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10 Hour Value Projects
I was looking through
my files and came across a booklet we put together for our YW many years ago, it
was before the new Person Progress Program came out. BUT is still works for the
new program. It is call "The Personal Project Value Booklet" To see the
whole booklet and to print in click here.
Below is a list that was once
called "Laurel Projects" But there are some great ideas that can be used for
value projects, they are not listed per value, but I am sure you can figure out
what value they would go in. Maybe some day when I have extra time, I will list
the values they would go with. And some may need a little more added to them to
make then 10 Hour Projects, but it will get the girls thinking.
1. Organize & carry out a family reunion.
2. Organize and lead a ward youth choir.
3. Create and make a collection of your own writings, musical compositions, or
graphic artwork.
4. Give consistent help over a period of time to a family or individual in your
ward with special needs.
5. With the approval or member of the bishopric, organize and carry out a
mission preparation experience for the young men and young women in your ward.
6. Organize and implement a scripture-reading incentive program for your class.
You may want to invite the young men to participate.
7. Write and direct a dramatic presentation that portrays a gospel theme and
involves children or youth in your ward.
8. Create a children's game that will help a child learn a principle of the
gospel, such as making correct choices.
9. Learn about or develop a system for organizing information or materials and
begin your own system.
10. Complete a certain first-aid course, including CPR training, and serve as a
volunteer in teaching first-aid skills.
11. Learn signing for the deaf and teach a song to your young women group to
perform in Sacrament Meeting. If there is a deaf branch near you, you may ask
for permission to assist on a primary lesson or help teach a group of deaf
children the 13 Articles of Faith.
12. Teach reading or language skills to someone in need of help.
13. Serve as a volunteer guide or docent in a community park, museum, or zoo for
at least three months. Share the knowledge you have acquired as a result of your
service.
14. Plan and care for a vegetable garden or maintain your family's or someone
else's yard for three months without pay.
15. Prepare and conduct a preschool or nursery class as a service for younger
children.
16. Organize sewing or other home skills class for younger children.
17. Serve as a volunteer in a hospital, nursing home, day-care center, or other
community social service institution.
18. Prepare 72-hour kits for each member of your family and present a FHE lesson
on emergency preparedness. Help plan a family emergency plan.
19. Organize and carry out a substance abuse prevention program in your school
or community.
20. With the approval of your bishop and the mission president responsible for
you area, work with full-time sister missionaries on a regular basis.
21. With the approval of a member of the bishopric, organize and conduct a
cultural arts event for your ward or community. Coordinate this activity with
the ward calendar through you Young Women President.
22. Put together a "Plan for College" evening or Saturday afternoon for the
young men and young women with sessions on college preparation, scholarships,
high school academics and other associations (clubs, etc.), study habits,
budgeting, cooking, etc.
23. Make something that could be of value to your posterity such as a piece of
needlework, a family flag, a coat of arms, or a quilt.
24. Plan and complete a personal history on each parent, and all your
grandparents. Type them up nicely and present them as gifts to other family
members.
25. Write your own personal history.
26. Work with parents to prepare names for temple work.
27. Find stories of experiences, personalities, etc. of ancestors and put
together a book of ancestral history that takes a more personal look into their
lives.
28. Record children's stories on tape and make puppets or flannel board
characters to go along with stories. Donate to a children's hospital or domestic
abuse shelter.
29. Plan and organize a service day for a youth group where you can go serve in
different places for different people.
30. Put together activity kits or trick-or-treat bags with treats in it for
children. Deliver to low-income youth center or domestic abuse shelter.
31. Plan and organize a blanket or coat drive at a time other than the holiday
season.
32. Plan and organize a drive for a homeless shelter for household items such as
towels, dishes, appliances, sheets, etc.
33. Make a "this is your life" quilt for you, a parent, a church leader or an
"appreciation" quilt for the bishop, stake president or stake patriarch.
34. Volunteer at a service center.
35. Volunteer at a veterinarian's office or the Humane Society.
36. Make baby quilts to take to hospitals for women on welfare.
37. Organize a children's used video drive to donate to a children's hospital,
homeless or domestic abuse shelter.
38. Plan and organize Family Home Evenings for an entire year. Plan lesson
topics, spiritual thoughts and songs. If you have younger brothers and sisters
put together flannel board stories, etc.
