Technology for parishes is about relationships

Speakers at Villanova urge churches to integrate tools of 'Web 2.0'

Mar. 20, 2010
(Caroline Cerveny)
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PHILADELPHIA – Do you know what Web 2.0 is? If not, “Google,” said Sr. Caroline Cerveny.

In a talk on “Catechetics in the 21st Century,” Cerveny said there are hundreds of ways that parishes and their religious education programs can take advantage of Internet interactive computer and mobile device technology to advance their ministry.

Computers and mobile devices are about communication, interaction and relationships, and should be an integral part of life in today’s parish and its religious education programs, said Cerveny, a Sister of St. Joseph, Third Order of St. Francis.

Unfortunately, she added, in most parish religious education programs “teachers don’t have the training or the funds” to obtain such technological tools or use them effectively.

She suggested four levels of technology use for religious education:

  • Basic: a computer, screen, LCD projector and speakers.
  • Cyber: the basic elements plus an Internet connection.
  • Interactive: the basics and Internet plus SMART Board, an interactive whiteboard for classroom use.
  • Participatory: Interactive plus a computer lab or portable computers or mobile devices.

Caroline Cerveny, Sister of St. Joseph, Third Order of St. Francis (Barbara Johnston)Caroline Cerveny, Sister of St. Joseph, Third Order of St. Francis (Barbara Johnston)Cerveny and other speakers at a daylong parish technology summit Feb. 25 at Villanova University in Philadelphia offered a variety of ways that parishes can use today’s computer technology and electronic mobile devices to advance their mission and ministry, especially among youths and young adults. The summit was organized by the university’s Center for the Study of Church Management.

Among suggestions the speakers raised were:

  • Use Internet resources for religious education and sacramental preparation.
  • Put weekly bulletins, announcements and other parish news on the Web.
  • Put an electronic registration link on the home page of your parish Web site, inviting newcomers to join the parish and to submit e-mail and other contact information for follow-up.
  • Use webinars (Web seminars), blogs and other interactive Internet tools to replace tedious informational meetings, allowing busy parishioners to participate from home instead of spending an evening at the parish hall.
  • Use Web resources already out there for everything from daily scripture readings and meditation to Bible study, religious education and sacramental preparation.
  • Encourage electronically linked prayer groups.
  • Set and publicize volunteer ministry schedules, such as those for readers, greeters and eucharistic ministers at Mass, through the Web.
  • Use free and open-source software from the Web to create presentations and to edit images and video. Or even design classroom presentations from www.moodle.net, a free Web site created to help teachers exploit the educational possibilities of Internet technology.

Cerveny noted that Web 2.0 -- which garners 382 million hits in a Google search -- is not a new Internet but a term coined to reflect the increasingly easy social networking, sharing, two-way communication, collaboration and global reach, all made possible by advances in Internet-based technology, that are shaping the way youths and young adults communicate.

Think Facebook, YouTube, Flickr, MySpace or what has become the world’s most massive and accurate encyclopedia, Wikipedia.

Cerveny is president of Interactive Connections, which she founded recently to promote better Internet technology use in religious education and pastoral outreach. She invited Villanova participants involved in religious education to join www.digitalcatechesis.ning.com, a Web network of people working to advance effective use of technology in all areas of faith formation.

Notre Dame Sr. Susan Wolf (Barbara Johnston)Notre Dame Sr. Susan Wolf (Barbara Johnston)Notre Dame Sr. Susan Wolf noted that according to a recent Pew study, 93 percent of American teenagers and young adults have access to the Internet. Those numbers decline among people over 30, dropping to 38 percent among those over 65, she said.

Describing the rapidly expanding use of the Internet for church ministry and mission, she said that when she left parish ministry in Ohio in 2005 to join the Paulist National Catholic Evangelization Association in Washington, the association began its first online newsletter.

She said Paulist quarterly webinars for diocesan directors of evangelization attracted an average of about 50 people in the first year, but now they average about 600 people representing more than half the dioceses in the country.

Cerveny urged digital immigrants (age 40 and up) to get help from digital natives, those under 40 who grew up with computer technology, if they feel unable to cope with the growing flood of mobile devices and Internet applications that teenagers take for granted.

She showed a video clip of excited fifth-graders working together on a project with computers and mobile devices. “When did your religious ed class have that much fun?” she asked.

In a conversation with NCR between presentations, two speakers from diocesan offices for youth and young adult ministry -- Scott Miller of Baltimore and Paul Jarzembowski of Joliet, Ill. -- said that advances in Internet communication offer the church both new opportunities and challenges.

Miller said there is a vast field of resources available on the Web that can be tapped just by creating hyperlinks on a diocesan Web site. He cited the sources for spiritual reflection on Lent put out by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (www.usccb.org) as one example. He also said his archdiocesan youth and young adult ministry office (www.archbalt.org/young church) marked the papally proclaimed year of priests by posting a series of videos by young people saying what they liked about their parish priests.

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“This is about relationships,” Jarzembowski said of the new networking capabilities on the Internet. “Now people can communicate back” when they receive an announcement from their parish.

Wolf warned that technology is “a tool, not a cure” and that a lack of hospitality in a parish or a self-centered community will not improve just because they make better use of technology.

Miller struck a similar note when he warned about “false intimacy” on the Internet, saying that sending condolences on Facebeook about someone’s death is not really the same as attending the wake or funeral of the dead person and interacting personally with his or her relatives.

