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Rally Day 2008 April 8 Honoring Godly Servant Leaders, Home Educators, Michael, Julie, Jesse and Hannah Welch who went to be with Jesus together, serving others, just like they lived their lives Our Rally will feature Special Guest Speakers John Revell Co-Author of Sinful Silence: When Christians Neglect Their Civic Duty,
Assistant Editor of SBC LIFE, the official journal of the Southern
Baptist Convention Executive Committee, Former Pastor in New York and
Florida speaking to us on Restoring The Standard & Will Estrada Director of Generation Joshua Will
is a homeschool graduate from Pennsylvania and the eldest of eight
children. He began working for HSLDA in January of 2004 as a legal
assistant for Staff Attorney Scott Woodruff. After graduating from Oak
Brook School of Law with a Juris Doctorate in May 2006, he moved to
HSLDA's federal lobbying arm as the Director of Federal Relations. As
HSLDA's representative on Capitol Hill, Will has used his enthusiasm
for homeschooling to passionately advocate for homeschool freedoms
before Congress and the various Federal Departments that impact
homeschooling. Under his leadership, HSLDA re-instituted the
Congressional Action Program, CAP, to train local homeschooling
families to be able to lobby effectively on Capitol Hill on the issues
that affect homeschoolers. Will
has a passion to not only equip parents but young people as well to
become effective advocates for the values that are important to
homeschooling families and our nation. Will is married to a homeschool
graduate, Rachel, and they live in Northern Virginia. Announcing THEA’s 2008 Capitol Hill Rally and Reception Day, Tuesday, April 8th On
Rally Day 2008, Tennessee Home Education Association, THEA,
www.tnhea.org, will again highlight, three great Speech and Debate
opportunities for Tennessee homeschoolers provided by our sister
organization, Christian Communicators of Tennessee, CCT,
www.cctennessee.org, Download the printer friendly version of Rally Day
2008 here. WHY
does the THEA Board Host Rally Day? All year dues are collected with
THEA receiving $9 from each membership. Thousands of families join and
it takes every one of you. Then in one day, Rally Day, we spend
between1/3 and 1/2 of the year's budget. WHY,
you ask? So you will come to Nashville, TN and put a face on home
schooling with your two legislators. That's right. You've got two, a
Representative and a Senator, who are in Nashville representing you.
It's like you were sitting in that seat in the House or Senate pushing
that button for YES or for NO. They push it for you. They represent
you. We've
had people who already knew these legislators telling them that
homeschoolers were bad. Our plan then is to ask you to come to
Nashville and meet with them. That's right. Our whole plan is to get
you here so you will meet with them. Then they'll know that they have
homeschoolers in their district. Let
them know that they are your State Representative or State Senator.
(Use these links to find your two state representatives.) It really
helps them. They can campaign for their next election without having to
leave their office. For many of you this is old hat. You've been here every year since 1985 meeting with your legislators. Whether you've been there once or twenty times please take a couple of minutes to click and tell us your family's story, so we can use that to encourage other families to create their story, too. Terry Bonham is the homeschool Dad and professional photographer who will be taking photos of Rally Day. Terry's image hosting site may be reached at the following address: www.exquisite.smugmug.com Click on the THEA Gallery and you will be there. Photos for Rally Day 2008 may be purchased directly from the site. Images will be available in approx. two weeks following Rally Day so don't go to the site too early. Terry Bonham can be reached personally at this e-mail address: terrybonham@hotmail.com. Rally Day Details A bit about Rally Day The
complete name of this event is the THEA Capitol Hill Rally &
Reception Day. THEA rents the War Memorial Auditorium, WMA, which is an
auditorium built to memorialize WWI veterans of TN. It is a part of the
Legislative Plaza complex across the street from the Capitol building
in Nashville. Our program in the WMA begins with Prelude music at 8:45
and concludes around 11:30. For more info, go to our web site at
www.tnhea.org. Here's
a map of Capitol Hill:
http://www.legislature.state.tn.us/info/CapitolArea.jpg. click on the
map to enlarge it. The War Memorial Building is identified on this map
as "WM". The front doors into the WMA foyer will be unlocked to the War
Memorial building at 7:15 a.m. on Tuesday morning, however the loading
doc on 7th Ave. will open at 7:00 a.m. For our purposes, this map is
upside down. If you were in the Capitol Building, you would look across
Charlotte Ave., across Union Ave. to downtown Nashville (hoping to give
you your bearings). The
War Memorial Building houses the War Memorial Auditorium, built to
memorialize WW I veterans. The entrance to the Auditorium is from the
courtyard which you access from steps in the middle of the block of 7th
Ave or from 6th Ave.you cross the fountain-covered plaza in from of the
Capitol Building, walk up the steps to the courtyard with the bronze
statute and to the entrance doors on your left. Downtown Nashville Parking The
first parking facility we would recommend is the Main Library Garage,
listed above, located at 151 6th Ave. N., charging $6/day for parking. On
the map, http://www.parkitdowntown.com/maps/, this garage is located
behind the Main Public Library. The drive in entrances to the garage
are on Sixth and Seventh Avenues between Church and Commerce Streets.
