These activities are to be used with the "Come Follow Me" November: Self-Reliance lesson.
I copied page 1 and 2 back to back.
page 1
page 2
I used the below activity to go with this point from the "What does it mean to be self-reliant?" lesson:
- Write on separate slips of paper the following topics related to self-reliance: health, education, employment, home storage, finances, and spiritual strength. Allow each young woman to pick one that she is interested in, and invite her to read about her topic in a copy of section 6.1.1 ofHandbook 2 (pages 34–35). Ask each young woman to briefly teach the class what she learned about her topic, how it relates to self-reliance, and what she can do now to prepare to be self-reliant in the area. How can the young women’s efforts in their youth bless their own futures? How can these efforts bless their families when they become wives and mothers?
We played like a Taboo game. I had these papers folded up in my Self-Reliant First Aid Kit I brought. I called on a girl. She came to the front and pick one out of the kit. She tried to get her classmates to say the large underline word WITHOUT using the word or the words listed below to describe it. They had fun doing this. Then, after they guessed it. We read the excerpt from the Handbook {see above for link}. The girls would write "Health" in box 1 on page 1 above. Then, as we would read the excerpt, they would list things they needed to do to improve in this category. This was a lot of fun!
Then, after playing this "game" to go over the 6 categories of being more self reliant. We talked about the parable of Talents. I then randomly gave each girl an envelope with coins in them. Some had 1, others had 2, and others had 5. They then needed to list 1, 2, or 5 talents they have that will help them be more self-reliant. Whether it be a skill or personality trait they had. I challenged them to strengthen this talent during the week, and not "bury" it.
This activity above goes with this bullet from November's "What does it mean to be self-reliant?":
- Give each young woman either five coins, two coins, or one coin. Have them read Matthew 25:14–29 to find what happened to the person in the parable who was given the same amount of money they were given. Discuss questions such as “What did the three servants do with the money they were given?” and “How does this parable relate to self-reliance?” Invite the young women to ponder the things God has given them that will help them become self-reliant, such as talents, personality traits, and abilities. How can they use these qualities to become more self-reliant? How can they use them to bless their future families?
This is wonderful. Thank you for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the game idea, I think it will make the lesson lively while still following the curriculum!
ReplyDeletePlease please please please don't include "control your weight" Ina lesson intended for our beautiful young women. I know you mean well and our generation thinks it is harmless but it is not. What these young impressionable girls learn at church they take as "gospel" for good reason. This is where we teach the gospel. The original church approved lesson says nothing about weight. Also for good reason. Teaching a girl to be obsessed about her weight can be deadly, and I'm not exaggerating. Thanks for your consideration.
ReplyDeleteHey Sherry! Thanks for your comment. I understand your reasoning behind it. I used to teach Junior High. :) However the quote you are referring to that includes "control your weight" on the Health page for the Taboo game actually came straight from the LDS Handbook. See link here: https://www.lds.org/handbook/handbook-2-administering-the-church/welfare-principles-and-leadership?lang=eng
DeleteThe original lesson has this section (see below) where they want the girls to read the sections on Health, Education, Employment, Home Storage, Finances, and Spiritual Strength from the Handbook. So I was just quoting the handbook. :)
Delete"Write on separate slips of paper the following topics related to self-reliance: health, education, employment, home storage, finances, and spiritual strength. Allow each young woman to pick one that she is interested in, and invite her to read about her topic in a copy of section 6.1.1 of Handbook 2 (pages 34–35). Ask each young woman to briefly teach the class what she learned about her topic, how it relates to self-reliance, and what she can do now to prepare to be self-reliant in the area. How can the young women’s efforts in their youth bless their own futures? How can these efforts bless their families when they become wives and mothers?"