Selected Product: | Hurt: Inside the World of Today's Teenagers (Youth, Family, and Culture) Paperback Author: Chap Clark Publisher: Baker Book House Release Date: 2004-10-01 ISBN-10: 0801027322 ISBN-13: 9780801027321 List Price: $16.99 Average Customer Rating: | | unChristian: What a New Generation Really Thinks about Christianity... and Why It Matters ISBN-10: 0801013003 ISBN-13: 9780801013003 List Price:$17.99 Disconnected: Parenting Teens in a MySpace World ISBN-10: 080106628X ISBN-13: 9780801066283 List Price:$12.99 Deep Ministry in a Shallow World: Not-So-Secret Findings about Youth Ministry (Youth Specialties) (Youth Specialties) ISBN-10: 0310267072 ISBN-13: 9780310267072 List Price:$18.99 Youth Culture 101 (Youth Specialties) ISBN-10: 0310273137 ISBN-13: 9780310273134 List Price:$19.99 Engaging the Soul of Youth Culture: Bridging Teen Worldviews And Christian Truth ISBN-10: 0830833374 ISBN-13: 9780830833375 List Price:$18.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Hurt: Inside the World of Today's Teenagers (Youth, Family, and Culture) by Chap Clark (ISBN-10: 0801027322, ISBN-13: 9780801027321). At this time we have not yet written a review for Hurt: Inside the World of Today's Teenagers (Youth, Family, and Culture) by Chap Clark (ISBN-10: 0801027322, ISBN-13: 9780801027321). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com What do teenagers really think about adults? If you think you know the answer, you may be in for a surprise. According to Chap Clark, today's adolescents have largely been abandoned by adults and left to fend for themselves in an uncertain world. As a result, teens have created their own world to serve as a shield against uncaring adults. Based on six months of participant-observer research at a California public school, this book offers a somewhat troubling but insightful snapshot of adolescent life. It will surprise and enlighten parents, youth workers, counselors, pastors, and all who want to better understand the hearts and minds of America's adolescents. best book on adolescents out there | Customer Rating: | | This is simply the best book on adolescents out there. If you are working with adolescents in any capacity, or have one, you should read this book to understand the world that they are living in. Once you understand the cultural situation they are in, you'll be more equipped to care, love, and minister to them. Definitely worth the read. | Hurt | Customer Rating: | | Awesome book! However, I find it hard to follow his writing at times because he's using a lot of technical terms. I think this book is very relevant to our teens today and you would be wise to take time to read it. | Eye-Opening | Customer Rating: | | This book was recommended to me by my youth pastor, and as a senior pastor I'm glad I've read it. If you thought you understood youth and their lifestyles, then think again. Chap Clark reveals that the youth of today are greatly different than the youth of twenty or even ten years ago. Combining hard sociological data with a Christian compassion for young people, the author enlightens anyone who comes into contact with teenagers. I strongly recommend this book to any parent, pastor, church leader, or other adult who is working with teens. We can't truly minister to younger generations until we've taken the time and effort to understand their unique needs and wants. Clark does an excellent job here of summarizing them both. | a book for every parent, or person who works with kids! | Customer Rating: | | Very sobering look at the state of adolecent thinking. Well researched and informative. A must read!! | Sociology, not theology | Customer Rating: | | I bought this book expecting to get a healthy dose of sociology along with some seriouse theological reflection on the sociological data. I was wrong. In my opinion this book was too heavy on sociology and too lite on theology. If Clark would've spent more time connecting the sociological conclusions to theological implications, the book would've been a gem. |
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