|
Courses in Youth Ministry Leadership
Revised:
04/08/2008
YL 500 – Mentoring
Experience for Youth Ministry Leadership
Before
enrolling in their fifth class in the program, students will be expected to
enroll and participate in this online mutual mentoring community with other
students who have matriculated. Though largely facilitated through the
Internet, this experience will also be catalyzed by each face-to-face course
encounter in which the student participates. Students will be expected to
offer both support and challenge on behalf of each other’s personal and
spiritual growth through reading assignments, active discussions, and
integration projects over a twelve-month period. Course entry points take
place in both January and July. (This 2 credit hour course meets a
Program Core
curriculum requirement
within the MA in Youth Ministry Leadership.)
FACULTY: Roger Vezeau
YL 507 - Thinking
Theologically in Youth Ministry
Case studies, personal experiences, modern ministry practices and the rich
learning environment of the National Youth Workers' Convention will be
integrated with reading, writing and discussion to cultivate students'
skills in theological reflection and integration. This class will be taught
on location each year during the final NYWC of the fall season and will
require students to also register for the NYWC.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Dave Rahn
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Theological Faithfulness
LOCATION: YS National Youth Workers Convention, Nashville
YL 510 - Leadership
Movements in Youth Ministry
Students will
investigate the history of youth ministry in order to discover and evaluate
leadership models and their effects. Using theories and methods drawn from
history, theology, cultural studies, and the social sciences they will learn
to explain how and why changes occur in the lives of young people and
through them, in the church and in society. They will also learn to
identify and evaluate the unintended consequences that accompany every youth
ministry leadership decision. In addition, students will employ these
interpretive skills to evaluate specific youth ministry leadership decisions
and predict their consequences. (3
credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Tom Bergler
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Theological Faithfulness
LOCATION: Youth for Christ/USA, Denver
YL 515 - Theology of
Discipleship Evangelism
Students will
develop a Biblical and theological foundation of relational youth
evangelism. The course will include a critique of modern youth evangelism
techniques based on theological premises and psycho-social developmental
issues. Students will also learn and evaluate Youth for Christ’s 3Story
Evangelism® approach to doing discipleship evangelism.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Phil Collins
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Theological Faithfulness
LOCATION: Huntington University, Huntington, IN
YL 517 - Christological
Foundations for Youth Ministry
This course is designed to help students develop a biblical theology of
youth ministry centered on the person of Christ. With one eye on Jesus’ 1st
century context and the other eye on the 21st century context of youth
ministry, students will discern Christological patterns for life and
ministry. Case studies and literature from the fields of theology and youth
ministry will be used to help students lead youth ministries that live out
the presence of Christ in their respective contexts.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Dave Livermore
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Theological Faithfulness
LOCATION: Huntington University, Huntington, IN
YL 520 –
Theology of the Church for Youth Ministry
Assumptions about the practice of youth ministry and its relationship to
the mission of God in the world are examined in this course. Particular
attention will be given to a comparison of Jesus’ and Paul’s teachings about
the nature of the Church and deriving implications for contemporary youth
ministry. (3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Dave Rahn
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Theological Faithfulness
LOCATION: Huntington University, Huntington, IN
YL 525 - Qualitative
Research in Youth Ministry
Students will develop a
foundation for qualitative inquiry of youth ministry-related subjects,
focusing primarily on the principles, methods, and skills that comprise
strong research. Taking advantage of the unique environment provided at
the National Youth Workers’ Convention, this course combines independent
study and a vibrant classroom experience with the “laboratory” of a
Convention to develop these foundational skills in research design,
collection, and analysis. The final design, implementation, and report
of a small research and writing project will serve as demonstration of
the students’ learning.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Terry Linhart
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Professional Leadership &
Expertise
LOCATION: YS National Youth Workers Convention, Nashville
YL 527 – Communication
Strategies for Youth Ministry Leadership
Communication is
one of the essential facets of effective leadership, whether that
communication comes through the medium of visual media, a printed message or
the spoken word, and the wide-ranging contexts and tools of communication
require leaders who are competent in these skills. Students in this course
will focus primarily on the sorts of communication skills that will be
required for teaching and preaching in the context of youth ministry. While
significant attention will be given to communication theory, the focus will
be on praxis, allowing students a laboratory for exploring and experimenting
with various types of communication. (3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Duffy Robbins
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Professional Leadership &
Expertise
LOCATION: Youth for Christ/USA, Denver
YL 535 - Assessment
Strategies in Youth Ministry
Students will
review various approaches to assessment in order to understand appropriate
assessment methods in various contexts as well as the strategic and
organizational benefits that emerge from ongoing assessment and evaluation.
