Archive for the ‘Middle School’ Category
Only one class for 4th-5th grade next year
Wednesday, July 28th, 2010Putting the new RE entry way to good use
Tuesday, June 15th, 2010November All Ages Book Club Selection
Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Our first ever All Ages Book Club meeting was quite fun – a mixing of perspectives and ideas from several ages. The November meeting will be Friday, November 20th at 7pm, and we will be discussing Becoming Naomi Leon by Pam Munoz Ryan. This story of family finds the children living happily with their grandmother, until their mother reappears after many years and wants to split the kids apart. To stay together, the family must journey to Mexico and ensure the support of their father for their living arrangements. Family and identity are explored as Naomi searches for both her father and her own racial and personal identity.
Upcoming dates for RE
Thursday, October 1st, 2009Mark Your Calendars:
October 3rd 7-9pm Game Night and Dessert Potluck (All Ages)
October 4th OWL for grades 7-9 begins
October 10th Youth Group volunteering for Nature Conservancy
October 11th NO RE classes – Standing on the Side of Love Capitol campus 11:00
October 11th Annual Dinner – we are working on having fun stuff there for kids
October 23rd 7pm All Ages Book Club, The Giver by Lois Lowry
October 24th 10am 350 Bike/Walk to Bush Park in Lacey
October 25th Children’s Chapel – children start in RE rather than going into service
All Ages Book Club Selection
Wednesday, September 30th, 2009
I’m very excited to begin a new All Ages Bookclub, open to any age and specializing in all the fabulous literature that spans age categories and generations. There are so many books that can be enjoyed by people of almost any age – think of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory or Winnie the Pooh. At our first meeting in October we can brainstorm a list of future book selections.
The October selection is The Giver by Lois Lowry. This Newberry Award winner explores a dystopian world and asks the question of how much you would be willing to give up in order to always feel “happy”.
The All Ages BookClub will meet Friday, October 23rd at 7pm.
More about Our Whole Lives
Monday, September 14th, 2009Our Whole Lives
Friday, September 11th, 2009This year OUUC is offering Our Whole Lives for grades 7-9. You are most likely familiar with OWL already, as it is a program we have offered for many years in a rotating cycle of OWL for middle school every other year. This year our OWL facilitators are Curtis and Wendy Tanner.
“Our Whole Lives is a progressive approach to sexuality education that deals with the totality of human sexuality in an age-appropriate manner. It is based firmly on the values of self-worth, sexual health, responsibility, justice, and inclusivity. As a result, the program takes a stand on gender equity and the inclusion of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender issues, which are often excluded from traditional curricula. Criteria for sexually healthy relationships are clearly laid out as yardsticks for making decisions. Our Whole Lives helps young people adopt these very humane values and provides them with information and skills they need for life.”
If you are interested in your child participating in OWL this year, it is mandatory to attend a Parent Orientation. Our orientation will be Saturday, September 12th, 10-1:30. A light lunch will be provided. Please RSVP to our DRE, Sara Lewis.
Coming of Age this Sunday
Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009This coming Sunday is a special service, for the Coming of Age youth. Coming of Age is an annual program for 8th graders at OUUC, and provides a faith-based rite of passage from childhood to youth. This year we have two remarkable youth participating in the program, who have been meeting with a mentor for months, working toward an understanding of their own credo.
At the Coming of Age service this Sunday the youth will stand up in front of the congregation and speak to their credos, and we will honor this important transition in their lives. The Coming of Age service will be held at 9:15, while the 11:00 service will be an intergenerational service celebrating the unique gift of each and everyone of us, On the Day You Were Born.
Intergenerational Service this week
Thursday, April 16th, 2009This Sunday there will be no RE classes, and the children are invited to stay with their families in the service, which celebrates Earth Day. In fact, the 2nd-5th graders have learned a song which they will sing in the service, and the middle school group will be doing a reading.
The service will also have a drum meditation, two stories, and many short readings. It’s been planned with children in mind.
One of the stories is Granddad’s Prayers of the Earth, from the lovely picture book by Douglas Woods. In this story, a boy and his grandfather share thoughts about the spirituality of all life on Earth during a hike. Later, the grandfather dies, and the boy is able to find comfort from those ideas they had discussed. This Sunday we will only be telling the hike portion, but the book is worth borrowing to read at home.
Come celebrate the Earth this week!
A Soggy Easter was still a lot of fun
Monday, April 13th, 2009Despite rain, the children were outside on Sunday for the annual Easter Egg Hunt. Our Middle Schoolers hid hundreds of eggs in the playground and the lawn and forest behind the church, and at each service the kids braved the wet to hunt for them.
It was worth getting wet, however, as everyone enjoyed both the hunt and the prizes they found in their eggs.