They charge $6/day which is a good price in the downtown area. If
you park there you are just two blocks from the Legislative Plaza. You
can walk through the Main Library to reach Church Street, and then walk
up Capitol Blvd. to Union, go to your right to the corner of Union
& 6th. Cross Union, walk up 6th Ave., taking the steps on your left
to the fountain-covered Plaza, up the next steps to the War Memorial
Building entrance. The
second covered garage is the McKendree Center, 140 6th Avenue N.,
charging $8/day, $4/hour, $2 each 1/2 hr. $8 - 1 & 1/2 hr to close.
$8 daily max., also 2 blocks from the Legislative Plaza. On the parking
map it is the purple block located next to and just south of the Main
Library and next to the larger purple block which is the Main Library
Parking Garage mentioned above. McKendree takes only cash or check
payment, no credit or debit cards. There is another covered garage at 145 7th Avenue N., charging $5/day. It takes only credit card payment. You
can find these and many more on the map at:
http://www.parkitdowntown.com/maps. On this map the blue spots are
surface lots and the purple spots are covered garages. For more info on
downtown parking locations, see:
http://www.parkitdowntown.com/parking/.
The Davy Crockett Statesman’s Debate Competition: Compete to be a Senator in our State Senate Chamber on Capitol Hill Student
Congress Competition: THEA & CCT will jointly host a two-day event
for Rally Day beginning with the Davy Crockett Statesman’s Debate
Competition, a Student Congress Competition for homeschool students
ages 11 + up. Two Preliminary Rounds on Monday, April 7th on the Campus of Free Will Baptist Bible College On
Monday, April 7th, THEA & CCT will host two Preliminary Rounds of
the Davy Crockett Statesman’s Debate Competition on the campus of the
Freewill Baptist Bible College, www.fwbbc.edu. The schedule for Monday
is: 7:30 Student Check-in & Judges' Orientation, 7:45 Student
Orientation, 8:00-11:30 Session 1, 11:30-1:00 Lunch Break (Judges'
Orientation @ 12:30), 1:00-4:30 Session 2. Freewill
Baptist Bible College will allow us eat in their on-campus cafeteria.
We can eat at their cafeteria, where they always serve a hot meal,
sandwiches and a salad bar. The cost per meal is $4.00 per person
regardless of the items selected. FWBBC wants a head-count of how many
of us will go through their lunch line, so on the on-line Competition
registration form there is a way to indicate whether you & your
family members will be eating from their offerings. Please indicate if
you are planning to eat at the FWBBC cafeteria. Do not send your lunch
fee to the Tournament registration; this is just for a head-count for
FWBBC. FWBBC has also opened the cafeteria for those of us who bring our own lunches to sit at their tables. Senators Qualifying for the Final Round The
announcement of those student Senators who break to the Final Round of
the Tournament will occur during Rally Day ceremonies in the War
Memorial Auditorium, WMA, on Tuesday, April 8th. The WMA Rally on
Tuesday begins at 8:45 a.m. and concludes at 11:00 a.m. Registration Registration
for the Davy Crockett Statesman’s Debate Competition opens on Thursday,
February 28th. The Registration is on a first come, first served basis,
however if possible we want to include all registrants. The number of
competitors will be determined by the number of rooms available to us
at Freewill Baptist Bible College. Registration is done on the
Christian Communicators of Tennessee web site, from the Student
Congress link. To register, go to www.cctennessee.org, and click on the
Student Congress link. The
registration fee is $20 per participant, with a maximum of $50 per
family. The registration fees help defray the costs of printing,
awards, and Judge’s gifts. For those families who are not members of
THEA there will be an additional $10 fee. You must register from the
CCT web site. Once you complete your registration form, print it out
and mail it with your check, made out to CCT, to the address on the
form. You will not be officially registered until your monies are
received. Submitting Bills & Resolutions for the Tournament Once
you have registered, you can submit your bills and resolutions in the
proper format from the Student Congress and bills/resolutions links on
the CCT web site. Submission of bills and resolutions begins on
Thursday, February 28th. The bills and resolutions will then be
reviewed by CCT and THEA. The bills and resolutions selected and
approved by CCT and THEA to be debated in the Davy Crockett Statesman’s
Debate Competition will be posted on the CCT web site on Monday, March
17th. So watch for that listing at CCT. You
do not have to submit a bill or resolution to participate, although
your potential to compete is reduced. To debate and discuss these bills
you will need to review them, determine your position on the issues
involved, study the issues, and find, prepare and bring evidence to
support your positions. This is the way to prepare to debate and vote
for or against the bills. If
one of your bills or resolutions is chosen to be debated, you will make
an authorship speech at the podium facing the Senator's seats or desks.
