h/t Doug Fields
by D. Scott Miller | Sep 11, 2012 | Uncategorized | 1 comment
D. Scott Miller
D. Scott Miller is the dean of Catholic Youth Ministry bloggers which is a polite way of either saying that he is just plain old or has been blogging for a long time (since 2004.)
Scott recently married the lovely Anne and together they have five adult young people and also grandparent three delightful kids (so, maybe he is just plain old!) Scott presently serves at Saint John the Evangelist in Columbia, MD as the director of youth and young adult ministry.
He has previously served on the parish, regional, diocesan, and national levels as well as having taught within a catholic high school. He is one of the founders of RebuildMyChurch and has returned to posting regularly (keeping regular is important to old guys) at ProjectYM.
D. Scott Miller
D. Scott Miller is the dean of Catholic Youth Ministry bloggers which is a polite way of either saying that he is just plain old or has been blogging for a long time (since 2004.)
Scott recently married the lovely Anne and together they have five adult young people and also grandparent three delightful kids (so, maybe he is just plain old!) Scott presently serves at Saint John the Evangelist in Columbia, MD as the director of youth and young adult ministry.
He has previously served on the parish, regional, diocesan, and national levels as well as having taught within a catholic high school. He is one of the founders of RebuildMyChurch and has returned to posting regularly (keeping regular is important to old guys) at ProjectYM.
Just a comment from a (26-year-old) Millennial. Either I’m misreading it, or this chart is a little misleading, because it claims to speak about “today’s teens,” but actually bottoms out at 18 (except for the texting sections and some sections that are unmarked as far as age). Only the last few years of what the chart defines as “Millennial” (18-34) overlap with the phenomenon they’re talking about.
I DO remember before the Internet, ubiquitous cell phones, and constant connectivity. It’s really the generation *behind* the Millennials–the Digital Natives proper–who have no memory of our pre-plugged-in state. These current teens, a good ten years behind me or more, are a totally different breed.
That said, hurray for infographics! :]