Five Principles for Connecting with Parents

When we have the support of parents/guardians, the strength and influence of our ministries are significantly increased.

Think about it, when a student gets involved with Cru, we are not just asking them to commit a lot of time. We are inviting them to live surrendered lives to Jesus, which demands all their devotion. It directly impacts everything about them. Parents or guardians are vital to the commitment level of every student with whom we engage. Students can also make a huge impact on their families. We have seen Jesus change whole families just by involving parents as we disciple their kids. For these reasons, we believe partnering with parents is vital.

It is wise to assume the parents you meet are doing the best job they can raising their child. It is possible to run into a parent/guardian who is disengaged from their child’s life, but this is not the norm. So we want to help you be intentional with communicating and connecting with the parents/guardians of the students who are involved.

Any true partnership starts and ends with clear and consistent communication.

Five Principles for Engaging with Parents/Guardians

1) Speak up First

Meet parents/guardians as soon as you can. Take the first opportunity you have to shake their hand and introduce yourself. Maybe you are on campus after school to meet new students and one of their parents shows up. Go introduce yourself. You are at a sporting event, and parents of a student you know are there; introduce yourself. After one of your gatherings, you see parents coming to pick up students; make it your aim to shake their hand and introduce yourself.

Here is a suggested script you might use to do this:

“Hi, Mr./Mrs. _________. My name is _________. I work with Cru, a Christian youth organization that works with students all over the country. We have been serving at _________ High School for [x] years now, and we really just want to see students do well in life. I met your son/daughter at ________ and they have been doing _______ with us. I try to talk with the parents of the students I meet, to see if you know about Cru, and to answer questions you may have. Has your son/daughter said anything to you about Cru? Do you have any questions? “

Other things you might include when meeting them:

  • Share with them your educational background and the training you have received in youth work.
  • Explain our ministry using the three-dimensional person or any other way your local expression of Cru casts vision to students.
  • Be prepared to share with them people on campus who can vouch for Cru as a reputable organization, e.g. teachers, administrators, other parents, etc.

It may be more feasible to introduce yourself over the phone, and that works just as well. The sooner you speak up and introduce yourself, the better. It will develop trust and can help clear up any possible misunderstandings that may come up later.

 

2) Know Your Audience of Parents

Parents/guardians are not one-size-fits-all kind of people. Whether you have interacted with them for years, you are one yourself, or you have not had much contact with other parents besides your own, it is important to know that all parents are different. Get to know the parents with whom you will be working.

Some parents/guardians exercise greater oversight with their children than others, but almost all parents care about their kids’ whereabouts, development, and well-being. No matter the situation, there are reasons why parents differ in terms of these things. It is always best to get to know how and why parents interact with their kids. We need to approach each family with a posture of support.

People come from various socio-economic and ethnic backgrounds, which highly influences what they value and how they raise their kids. Differences in parenting are not always based on what they have the capacity for, but are also influenced by how each family’s personal values and culture regard kids, parents, and the family relationship. You may find grandparents to be as highly involved in a child’s life as parents because they all share the same housing or because there is an emphasis on extended family.

There are still other situations where parents are not involved at all and, because of their lack of availability emotionally or physically, other people may be more involved, such as grandparents or a guardian. It is also important to be sensitive to the fact that not all parents are the child’s biological parents. We always need to be aware of the possibilities of adoption and foster care. It is important to be cautious about making assumptions when it comes to a child’s connection with the adults in their lives.

 

3) Involve Parents

How would it help your ministry if you knew a parent was praying for you, your team, and the ministry every day? How might it encourage you and your community to see your work with teenagers directly impacting the lives of families? As you pursue students relationally, be looking for opportunities to involve parents in the work. The sky is the limit here.

Parents can be involved in many different ways, but here are a few ideas:

  • Helping with any fundraisers
  • Bringing food to meetings
  • Leading a group of students or another parent group
  • Volunteering at conferences and/or mission trips
  • Leading a prayer group

A ministry within a ministry

A parent that prays for you is a parent that supports you. Asking parents to join in praying for you is a great way to connect families to your ministry.

You could facilitate this by asking students to bring their parents to a prayer meeting. Ask the parents to take one day a month to pray for the ministry. This can be as informal as them deciding how to pray and as formal as having a monthly calendar and indicating a way to pray on each day of the month. Parents can also gather to pray as a group regularly or periodically.

You could ask a group of parents to commit to praying through a particular time of the year, such as breaks or during special events, like when the ministry is going to participate in a spring or summer mission. You could even ask a parent to oversee a team of parents and allow them to provide leadership and/or discipleship to this area of the ministry.

