[Ansteorra] Youth Collegiums

Bridget the Stargazer bridgetthestargazer at hotmail.com
Wed Jan 23 07:17:19 PST 2008


I can't remember where I read about it but either at an event (or at the events of a kingdom), they would have a herald announce the parents who needed to collect their children. The parents were warned this would happen beforehand so if it happened to them, it was their own fault.

Say lunch is scheduled for 12:00pm. It could be heralded at 11:45am that parents/guardians need to collect their children to feed them during the break. The same thing could happen near the end of the day's activities. If at 12:15pm or 15 minutes after the day had ended, the children were not collected, a herald could announce the uncollected "valuables" at Children's Activities.

Taking a moment in court to say thank you to the parents who DID collect their children promptly without mentioning those who didn't (they will shamefully know who they are) might encourage others to do likewise in the future. 

Just a couple of thoughts,
Bridget the Stargazer


> 1. Youth Collegiums - was Children ... (Chiara Francesca)

>
> For the last 5 or 6 years or so on and off I have run youth collegiums.
>
> The classes were all held in one location, the large open hall in Canton. At
> no time were any children alone with just one adult. They were sharing the
> hall with a minimum of 100 adults. Some had parents actually participate in
> the classes. Other parents taking advantage of the air-conditioning in the
> hall happily sat in there with us. :)
>
> I still have all my notes of what worked and what did not. What classes we
> taught, how many students were there, and which classes were the most
> popular.
>
> The best part: I can tell you right now without looking for those notes that
> the most popular classes were the ones the parents or other adults took with
> the kids cause they thought it was a cool class and lasted only 30 minutes
> to an hour each.
>
> The biggest problem: lunch. Parents that were not there already would not
> come to pick up the kids to feed them lunch. Then at the end of the day once
> again, they would not come to pick up their kids. I am totally open to
> solutions to this one, there has to be one that does not involve stopping
> this kind of activity.
>
> Other than that we had youth from ages 5 to 50+ filling every class and
> enjoying themselves.
>
> I think it is a pity that we never hear the good things about these kinds of
> classes and collegiums for kid.
>
> Chiara Francesca

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