Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Here's how to discuss the presidential election with them. America is increasingly polarized, and many kids are picking up on the tension. Here's how to discuss the presidential election with them.
It’s election season…again, and while you might think young kids are blissfully unaware of all the buzz, they’re more perceptive than we often realize (or would like to admit).
Nazarene Bible Quizzing (also known as "Youth Quizzing", "Teen Quizzing", or "Bible Quizzing Ministry") is a program for discipleship targeted to children aged 12–18 or in grades 6–12 in the United States or Canada. Some 5th graders are regularly allowed to participate, and 4th graders are allowed to participate in rare circumstances.
United Church Press, 1980. Confronting the Bible: A Resource and Discussion Book for Youth. United Church Press, 1968. The Creative Word: Canon as a Model for Biblical Education. Fortress Press. 1 January 1982. ISBN 978-1-4514-1957-3. David's Truth in Israel's Imagination and Memory. Fortress Press. ISBN 978-1-4514-1958-0.
Kids Pick the President is a series of specials produced by Nickelodeon, organized around a mock election to determine children's choice for the President of the United States. Since 1988, Kids Pick the President has accurately predicted the winner of each election with the exceptions of the 2004 , 2016 , and 2024 presidential elections.
Here's how to debunk politics for young minds and bring the debate home to your dinner table. If you’re anything like me, you’re both excited and anxious when your kids ask about the 2020 US ...
Sunday Pix is an American Christian comic book published weekly by the David C. Cook publishing company, beginning 1 May 1949. In the late 1960s, the title was changed to Bible-in-Life Pix, and in the 1990s the title was changed to Pix. It is usually sold or given away to Sunday school pupils.
"Sunday school answer" is a pejorative [1] used within Evangelical Christianity [2] to refer to an answer as being the kind of answer one might give to a child. [1] The phrase derives its name from the concept that certain answers are likely to be an appropriate answer to a question asked in a Sunday school even if one has not heard the ...