 

4) Respect Their Authority

I once reached out to a parent to introduce myself and asked if they had any questions. They told me they did not want their child involved with us. This is rare, but it does happen. In that case, give the parents your word you will not contact their child. Regardless of those parents’ reasoning, you need to respect their parental rights and encourage their son/daughter to respect their parent’s wishes too.

 

5) Communicate Clearly and Often

Let’s be honest, you cannot partner with someone with whom you do not communicate. Any true partnership starts and ends with clear and consistent communication. Most parents will feel valued when we make sure they know what is happening.

Here are some ways to communicate with parents:

  • Phone Calls are very helpful ways to establish trust with parents. Phone calls can be used to introduce yourself, inform a parent of an event, or just build a relationship. Making a phone call goes a long way in building trust.
  • Texting is a quick way to get out a small amount of information in a timely way. Parents often communicate with their kids in this way so they are aware of and attentive to texts coming in on their devices. You might consider creating a Whatsapp (or similar platform) messaging group for parents and guardians.
  • Snail Mail is a very effective way for building trust as well. Snail mail with a personal touch is huge in building a relationship with families. Examples would be a postcard saying you are praying for their family or a reminder of an upcoming event. Send a card when the family is experiencing loss, a move, or graduation.
  • Email a newsletter about what is happening with the ministry. Using something like Mailchimp will allow you to design letters, share them on social networks, and track your results. You will also be able to send info to a just one segment of your database of parents.
  • Meetings can be used periodically to welcome new parents or to start the school year. These are good when you need to give details about an upcoming mission trip or conference and if there is low relationship capital. Even if parents do not show up, having a meeting can help a parent/guardian see you are serious and professional.
  • The Cru website gives plenty of helpful information for parents wanting to know more. Click here to look it over to become familiar with what is on it.
  • Social Media is another great way to communicate with parents. Find out if most of the parents are on Facebook or Instagram or some other platform. Ask a parent to help begin connecting parents of involved students.
  • For events: Most parents feel better the more details they have. They are wondering, “Will my child be safe and well-supervised?” Make sure you can communicate who, what, where, and when, including start and end times.

Engaging parents/guardians is a must for a successful win, build, send ministry.

Not Sure Where to Start?

It is not always easy to start something new. It can be easy to get overwhelmed, but the following are some small steps to help you get started:

  • Ask yourself, “Who are the students with whom I spend the most time?” These are the parent you want to engage first.
  • If there are a lot of them, pray and narrow it down to five students.
  • Get the contact information of those five students’ parents and call them.
  • Introduce yourself using the script above or some variation of it.
  • If appropriate, ask them if you can buy them coffee or lunch sometime. If not, it could be just a five-minute connection when they pick up their child from school.
  • While you meet with them, try to gauge if a parent is open to further engagement.
  • From that point on, look to engage every time you see them.

Start small, then repeat. Soon it will be second nature to involve parents in your ministry.

Parents Help Us Win

Engaging parents/guardians is a must for a successful win, build, and send ministry. We are inviting students to live differently, and the parents who trust us will encourage and support students who want to follow Jesus. We know that engaging parents can feel quite daunting and possibly intimidating…but you can do it!

Next Step
Call a parent of your five most involved students to introduce yourself. Try to schedule in-person time with them while on the phone.

RECENT POSTS

The Claim Your Campus Prayer Strategy

CYC is an organization that exists to empower middle and high school students to pray for change on their campus. Their goal is to get one million students to claim their campus for Christ through prayer. CYC offers a phenomenal app you can check out here.

We encourage all campus movements to emphasize prayer and the Claim Your Campus app is a great way to engage students in prayer. Download it now to kickstart a movement of prayer on your campus!

5 Key Features of the Claim Your Campus App

Pray Now:
This section is designed to lead any student through a daily 15-minute prayer time for their school. The format is simple: Listen, Thank, Ask. Each day students read a passage of scripture, thank God for something specific He is doing in their school, and ask Him for help at their school and schools across the country.

21-Day Challenge:
Habits take time to build. The 21-Day Challenge can help you and your students build the habit of praying together daily.

Share Your Story:
Students from all over the country are using Claim Your Campus at their schools. This video feature gives students one minute to capture what God is doing at their school and then share it.

Groups:
Use the Groups section to form your own prayer group and/or join other groups. Students praying together in community for their school(s) is the foundation of CYC. The group feature keeps students connected, motivated, and encouraged to keep pressing on!