Technology can help Catholics sideline unimportant meetings and “concentrate on the important stuff ... keeping focused on worship and ministry,” he said, but he added that such an approach will work only if we steer them toward that primary focus on worship, mission and ministry.

[Jerry Filteau is NCR Washington correspondent.]

Stories in this parish series

Thanks for the lovely article

Thanks for the lovely article and photo of Sr. Caroline Cervany. The caption underneath the photo needs to be corrected...she is a Sister of St. Joseph, Third Order of St. Francis and her NAME is Sr. Caroline Cervany. (you had written Sr. Joseph, Sr. Caroline Cervany.) Thanks!

Truly, her last name is

Truly, her last name is Cerveny... two "e"s. "Caroline Cerveny SSJ" as per her Digital Catechesis NING siter: http://digitalcatechesis.ning.com/?xg_source=msg_mes_network

Thank you to NCR for covering

Thank you to NCR for covering an evolving area of interest in our ministry world today. As our students become ever more tech literate, we will need to figure out how to "walk their walk, and talk their talk" in order to be relevant in their everyday world - yes, even in the ministry world! For those who would like to learn more about this world, please visit my social bookmarking website http://www.delicious.com/ccerveny . There are many areas you may want to focus on. On the right side you'll see various tags. Note the Web 2.0 tag - with currently - 164 links. There is much to learn in this area.

And to the person who preceded this comment, thank you for calling attention to the full name of my community. Or in short, SSJ-TOSF!

For those who are interested in joining others to learn more about the faith-based educational technology world...which is different from the many administrative computer services that are also important to ministry...I invite you to join us for the 2nd INTERACTIVE CONNECTIONS Conference! Circle your calendar for January 31 (eve) - February 3, 2011. There will be a special parish day on Tuesday, February 1. Watch for program schedule and registration information in early August at - http://www.intconnect.org!

Thanks for an excellent

Thanks for an excellent article and the reminder to all of us of the absolute necessity of integrating technology into ministry. I have been "too busy" until recently to move to the next stage of WEB 2.0 and using social media and networking. Interactive and participative communication and education are the present and the future in education and in ministry. I have just gotten onto Facebook and use YouTube now regularly with undergrad theology courses--tremendous resource.

I have heard Sister Caroline Cerveny and she is on the cutting edge of technology and ministry--a real prophet and pioneer. The article encouraged me to use a 5 minute YouTube on Nick Vujicic as part of the homily for the Easter Lifeteen Mass. I appreciate the links she offered and also the creative possibilities for myself and those I teach in ministry formation classes to move into the 21st century with interactive technology. It is all about relationships!

Sister Caroline is at the

Sister Caroline is at the very forefront of integrating Web 2.0 platforms into practical catechetical exercises.

As one who grew up in the 1970's when CCD meant glueing macaroni to posterboards captioned with crayons and magic markers - I truly appreciate the possibilities that Web 2.0 activities represent for making contemporary catechesis relevant and interesting. Sister Caroline is a true pioneer in this area.

Sister Caroline is a pioneer

Sister Caroline is a pioneer in integrating web 2.0 platforms into contemporary Catechetics.

As one who grew up in the 1970's when attending CCD meant glueing macaroni to poster boards labeled with brightly colored magic markers - I can appreciate the possibilties that web 2.0 applications bring to bear in making catechesis fun, relevant, and interactive for todays youth.

Sister Caroline understands the necessity of communicating with the youth in their own languages (e.g. internet shorthand) and we ignore her instruction at our own peril.

Sr Caroline's understanding

Sr Caroline's understanding of the importance of integrating Web 2.0 platforms into parish-based catechetical programs is cutting edge. She is keenly in tune with the need to reach today's students in their native languages (like digital shorthand) and we ignore her instruction to our detriment.

As one who grew up in the 1970's when CCD meant cutting out pictures from magazines and glueing macaroni to make posterboard collages - I have a deep appreciation for Sister Caroline's advocacy for updating our educational tools to make them fun, interactive and relevant.

Keep up the good work Sister!

Thanks for the focus

Thanks for the focus balancing the importance of technology with the importance of parish hospitality. As a pastoral associate in a senior parish, with an average age of 80, I am happy to say that technology does have a place here; change is a big issue with seniors and though computer use is not widespread, we do have a parish web site with pictures/slide shows of parish events, birthday greetings to our centenarians, and links to internet sites as well as bulletins and other parish news. A percentage of our volunteer ministers receive their schedules by e-mail, and we have a high rate of approval for slide show meditations at special seasonal liturgies. Thanks, Sr. Caroline, for the encouragement to use all the tools at our disposal to advance the gospel to all ages.

As a former student of Sister

As a former student of Sister Caroline, I firmly believe she has her heart on the pulse of Cyberculture. She not only stresses the use of the technology to further religious education, but the more important use of technology to further our faith in Jesus Christ and the Catholic Church. It is the bottom line of faith in her presentations that sets her apart from others in her field.

Thank you Sister for saying yes to your call!!!

Sr. Caroline has been a real

Sr. Caroline has been a real blessing for the faith formation leaders of our diocese. She has challenged us to "read the signs of the times" in a whole new way and to harness the cyber possibilities for the catechesis of the people of God. Thank you, and your community of sisters that supports you in this very important work of catechesis for a cyberculture. Brian Lemoi Diocese of St. Petersburg

I was pleased with this

I was pleased with this article and the forward thinking it represents. We need as to embrace technology in all its forms to reach the young people of today! S Caroline is certainly doing that and I hope this initiative will catch on with all our dioceses. We truly don't want to miss the opportunity technlogy allows us presently.

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