Youth Culture Issue 82
Transcription
Youth Culture Issue 82
Why Jackson College? Why now? Bill: Well, until recently, this was a community college and only offered a two year degree. It has just become a four year college with an enrollment of 10,000. And I live two miles away from campus! tour of campus and said, “Here is where you want to hold a Bible study.” He showed me the Dove Room. It’s named for someone named Dove, who happened to be a Christian. It seems like the right room for a Bible study. He also recommended a class for me to take. So, I have enrolled as a student! It gives me full access to campus. And the right to set up a student group? Do you have a plan for how to attract students? wasn’t hard to get contact information for them. They have all heard from me about the Bible study. So far, three of them have contacted me and said they want to join. Do you have any other plans? Bill: Just my usual. Walk around, pray, listen to the Lord, and then do what he tells me. That’s all I have really be doing all along. It’s worked so far... Bill: I have some connections already. A few are friends of my grandchildren whom I evangelized. They are going to help me run our welcome booth next week. By chance I found out that 24 graduates of Lumen Christi, a local high school, would be attending Jackson College. It What have you done to get things going? Bill: I have lived in Jackson a long time. I know a lot of people. One of them happens to be the vicepresident of JC. He gave me a Issue 82 University Christian Outreach is engaging a bold plan to expand this autumn to Jackson College, in Jackson, Michigan. Bill Navarre, a member of Morning Star Community, recently joined UCO as its oldest staff member. Bill is in his seventies and is a retired lawyer with a history of leading young people to the Lord. The Kairos Youth Culture Newsletter interviewed him last week. Bill: That’s another story. I went to the head of student affairs to see what I needed to do to set one up. It turns out she is a believer as well and said, “Awesome, we have needed a Christian group on campus!” So she helped me out. Now we have a student group, a meeting room, and a booth at the student fair this week. We are the first Christian group on campus. September Forever Young 2014 Youth Culture newsletter Bill Navarre Incoming Freshmen Beloit College assembles an annual “Mindset List”to remind their faculty to be wary of using dated references. Incoming freshmen tend to relate to events that happened before they were born as ancient history. To put this year’s freshmen in context, they were mostly born in 1996 – the year Madonna released Don’t Cry for Me Off to College When she was one Princess Diana and Mother Teresa died on the same day and Harry Potter went to Hogwarts. Youth that age were probably in bed at the turn of the millennium – and if not, they probably wished they were. Y2K was long gone before they understood what the acronym meant. Argentina and gave birth to her daughter Lourdes Maria Ciccone Leon. Lola Leon will be attending the University of Michigan, (her mother’s Alma Mater) this fall. For her, “press pound” has only ever meant “hit hashtag.” Hong Kong has always been part of China, and everybody has always loved Raymond. They were stamped by watching the twin towers fall in their first week of kindergarten and by the Columbia disaster in elementary school. They grew up helping their parents learn to use Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram on their tablets and smart phones. For most, a smart phone is more important to them than a tablet or a computer. Increasingly, it is the way they shop. (Online shopping has climbed from the eighth to the second most popular way to shop. Discount department stores remain #1.) They have grown up in a time of great moral shift, which they hardly notice because it is just the way things are. More students than ever will attend college in America this autumn. Their average costs are expected to be $21,000. (The average peaked in 2010 at $24,000.) Colleges continue to charge more but average spending is down mainly because more students are enrolling in twoyear public colleges. (Two year college enrollment is up 4% from the previous year at 34%.) The most common financial surprise to incoming students is the high cost of textbooks – $1200 per year. Transportation (commuting, parking fees and auto repair) is the next most common surprise. Our job is to understand them and to reach them with the Gospel. Comments welcome: .Kairos.editor@gmail.com