Prayer Walk Your Campus:
This feature describes how to prayer walk a campus in three easy steps. Invite. Pray. Report. It includes a brief tutorial and a downloadable prayer walk guide.

Social Media:
Stay connected through Tik Tok, Instagram, and Youtube pages; News and Updates can also be found in the app.

Cast the Vision: Prayer Equals Change

  • Use these videos to get excited about how God could change your campus through prayer and how He could use you to build a prayer movement at your school.
  • General Promo video
  • Marion School video

Invite Students to Be One in the Million

Students download the app using the QR code graphic & claim their campus!

We encourage all campus movements to emphasize prayer and the Claim Your Campus app is a great way to engage students in prayer.

4 Different Ways Students Can Claim Their Campus

  1. Start a Weekly Prayer Group. The CYC app provides prompts that change weekly.
  2. Host a prayer walk around your campus. The CYC app features a Prayer Walk Guide.
  3. Embed 5-10 minutes of Prayer into Your Weekly Cru Club Meeting. Build a CULTURE of prayer. CYC has done all the work for you. Click here for the Leader’s Guide and here for premade slides for up to 20 weeks. That is enough for an entire school year. CYC’s GRAB-N-GO resources make praying EASY.
  4. Participate in Annual National Events such as SYATP.

Invite the adults in your community to support SYATP by signing up for The Prayer Walk Project. This project offers a way for caring adults to join hands in prayer on the Saturdays before and after SYATP.

Prayer is the real power in any campus movement. Make it a non-negotiable in your ministry to emphasize prayer with adults and students and see how God moves.

Next Step

Download the Claim Your Campus app and consider how you could use it on your campus today. Do you have a prayer strategy for your plans? If not, send the app to a few student leaders and invite them to start praying for their campus!

DOWNLOAD THE APP
4 Ways to Prepare for a Prayer Walk
1
Prepare Your Heart

Surrender the Prayer Walk to the Lord. Ask the Lord for one or two scriptures to help prepare your heart. Jot them down. If you like, use them to inspire the people you invite, or share them with your team the day you meet to prayer walk. Pray for:

  • Divine appointments with people.
  • Connections with insiders at the school who are like-minded and willing to help.
  • God to guide your steps.
  • Open eyes to see the spiritual needs of the campus.
2
Prepare Your Team

Pray for Names. Ask the Lord to bring to mind specific names of students, volunteers, parents, pastors, and/or faculty you can ask to join your prayer walk. Keep in mind, this is not about numbers. Even one prayer partner is enough. Matthew 18:20 says, “Where two or three gather in my name, there I am with them.”

Invite the People
that He brought to mind. Decide what mode of communication is best: text? social media? phone call? Give them a brief description of what a prayer walk is and what they can expect that day. Share what has motivated you to gather a team to pray. Be sure to tell them the date, the start and end times, and the location. Give them an RSVP date.

Send them any final details
on the day before. Remind your team what time you will begin and end and the location to meet. Let them know what to bring and any adjustments needed due to weather or other factors.

(During a Prayer Walk) Pray for: Divine appointments with people. Connections with insiders at the school who are like-minded and willing to help. God to guide your steps. Open eyes to see the spiritual needs of the campus.

3
Prepare Your Campus

Check with an Insider at Your School. Once you choose your campus and gather your team, you may want to check with an insider at the school to see if there is anyone you need to notify ahead of time. Most likely, it will not be an issue if you are prayer walking after school or over the weekend on the parts of the campus that are open to the public. Avoid prayer walking on campus during school hours without permission.

4
Prepare Your Details

“WHO” DETAILS: By now, you know WHO is coming. But here are some other “WHO” questions to think about if you have a larger group. Who will…

  • begin the prayer walk (introduce/explain it)?
  • end the prayer walk?
  • lead smaller groups (if your team is large)?


“WHAT TO BRING” DETAILS
: You may want to bring copies of the Prayer Guide and the Leader Guide.

“WHERE/WHEN” DETAILS: Make sure everyone knows the date and time you will meet. Include starting point (address of meeting spot) and ending point (time and meeting spot).

“HOW” DETAILS: For your convenience, this Campus Prayer Walk Leader’s Guide provides a general flow and includes sample scripts of what to say from start to finish. If you can read it, you can lead it. But you may need to think through the unique needs of your prayer walk.

Would you like the prayer walk to be more casual or more organized? Do you have people who are comfortable prayer walking or more new people who may need more instruction?

You have prepared your part. Time to grab your walking shoes. Let’s do this!