39. Learn to sew and make some baptismal clothes for the ward.
40. Take a class to improve a talent such as singing, dance, piano lessons, etc.
Maybe organize a night where you and other young women could share their
talents.
41. Put together a tutoring program for children in the ward.
42. Plan and organize a children's "Olympics" in your ward. Talk to the Primary
president and ask for names of children who are less active or are struggling.
Make it a whole day event. Plan fun events and have awards at the end. Make sure
each group gets an award of some kind. You could make the events gospel related.
43. Pick a personal challenge (spiritual or physical) and set up a
progress/program to strengthen yourself in that area. Organize and come up with
a game plan to go by for at least 3 months. Make a visual display to remind
yourself. Write about it in your journal as you go along.
44. Spend at least 20 hours studying different material about the life of the
Savior. Put together a presentation and present it at a fireside for the youth.
Write about your feelings in your journal as you go along.
45. Read the whole Book of Mormon. As you read it keep a record in a notebook of
each chapter or section and what you learned as you go along. Make it as
detailed as possible. Keep an ongoing record also of your favorite scripture
references, by topic and file in a small file box for easy reference. On each
3X5 card write reference, write out scripture or key words, and why it stood out
to you.
46. Read the whole Doctrine & Covenants and do the same as above.
47. Learn how to crochet or quilt. Make 1st college blanket, make 1st wedding
quilt, or make 1st baby blanket for yourself or for someone else.
48. Put together a family cookbook with favorite recipes. Give to family members
as gifts. Familiarize yourself with the recipes and learn to make them as you go
along.
49. Learn how to can fruit.
50. Learn how to stencil, wallpaper and paint. Redo a room in your house.
51. Provide free babysitting for 6 months for a couple every other week for them
to go to the temple or on a date. Plan activities for the children. If age
appropriate, activities could teach them about the temple.
52. Provide babysitting for the nursery for Homemaking for 6 months. Plan
activities for the children.
53. Make finger puppets for a children's hospital. When they prick fingertips,
they like to give them a finger puppet because they do it so often. Children's
Hospital in Seattle goes through 50 each day.
54. Make bags that fit over the back of a wheelchair. Donate to a children's
hospital. They are always in need of them.
55. Schedule and plan specific times at a domestic abuse shelter or homeless
shelter for the children to make Christmas ornaments and the moms could do a
craft. On other months besides Christmas you could do other crafts, stories or
skits.
56. Plan and organize a swimsuit drive or make swimsuits for a children's
hospital. They do therapy and have other activities in the pool. Always in need
of them!!
57. Learn to knit and knit booties for babies at a children's hospital, homeless
shelter, domestic abuse shelter or any hospital. Always a need for these!!
58. Sew onesies for babies at a children's hospital.
59. Sew flannel receiving blankets for babies at a children's hospital.
60. Sew little outfits to give to parents of premature babies.
61. Organize a book drive for homeless shelters or hospitals. Children's
hospitals are always in need of paper-back and regular books for kids of all
ages. Teenagers included.
62. Volunteer at Deseret Industries for 20-30 hours (or at a Salvation Army).
63. Call LDS or regular bookstores and donate time.
64. Call local child care places and ask if there is a need for certain items.
Maybe you can volunteer your time to read or do a craft. Maybe there is
something you could make for them of help them prepare (cut-outs, etc.).
65. Volunteer your time to go visit an elderly person in our ward on a regular
basis. Offer to do housework or just sit and talk.
66. Offer to do Personal History for an elderly person in ward. Interview them,
get it organized and type it up for them.
67. Offer to organize things such as photos or paper work for elderly person in
ward.
67. Learn to do woodworking and make yourself a hope chest.
68. Offer free babysitting around the holidays so families can do their
shopping.
69. Create a family newsletter for a year and distribute to all relatives every
3 months. Check with all of them for ongoing events in everyone's lives. Have
one person each month send in a spiritual message on a certain subject. Example,
have Uncle Joe send you his message on "The Joys of Freedom" for the July
newsletter. You could have crossword puzzles, thoughts, funny quotes, funny
memories, announcements, etc.
70. With the approval of the Primary President and YW Leader, serve as a helper
in Primary in making visual aids and other class materials. Help w/Achievement
Day or other Primary activities.
