Dream: to think strategically and with vision about our work in schools.

Develop: to consider different skills we need to grow for our work in schools.

Do: a resource idea related to this theme that you can take and use in your work.

Each month we will link you to downloads and continued reading at schoolswork.co.uk.

Dream

‘Your beliefs become your thoughts, Your thoughts become your words, Your words become your actions, Your actions become your habits, Your habits become your values, Your values become your destiny.’ Mahatma Gandhi Thinking about what is important to you and how it impacts your life and ministry is influenced by a variety of factors. You are shaped by your upbringing, your family and friends, the media, your experiences, education and the culture around you. The values you live your life by can be transient and change over time. Perhaps thinking about values for you is more of a professional idea and just something you have had to do for work, or perhaps through working in youth ministry your values are an integrated part of how you define yourself and what is important to you.

As an example, Psalm 15 offers us a collection of values that go on to impact behaviour. The psalmist writes about a person valuing truth, speaking words of truth from his heart; in valuing kindness he does his neighbour no wrong; in valuing honesty he sticks to his word even when it costs him and in valuing justice he does not accept a bribe against an innocent person. The values of truth, kindness, honesty and justice in this example were not just listed or talked about, they impacted behaviour and actions.

  • Think: Would you be able to articulate your own values to somebody else if they were to ask you over coffee today, or to give examples of how those values are lived out either through your work or in your personal life? Take a moment to reflect on what is important to you and how you might make decisions based on those values. If it is helpful, we have provided a tool in the next section, which you can use to conduct a values ‘audit’.
  • Discuss: Schools now have to promote ‘British Values’ (tolerance, democracy, the rule of law and individual liberty). What values would you add or change if you were to consider promoting Christian values in schools?

Develop

‘It’s not hard to make decisions when you know what your values are.’

Roy Disney (nephew of Walt Disney)

Shared values that are lived out should affect everything you do and the decisions you make. We have developed a values audit resource that you can use to help you clarify which values feature higher than others in importance to you, which values are being lived out well and which are perhaps being neglected. To download the PDF to use on your own or with a team, visit schoolswork. co.uk and search for ‘values audit’ in the search bar. There is also a completed version on the website you can look at as an example of how to use it.

The third column on the grid is titled ‘thickening your values’. This is to help you consider how you might widen the impact of your values or make them more tangible through a certain activity. For example, if you run a drop-in breakfast club before school and the values you have listed are fun, faith and community, ‘thickening’ these values might involve how you will introduce more games that help all young people to be involved and to think through what it looks like to spark conversations around faith through the games or in other ways that help the whole breakfast ‘community’ to be involved.

Do

To help students explore their values, we have prepared a game for you to use called ‘What matters most?’. It can be used in the context of a one-to-one mentoring session, group work or in a more informal setting in a club or detached context. The aim is for young people to be able to think through things that are important to them by playing different ‘tiles’ with items or activities or ideas on and they have to decide which are most important and which are less important. They also get to learn more about those they are playing with so it can work well as a small group ‘get to know you’ activity. The game is available as a free download on schoolswork.co.uk (search for ‘What matters most’). Topics include relationships, faith, entertainment, food, global issues and family.

To follow up from the game, ask each student to list their top three tiles from the game and then help them think about what values those tiles represent, for example ‘Snapchat’ could be friendship, ‘Thinking about the point of my life’ might be purpose, ‘Saying sorry’ could be forgiveness. For a longer list of values to help you, there is a free resource we provide a link for on schoolswork. co.uk on a blog entitled ‘values audit’.

Depending on your context, the group could respond in one of three ways:

  • Create a piece of artwork showing the things that matter most to them and the values they represent.
  • Write a poem or a ‘day in the life’ piece of writing about how these activities / objects or ideas affect and shape them as people.
  • Read reading Psalm 15 (as discussed in the ‘Dream’ section above). Ask young people about what we can learn from the Psalm and what values they share with the person described in the passage, and how they are different.

Event coming up

You are invited to a schools work networking and equipping event this October in London, which will be exploring Christian values and schools work. The event takes place on Friday 21st October at London City Mission. You can find details at streamschoolswork.org

Amy Tolmie is director of SchoolsworkUK, a Youthscape project.