark Driscoll

December 4, 2012

Last week @TroyFarley shared this article with us via @TheResurgence. Thanks Troy!

  

9 Tips For Teaching Students

You can find the full length post by Mark Driscoll here

START STRONG 

You have to get their attention the moment you step up to teach if you want to keep their attention. Start with high energy, a big question, or a big concept. Don’t ever, ever start with, “Hey, how are you guys doing?” Your lead pastor probably does that, everyone does that, and it’s nearly always the wrong way to start. We don’t ask people how they are—we tell them what God has said, which then changes how they are. Start strong. Nail your first word or line in your prep. 

TEACH ONE CONCEPT 

Students are not stupid. They can learn more than is often expected. Don’t dumb it down, just focus it in. Give them one big idea—sin, Scripture, the cross, Jesus’ divinity, the resurrection—something to focus the entire message around. 

ASK A TON OF QUESTIONS 

Make your lesson interactive by calling on kids. Unless you have a large group of hundreds of students, ask questions throughout the message to keep students engaged and see what they are thinking. I throw out giant candy bars to kids who give me good answers, which keeps it fun and light. When students ask a question, I let other students try and answer it. If they don’t get it right, I then answer it. But I want to get students thinking and talking about faith. 

BE ENTHUSIASTIC AND KEEP THE ROOM ALIVE 

Students don’t just believe what you teach. They get excited about what you get excited about. 

MAKE IT FUN 

Have a sense of humor when appropriate. Get students up front to lead worship or share their testimony. Plan activities to develop relationships outside of the big group meeting. Use interesting props or anything else that might help keep it fun yet still reverent toward God. 

ALLOW TIME FOR Q&A 

After you teach, open it up for a focused Q&A session to gauge where the kids actually are. Students have questions, so invite them to ask them. For students who may be shy or have a private question, invite them to find you or another leader after the teaching time. Be around and available following the lesson in order to talk with students and answer their questions. 

CONNECT EVERYTHING TO JESUS 

The whole Bible is about Jesus. Say the name of Jesus, point to Jesus, honor Jesus, and focus on Jesus. 

GIVE AWAY NICE BIBLES 

Many students, even those from Christian homes, don’t have a decent Bible. Tell them about the YouVersion Bible App and show them how to start a Bible reading plan on their phone. Fundraise money to give away decent Bibles to students. A good Bible can change a student’s life. They might consider it such a great gift that they take it seriously and start reading. I give away leather ESV Study Bibles to our students who need one. 

TAKE A PARENTAL TONE 

Pray for the students all week. Ask God to keep giving you the Father’s heart for the students so that when you get up to teach they see you in a parental role, loving and leading them. Even if you are not much older than the students, you can at least be like an older sibling. So many students do not have an intact, godly, helpful home; more and more, student ministry needs to pick up a lot of what the parents used to teach but no longer do about the practical stuff of life.

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