71. Plan and organize a fun night of songs and funny skits for a domestic abuse
shelter or nursing home. Call local florists and see if they would donate
flowers. Put together little booklets called "Messages of Hope" for the women.
In the booklet put quotes on hope, courage, and determination from church
leaders. Coordinate w/everyone what they are doing. Make sure you have some fun
songs and skits but also some that will touch their hearts, i.e. You're Not
Alone, Walk Tall, etc. Get permission to make little loaves of banana bread for
the moms and little goody bags for the kids.
72. Call around to athletic clothing distributors and see if anyone will donate
plain baseball caps. Send a sign-up sheet around in R.S. and ask women in ward
to donate things to decorate them with (pom-poms, wiggly eyes, pipe cleaners,
silk flowers, ribbon, little army guys, small plastic dinosaurs, fabric paint,
patches, etc.) Make "Happy Hats" and deliver to children at domestic abuse
shelter, homeless shelter, or children's hospital.
73. Learn to crochet and crochet afghan squares for the Red Cross "Warm Up
America" Program. They will put the blankets together; they just need people to
make the squares (7"x9" rectangle). For information call (704) 824-7838, or
Warm Up America!
c/o Craft Yarn Council 2500 Lowell Rd.
Gastonia, NC 28054
74. Organize a blood drive.
75. Read the "Miracle of Forgiveness," look up every scripture you can find on
repentance and forgiveness, keep a journal while doing so, and make some
personal goals between you and your Father in Heaven for 3 months. Make a visual
reminder.
76. Learn to cross-stitch and make a picture of your favorite temple or a family
tree.
77. Make a "Journal Jar" for each member of your family, including yourself.
Encourage everyone to start his or her own personal history. Gather all the info
at the end of a year and put everyone's history into one big family one.
78. With your Bishop's approval, learn all the missionary discussions by heart
and offer to go on splits w/the ward and stake missionaries for 4 months when
they are teaching women.
79. Choose a career field in which you have interest. Contact someone in that
field and volunteer your time to learn about that specific field.
80. Make a "friendship quilt". Hand out fabric squares to your friends, have
them decorate them and give them back to you. Make a quilt to help you remember
each friend through the years.
81. Plan and organize a "Parent's Prom" for the couples in your ward. Collect
high school pictures of them, vote on a king and queen, play their favorite
music, etc.
82. Make barrettes or hair scrunchies for at the temple or temple clothes for
children being sealed to their parents.
83. Learn about cars and help fix one up.
84. Put together an *Individual Worth" photo album. You can focus on your
strengths, talents, etc. Mix in with the photos some of your favorite scriptures
and thought.
85. Plan and carry out New Beginnings
When I was a Laurel, I wrote a play (one act about 20-25 minutes) and put it on
with another Laurel and a little girl from primary for a fireside one Sunday.
86. Get a book of cross-stitch patterns from the church bookstore (I've even
seen the book on the internet for sale) and cross-stitched all the values and
meanings and the theme and pictures of the torch and each class's picture. Then
I made it into a quilt using the young women colors as borders. I still sleep
under that quilt!
87. Put on a prom for the ward's married couples, complete with pictures.
88. One YW did a years worth of family home evenings, with all the flannel board
pictures and props.... tons of work, but what a wonderful resource for her
future family as well as her present one.
89. One Laurel is teaching a 9-year-old boy to read.
90. Give piano lessons.
91. Coach or run a tournament for a YW sport.
92. Do a babysitting service project--so couples could go to the temple.
93. Help make awards, binders, bookmarks, or other YW memorabilia for the
incoming Beehives or upcoming activities.
94. Make pretty value-colored posters for the values, value statements, and
related scriptures.
95. Make tablecloths out of the value colors for the young women's room
96. Make a craft or room decoration which includes all of the young women colors
for each young woman in the ward. When a young woman finishes that value, she
gets an item of the matching value color. This may encourage the girls to think
about what she still must do to complete her year's experiences.
97. Plan an all-night scripture-a-thon. Plan different characters from the
scriptures to visit throughout the night/evening and different discussions to
keep everyone awake and focused on the reading.
98. Have a clothing drive. Make boxes to place around the building and asked
members donate the clothes. Launder, separate, and fold all the donations. Take
them to a shelter. (Check first with the shelter first to determine needs, etc.)
