I never know just how much “Snack” to put into these Snack Packs.
This week I put pictures of perfect coincidences, pixelated wooden faces, the choice between Hulu and Netlflix, a crocheted human skeleton and some Tweets on the side.
The #1 Resource for Church Technology Creativity & New Thinking
by Allison Dye
I never know just how much “Snack” to put into these Snack Packs.
This week I put pictures of perfect coincidences, pixelated wooden faces, the choice between Hulu and Netlflix, a crocheted human skeleton and some Tweets on the side.
by Allison Dye
How can Churches help close the Homework Gap?
We have talked about the Homework Gap here and here on ChurchMag, and as someone who has experienced both bad and good internet connections, I know that I’m privileged to have even had an internet connection in the first place.
5 million families with school aged children do not have access to high speed internet at home.
Below I have three ways that churches can begin to help close the Homework Gap.
[Read more…] about 3 Ways Your Church Can Help Close the Homework Gap
by Allison Dye
While I see the video game world has changed and is continuing to change, despite the fact that 48% of gamers are female, there is still some belief lingering that video games are just for boys. Why is that?
In this Adam Ruins Everything video, Adam tells how Nintendo’s early marketing plan resulted in video games being targeted towards just one gender.
[Read more…] about Why People Think Video Games Are Just For Boys [Video]
by Allison Dye
It’s time for your weekly Snack Pack, from an icy moon possibly leading to another universe, to an egg that’s now famous, with a cute plush turtle in between– that’s not even all of it. Let me just let you enjoy your snack.
by Allison Dye
Happy FRY-day!
This week’s Snack Pack doesn’t really have fries for you, but it does have some embroideries that may make you hungry, a snowman robot, some tips for improving those New Year resolutions, and more!
by Allison Dye
In the video below, John Green talks about how in the early 1990s, his home got internet for the very first time. He shares how it felt and what he thought. He remembers his dad saying, “Look the internet can show you what the weather is like right now in Beijing!”
I don’t remember when my home first got internet because for as long as I can remember, we’ve always had it. Maybe that’s why I find this video interesting. For me, imagining not having internet is like imagining what it would be like to be without running water. Maybe, that’s exaggerating, or maybe I rely too much on the internet, but it has become a necessary utility, if not a vital one. I take for granted that I can check any time what the weather is like in Beijing, or any other place in the world just like I take for granted that I can use running water whenever I need it.