Showing posts with label Barna Group. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barna Group. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

The Hyperlinked Life

The Way We Were and Are

"We are stuck with technology when what we really want is just stuff that works." 
Douglas Adams, The Salmon of Doubt



   The transmission of technology has forward gears only... there is no reverse; digital natives have no problem accepting this concept, but digital immigrants (like myself) often 'kick against the goads.'


For a near-future scenario, watch this-

           


     The Internet of Things (IoT) is the next Big thing, and humans love the next big thing, tho' nostalgia seems to be a close 2nd. So, what's a person of faith to do in a world turned virtual? The Hyperlinked Life by Jun Young and David Kinnaman offers help.


The Hyperlinked Life

A Few Questions To Begin With
from The Hyperlinked Life, Live with Wisdom in an Age of Information Overload

   -How many times, on average, would you say you check your phone in a given day?

   -Where do you get most of your news information?

   -What three words would you use to describe "life today"?


   The Hyperlinked Life is from the Frames series by Barna Group; a collection of survey-based, data-driven books designed for 21st Century Christians. Being an info-junkie, I like the format- compact, with infographics and practical advice. Here are a few suggestions the book offers for living well in a hyperlinked world:

1.   This is an incredible time to be a part of. Jim Elliot said, "Wherever you are, be all there!" We are here, in the midst of available information, but we need to remember our calling- technology should not define or control us.

2.   We need to ask God, "What is my role in this time?" 

3.   Remember the Sabbath!
When the Lord God said, "Remember the Sabbath", He meant more than- "Oh, and stay home from work one day a week." To 'set apart' means, in part, to be 'different'... to have different thoughts, to do different acts, to refrain from usual acts... i.e., unplug and recalibrate.



   These are busy times...but then, I suppose people have been saying that for a long, long time; one reason why books like The Hyperlinked Life serve as reminders to stop and survey the landscape on occasion. The pixels are rising.


                  

You can download one free copy from
the Frames collection here.
The Hyperlinked Life trailer CHURCH VERSION from Barna Group on Vimeo.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

What are you doing here ?



"Living is a great deal more than simply not dying. It is carrying out a mission, committing oneself to fashion some meaning that will attain eternity."
Leonardo Boff



     We walked down the hallway side by side, the Principal and me, and a remembrance unsettled me. My mind wandered to the third grade, a record year of 'office visits', a time when the Principal often walked me back to my classroom (probably because he knew I might wander elsewhere). 
     Referring to a Principal as colleague still sounds uncomfortable for me... I suppose that 3rd Grader stills lurks inside me. Stopping in front of a locked door, the Principal said, "Here's your room. Here's the key. Good luck." I think it was the 'good luck' that brought me back to the present. In that moment the 3rd Grade boy slipped away and a voice inside me asked, "What are you doing here?"  That was my first day with the Memphis City School System. The halls smelled of marijuana and teenage-body-odor... the ideal breeding ground for cultural hormones to thrive in. 

     I learned more that first week in the classroom than my combined years of formal education could begin to muster. The view from behind a teacher's desk is difficult to describe. Reality overrules theory, and the reality in a High School classroom is not for the faint of heart- 'thinking on your feet' takes on a new meaning. That first week revealed areas I didn't know existed, and to say I was unprepared would be a gross understatement. Teachers Beware- Young people know a poser when they see one! So, simply put:

Know your subject,
Know your goals,
Know your limitations,
ever remembering-
we teach people, not subjects.

     That first week in the classroom, for me, was twenty years ago. The 21st Century classroom has a new landscape and the digital natives are restless. 

 In 1647 a decree was issued in the Massachusetts Bay Colony that every town of fifty families should have a school. The decree was known as The Old Deluder Act. Culture has a way of shifting original intents and public education in America has succumbed; it is a hotly debated topic, with voices coming from politicians and parents, entrepreneurs and movie stars. Nicole Baker Fulgham and Barna Group, have just released Schools In Crisis, They Need Your Help (Whether You Have Kids or Not). Ms. Fulgham, both teacher and advocate, is the founder and president of The Expectations Project. There are many books, articles, and websites devoted to education reform but Schools in Crisis is:
Concise
Written specifically for Christians
Survey based
Realistic

It is a book for not only parents and educators, it is a book for Americans. Schools in Crisis presents the problems, proposes achievable goals, and poses a challenge-

"We have a nation of armchair educators when many schools- and millions of students- are in crisis. We believe it's time to stop offering unsolicited advice and get in the game." 

     As a parent and an educator I can only say, "Amen!" And so, the question remains-

What are you doing here?