99. Organize a service project to benefit a home for pregnant girls. Make a
quilt for each baby that will be born soon. Provide seasonal decorations to make
the home more cozy and throw a seasonal party. If there are also children living
there, provide activities or crafts for them at the party.
100. I have given my Laurels the choices of putting together the various special
activities throughout the year (New Beginnings, YW in Excellence), and one of my
Laurels did a Super Saturday activity (our ward was in charge of the activity,
and she had a great idea, so we let her do it). They always come up with such
creative ideas!!! You could put one in charge of a fireside, a weekday
activity--someone said they had about 10 mini-activities to let the girls see
some ideas for full-blown activities, and then they took 2 or 3 of those
activities a week and let the girls do more involved projects.
101. Then there's the "make something for someone needy" activities: e.g. making
quilts, teddy bears, toiletry kits and getting book donations for the local
S.O.S shelter; making quilts for the homeless shelter; work in the local soup
kitchen x amount of hours; making quilts and baby clothes for the hospitals to
hand out; gathering donations for the thrift shops; etc. There's also doing yard
work for a shut-in; helping people move into or out of the ward (mostly setting
up volunteer schedules); visiting a local nursing home (or setting up a ward
service project for a local nursing home, doing yard work, visiting the
residents, having the primary make drawings and sing songs, etc.) 102. Plan a
youth temple trip (rides, accommodation, lunch, etc., etc.).
103.Learn to quilt, knit, crochet, cross-stitch, etc. and complete a project.
104.One of our girls had lived in Europe and wanted to prepare a scrapbook of
her experiences there.
105. Write an YW or YW/YM newsletter monthly for a specified length of time.
Distribute it to all the youth.
106. Learn and practice a homemaking skill such as cooking or sewing. (20 hours
worth should teach them well)
107. Plan an YW retreat for the ward.
108. Work on genealogy at you local family history center. Computerize your
family records on PAF or do research yourself. Prepare names for the temple and
do the work.
109. Learn a musical instrument and perform at YW in excellence.
110. Compile a cookbook or favorite recipes from ward members.
111. Learn to paint or wallpaper.
112. Maintain a garden for a season.
113. Tutor a younger person in a subject you are good at.
114. This one is almost completed by one of our girls: transpose favorite YW
music into sing able keys! We purchased many copies of "I walk by faith" and
received permission from the publisher to transpose a pianist copy because we'
ve got a room full of altos. This girl comes to my house on Sunday afternoons to
use my computer music program. It has been really nice to use some of that music
that they would otherwise screech and giggle through.
115. Make a year's worth of personal progress reminders and handouts for YW.
116. Our Laurel class made arrangements to go to the children's ward of a
hospital on a monthly basis and decorate for the different holidays. For one
weekday activity we would make the decorations, and then on Sunday we would take
them to the hospital to put up on the walls. We did this for about 7 months.
117.We also have had several different service projects where we sewed bibs for
a women's shelter and have gone to the local food bank and also the bishop's
storehouse.
118.Spend time at the dog/cat pound doing service there and taking care of
animals
119. Planning and implementing a large all-day free babysitting activity a few
weekends before Christmas so that parents in the ward can go Christmas shopping
w/o little ones afoot (includes snack preparation, planning the day's
activities, assigning other YW to take part of the assignments, making Christmas
presents for the parents, lunch, taking pictures for the parents to see later,
etc.)
120. Planning and implementing a canned food drive in the community Gathering
clothes to be taken to Mexico (pick-up, cleaning clothes, sorting by size,
gender, seasons; packing and delivery to appropriate people in the community)
121. Providing a large family with the "12 Days of Christmas" anonymously, of
course!
122. Making baby quilts and presenting these to new mothers in the ward along
with "baby baskets" filled with essential baby items
123. Organizing a YW choir Providing a summer's worth of service at a home for
young children with physical and mental disabilities.
124. Writing a Sacrament Meeting Program to be "performed" (probably not the
most reverent word for a Sacrament Meeting) by the youth (a Laurel did the Book
of Mormon as her themeIf you contact SLC ask them about it. The girls can put
together new baby kits, crochet leper bandages, etc. The church can give you all
the specifics.
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