There are many types of Meetings...
We have
different types of meetings for different types of needs. In our community we
have Meeting for Worship, Meeting for Business, Meeting for Sharing, Programmed
Meetings, Unprogrammed Meetings, and Called Meetings. Some classes have
explored Meetings with a special intention.
These meetings are part of our school culture and are used as authentic, personalized, age appropriate versions of meetings one might find at their Monthly Quaker Meeting. They have been adapted (just a bit) to suit an elementary school setting.
Here is some
brief information about these Meetings:
Meeting for Business:
*Two of our faculty members clerk our Lower School Meetings for Business and Grade
Level representatives clerk a smaller Meeting for Business each week.
*All members/participants of a Meeting for Business should be
continually learning and practicing their “craft” (of either being a clerk or
of being a participant of a clerked Meeting)
Meeting for Sharing (Worship Sharing):
* A Meeting for Worship that has a sharing intention generally has
more messages than a MfW
*Participants may be focusing on a topic and sharing their thinking
with the Meeting about that idea
Programmed Meetings/Unprogrammed Meetings:
*Programmed Meetings for Worship have a plan that may include
readings, singing, or other components that are planned ahead of the Meeting
*Unprogrammed Meetings for Worship are silent Meetings with no planned
components
*Members of the Meeting speak into the Silence as moved to do so.
*Our Lower School Meetings for Worship are semi programmed since we do have the
planned element of reading the Query every month and sometimes we sing a song
Called Meetings:
* A Meeting for Worship called by a clerk
at a non-regular time, usually for the purpose of considering a particular
issue
*A Called Meeting is clerked by the party
who calls it. That person should sit at the "front" and close the silence at the
appropriate time
Our Fare Thee Well Meeting at the end
of the year is a Meeting with a Special attention:
*A Meeting for Worship that has a celebratory intention generally has
more messages of good wishes, farewells, gratitude
*The silence between messages is still very important – although it
may be shorter than our weekly MfW (think of it as taking a really good breath
or two between each message, if not more)
*The nature of sharing into the silence should be calm, respectful, thoughtful
*The nature of sharing into the silence should not be a race and
should not be game-like or an attempt to make sure to get a word in before it
all ends (in other words, we’re not speaking just for the sake of speaking)
Consider
using Silence and Meeting in your classroom:
*To celebrate a milestone or accomplishment
*To honor and reflect upon a big idea, current event
*To deeply consider those times when you and your students are on the
social emotional growth edge
Comments
Post a Comment