Students will thoroughly explore case studies in order to understand how to
contextualize the key principles and develop an assessment program for their
current settings.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Kara Powell
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Professional
Leadership & Expertise
LOCATION: Youth for Christ/USA, Denver
YL 545 –
Collaboration Strategies for Youth Ministry
Vision-casting, consulting, cooperative learning, conflict management
and negotiation skills are all explored in this course. Students will
consider their own context as they construct their skills around servant
leadership values to develop an overall approach to youth ministry coalition
building and collaboration. (3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Dave Rahn
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Professional Leadership & Expertise
LOCATION: YS National Youth Workers Convention, Nashville
YL 550 - Cultural
Influences on Youth Ministry
Media, family
relationships, economics, post-modernity, politics, consumerism, etc.
influence both adolescents and those who work with them. This course will
guide students in examining a variety of those influences, evaluating both
the positive and negative factors, and strategizing to build a culturally
savvy ministry.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Dan Lambert
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Adolescent Specialization
LOCATION:
Daytona, FL
YL 555 - Urban Social
Context and Youth Ministry
This course will
allow students to examine the ways in which social structures and
institutions—such as class, family, community, and power—and social
problems—such as crime and abuse—influence the lives of youth in urban
communities. Students will also explore the scriptures to discern how to
apply ministry-as-service to youth and families in urban communities.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. René Rochester
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Adolescent Specialization
LOCATION:
Daytona, FL
YL 557 - Ministry to
At-Risk Youth
This course is designed to enable students to develop a ministry model for
work with troubled youth. Students are expected to be familiar with
literature on the culture of troubled youth, reaching troubled youth for
Christ, and effective youth ministry strategies. Particular attention will
be given to developing a holistic Christian approach for effective
intervention, making it useful for those serving in churches, parachurch
ministries and within secular social service agencies. Small group Bible
study teaching methods and mentoring will be emphasized and practiced.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Scott Larson
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Adolescent Specialization
LOCATION:
Daytona, FL
YL 565 - Issues in
Adolescent Development
Adolescence may
be the most chaotic, complex and crucial of our developmental stages with
its multiple facets of change occurring simultaneously. The stakes are high
with identity formation at the heart of all that is happening. Understanding
this developmental reality is critical for those who work with teenagers.
This course will explore the “so what” of adolescent development from a
number of perspectives including its ministry implications, parenting
implications and faith development implications. It is assumed that
students will have a basic understanding of developmental theory so that
issues related to the cognitive, moral, emotional, physiological, social and
faith journeys can be integrated holistically and produce developmentally
appropriate ministry strategies.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Steve Gerali
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Adolescent Specialization
LOCATION:
Daytona, FL
YL 570 –
Counseling for Youth and Family Ministry
This class will expose students to a Family Systems model for counseling
teens and families, different than other approaches to counseling within the
context of student ministries. In addition to exploring the Hebrew concepts
of counseling and how Job's friends responded to a crisis, topics will
include ways of equipping volunteers for counseling; ideas to empower our
students towards peer counseling; and how to build a long term model of
counseling rather than just a reactive approach to putting out "adolescent
fires." This class will offer lecture, discussion, movie segments, research,
Scriptural integration and some role plays. (3 credit)
FACULTY: Dr. David Olshine
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Adolescent Specialization
LOCATION: YS National Youth Workers Convention, Nashville
YL 650 – Culmination Research Project for Youth Ministry Leadership
The culmination research project is a way for students to demonstrate
their graduate competency while making a distinct contribution to youth
ministry’s body of knowledge. Coming at the end of their program, students
will secure from among the Youth Ministry Leadership faculty a sponsor whose
research interests match their own and who is willing to provide largely
on-line support around the design, implementation, analysis, and written
summary of an original project. It is intended that the culmination research
project will be of publishable quality and that a faculty-student
co-authored article will be the result. (2 credits)
FACULTY: Various
YL 651 – Culmination Research Project for Youth Ministry Leadership
The culmination research project is a way for students to demonstrate
their graduate competency while making a distinct contribution to youth
ministry’s body of knowledge. Coming at the end of their program, students
will secure from among the Youth Ministry Leadership faculty a sponsor whose
research interests match their own and who is willing to provide largely
on-line support around the design, implementation, analysis, and written
summary of an original project. It is intended that the culmination research
project will be of publishable quality and that a faculty-student
co-authored article will be the result. (2 credits)
(continued from YL 650)
FACULTY: Various
YM 527 – Sociology of
Adolescence
A
study of the development of the stage of adolescence in Western society and
the current influences that shape its constitution. Includes an opportunity
to use empirical research methods to explore the social patterns of
adolescents in a particular community.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Steve Gerali
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Adolescent Specialization
LOCATION: Huntington University, Huntington, IN
YM 557 - Student
Leadership in Youth Ministry
Students will survey modern ministry practices to discern operational
definitions of student leadership. They will subsequently explore related
biblical principles, relevant historical events, issues in adolescent
psycho-social development, and Link Institute research in order to formulate
a plan for the development of effective student leadership in youth
ministry.
(3 credits)
FACULTY: Dr. Dave Rahn
CURRICULAR EMPHASIS: Professional Leadership & Expertise
LOCATION: Youth for Christ/USA, Denver
See a list
of courses by theme >>>
Back to Youth Ministry
Leadership home page >>>
|