Archive for Children

Five Ways to Engage Children in Sunday School

“Tell me and I forget, teach me and I may remember, involve me and I learn.”  Benjamin Franklin

Research suggests that eighty-seven percent of all learners learn through kinesthetic activities. [1] Children are no exception and thrive on opportunities provided through experiential learning and hands-on activities. With this in mind, classrooms need to be a reflection of how children learn best. Below are five practical ways in which you can actively engage children in your Sunday school classroom:

#1:  Provide an Interactive Environment.  Children learn best when they are involved in the process of learning. Optimal learning can be facilitated by engaging children and encouraging them to be active in the classroom, not merely spectators. Some tangible ways in which we engage students include:  collaborating with other children, problem solving, manipulating objects, and by exercising independence.  Active learning not only increases a child’s performance in the classroom but also helps with the retention of knowledge.

#2:  Plan Ahead with Classroom Preparation.  Bill Emeott states, “The best session is a planned session.”[2] Providing an active learning environment will take time, careful planning and intentionality. Be creative in your ideas and be flexible with the learning process.  For instance, allow children an opportunity to problem solve together, let them move about freely using objects to build, or encourage them to tell the teaching story in their own words. Developmentally appropriate practices will help you determine what is age appropriate and feasible for each child.  Never challenge a child beyond their capability, but lead them towards success.

#3:  Relationships Matter.  An effort must be made to know the children you work with and to understand their unique learning styles. Each child is different and they learn in different ways.  Understanding what communicates best to the children you serve will make the learning experience both meaningful and memorable. A teacher is an observer, an active supporter and actively engages children in conversation.  According to Erika Christakis from The Atlantic, “Conversation is gold.  It’s the most efficient early-learning system we have.”[3]

#4:  Commit to Long-Term Benefits. Children will not comprehend everything you teach immediately. It takes time for information to be processed and each spiritual truth you share will be reinforced by teachings they will receive as they grow older. Be committed for the long-term, knowing that you are an integral part of this process. Making the learning process memorable and interactive will enable a child to recall those moments as they grow older and the teachings are reinforced.

#5:  Repetition Is Vital. Children enjoy and need repetition. Allow children the opportunity to tell and retell the story in their own way. Have them recite a verse or an important concept over and over again.  Make it fun and exciting.


[1].  Donna Walker Tileston, “What Every Teacher Should Know about Learning, Memory, and the Brain” (Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin, 2004).

[2].  Lifeway Church Resources, Wholly Kids:  Guiding Kids to Life in Christ, (Nashville: Lifeway Ministry Publishing, 2015), 121.

[3].  Erika Christakis, “The New Preschool is Crushing Kids:  Today’s Young Children are Working More, But They’re Learning Less.”  Last modified (January/February 2016).  Accessed on December 3, 2021.  https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2016/01/the-new-preschool-is-crushing-kids/419139/

Jennifer Howington  is the Childhood Ministry Specialist for Texas Baptists

Three Essentials for Discipling Children

Is your church committed to the spiritual development of children?

Provide a clear commitment of spiritual development for kids. What do you want kids to know and do by the time they move into the youth ministry? Be able to quote the lines from “Dave and the Giant Pickle” Christian video? I hope not! Children’s leaders and teachers need a commitment to these three objectives and to see themselves as a part of a team that is impacting the lives of children.

Know Jesus * Learn Bible Skills * Show Children How to Serve

Know Jesus

Children are so impressionable and want to please adults. We never have to be pushy with the gospel but we must pray for our kids and faithfully tell them about Jesus. Parents are not impressed with the crafts their kids make in class. They are impressed when they hear a teacher ask about the child’s salvation experience, read how the teacher is praying for their child and see the teacher building a relationship of love with their child. Teachers must take advantage of sharing the plan of salvation each month during class. This will help focus children to know the gift of salvation God is offering them. Share Christ!

Learn Bible Skills

Children must obtain their Bible skills. Parents do not have this on their radar. Whenever I insist that children’s workers and parents must help kids obtain their Bible Skills, no one pushes back. If kids do not know how to use their Bibles, they will become handicapped Christians unable to feed themselves spiritually. Bible skills are not taught in the youth or adult departments and the responsibility lies square on our shoulders. Teachers and parents can easily teach and reinforce learning the books of the Bible, how to use the Bible and memorize verses. These are lifelong skills that will make a huge difference for loving the word of God and hiding it in your heart. Parents that hear their child reciting verses or finding verses in their Bible are amazed and grateful for the investment the church is making in their child. Teach Bible skills!

Show Children How to Serve

Children are some of the most selfish people. Many adults are selfish too. Children must be shown how to give. It is important to hear about missions but doing the work of serving others is of much greater value. Kids enjoy opportunities to do for others. They are hands-on learners. The beauty of serving others is not what the child can receive. The focus is on the one being served. When the child walks away from that opportunity of serving they experience the joy Jesus gives when you serve others. Parents take notice when their children are lead to do for others. They appreciate the investment of expanding the child’s world from a “me” focus and they see attitudes change.

These characteristics of a Preschool and Children’s ministry must be intentionally put in place. When young parents see the clear plans you have for kids, they will feel comfortable with church and making the choice to be involved. Gather children’s teachers and evaluate your present situation. Would a young family coming in the door this Sunday feel comfortable with your church?  Get more great helps from Mark at www.mrmarksclassroom.com .