Next Step
It is time to get on the campus to pray. Text one friend today and ask them if they would be willing to go to the school to prayer walk with you this week. Get your feet on the campus and pray together. Once you have done it yourself, it will be a lot easier to gather others to do it with you.
Prayer Walking

After the Israelites wandered for 40 years in the desert, God called Joshua to bring His people into the land He had promised them. The commander of the army of the Lord appeared to Joshua with instructions essentially for a prayer walk around the city of Jericho. And let’s just say the Israelites’ obedience to his words, made history. (If you are unfamiliar with this incredible story, you can read the whole story here.)

What is Prayer Walking?

Prayer walking is just what it sounds like—praying as you walk. And you can do it anywhere: around your neighborhood, through your city, or even on your daily commute. Invite others to join you! As you walk together, let the Spirit of God use what you see to guide your prayers. Then, trust God to respond in His perfect way and timing.

One of the most impactful places for a prayer walk is around a school campus that means something to you. It puts you right where the students are—like God’s boots on the ground—allowing you to connect your heart to that specific location as you pray. And who knows? It might even lead to a chance meeting with a key person on campus. Many ministries have started with a simple “Hey there!” to a student or administrator during a prayer walk. A casual stroll can open unexpected doors!

If you have never done this before, no worries! Joshua—the young leader from the Bible—had not done it before either. It was his willingness and availability to God that mattered most. And the same goes for you—no experience required!

Prayer walking is just what it sounds like—praying as you walk.

Prayer Walk in Three Easy Steps

Meet Up (5 minutes)

Grab a friend or two and meet on campus- ideally after school or on the weekend. Select and read a meaningful passage from the Bible together. Take a minute to pray a blessing over this time, and ask the Holy Spirit to guide your prayers.

Walk & Pray (10-20 minutes)

Start walking the perimeter of the campus and let the Holy Spirit use who/what you see guide your prayers. Here are 5 ways you could begin praying:

  • Ask God to move by His Spirit on this campus and be glorified.
  • Pray people here would hunger and thirst for God.
  • Pray for the believers here to live wholeheartedly for Jesus and make others feel seen, known, and loved by God.
  • Pray for leaders in this school’s community (students, parents, administration, faculty, coaches, etc.)

Wrap It Up (5 minutes)

Select a spot to close your time together. Talk about how it went. Was there anything that stood out as significant or meaningful? Take a few minutes to thank God for this time. Express your love for Him and your confidence that He will respond to the prayers He heard today.

Other Prayer Walking Guides

If you would rather have a more specific guide to help you in your prayer walk, try one below:

One of the most impactful places for a prayer walk is around a school campus that means something to you.

Why Do It?

Prayer Walking Knocks Down Walls

What effect did Joshua’s and the Israelites’ obedience have on the fortified and powerful ancient city of Jericho? Well, the God of the Universe infused their faith-filled feet with power, causing the otherwise insurmountable walls of the city to collapse. That’s how they fought and won the battle of Jericho—without ever throwing a punch!

Now, maybe you are not planning to tear down any physical walls around your school—in fact, let’s definitely avoid that! But in the spiritual realm, every school is a battlefield for souls. On every campus, there are barriers to the gospel that need to be broken down. Inside every person, there are walls that separate us from God or keep us from fully experiencing the abundant life He wants for us.

Looking for a more current example of a battle fought and won with prayer? Check out this powerful story of what happened when a group of students in Marion, Indiana consistently and prayerfully put feet to their faith and watched God win the battle for their campus. If you want to read about more victories won with praying feet, check out Exodus 14 and 2 Chronicles 20:1-30.

Some Other Great Reasons to Prayer Walk Your Campus

  • It is a place to gather other believers who have a heart for the campus.
  • It is a way to be on campus with a purpose.
  • Sometimes God uses these times to introduce us to key gatekeepers on campus.
  • It might surface some needs on the campus with which you could help.
  • It helps your team become more familiar with the campus and less fearful of going there.
  • It is better than doing nothing. Sometimes God moves when we take action.

 

Within the campus ministry of Cru, prayer walking has actually been shown to be the single most effective strategy in seeing new gospel movements started.
Dan Allen, Director of Mission Expansion

 

The powerful presence of God always has and STILL does mix with our prayers and supernaturally connects us more deeply to God, ourselves, and others. Prayer breaks down barriers that lie between us and wins the battle for souls.

Prayer walking can be your lead foot on any campus. Ready to grab a friend and step into the unknown with Him? Prayer walking is something anyone can do.

Next Step
Plan 15 minutes this week to stop at your local high school, walk around, and pray for the school. Bring a friend or do it alone; just get your feet on the campus and pray. Ask God to show you what next steps He would like you to take.

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