This spot is referred to as the "well". Authorship Speeches can last no
more than 3 minutes. To speak in favor of or against a bill or
resolution the Senator stands at their desk or seat and can only speak
for 2 minutes. If a Senator makes a motion, they do not have to come to
the well, but can make their motion from their seat. Final Round of the Davy Crockett Statesman’s Debate Competition in the Senate Chamber on Capitol Hill As
noted above, those student Senators who qualify for the Final Round of
the Tournament will be announced during the Rally Day program in the
War Memorial Auditorium on Tuesday, April 8th. See Rally info above. The
Final Round will take place in the our state Senate Chamber in the
Capitol Building on Tuesday afternoon, April 8th, beginning at 1:00
p.m. and concluding at 4:30 p.m. The Chamber can seat 33 Senators, so
we will have 33 homeschool students moving to this Final Round from the
two Preliminary Rounds on Monday at Freewill Baptist Bible College. If
you do not have a student participating as a Senator in this
Tournament, we invite you to come over to the Senate Chamber and
observe all or a portion of the Final Round of the Davy Crockett
Statesman’s Debate Competition from the upstairs gallery of the Senate
Chamber. Perhaps you are interested or your children are interested in
this event. Come and learn about Student Congress. You can come and go
and watch as much as you like, but, please, come and go quietly. Take
a virtual look at the Senate Chamber where the Davy Crockett
Statesman’s Tournament will take place April 8th by clicking here, then
click Senate, then Video Streaming. Once
again, we invite Tennessee home school students, members of THEA, to
participate in this special opportunity to compete in the Davy Crockett
Statesman’s Debate Competition at Freewill Baptist Bible College with
the Final Round in the Tennessee State Senate Chambers on Capitol Hill.
Please
note that the Davy Crockett Statesman’s Debate Competition, because it
is a lengthy competition, will take place on both Monday, April 7th
with two Preliminary Rounds taking place at the Freewill Baptist Bible
College and the Final Round taking place after the WMA Rally on
Tuesday, April 8th in the Senate Chambers on Capitol Hill. Information on Student Congress from the National Forensics League: www.nflonline.org The
National Forensics League, NFL, the public and private high school
debate league, describes Student Congress as an individual debate in a
large group setting. Legislative debaters research and write pieces of
legislation that they feel will better the society in which we live,
just like our state and U.S Senators. At a tournament, debaters will
then speak on the legislation while using proper parliamentary
procedure. Judges score each competitor based on argumentation ability,
speaking technique, knowledge of parliamentary procedure, and overall
participation. Each
session of Congress will be led by a student Presiding Officer. The
Presiding Officers will be selected from the registrants. Preference
will be given to high school seniors who have already competed as
Presiding Officers in previous Student Congress Competitions. Then high
school juniors and younger students will be considered. The
National Forensics League web site provides great instruction and
coaching tips for those participating in this event, including "A
Beginner's Resource for Congress Competitors", "Student Congress
Helps", "A Congress Handout" which includes guidelines and advice for
preparing for and participating in Congress, and "Legislative
Brainstorming Hand-out" which guides Congress debaters to brainstorm
arguments. All of these documents can be downloaded from the NFL web
site. Understanding Parliamentary Procedure You
will also need to understand parliamentary procedure, which are the
operative rules for governing legislative bodies, including Student
Congress. Here’s a list of the most frequently used parliamentary
motions from the National Forensic League web site. Robert’s Rules of
Order, available at bookstores, is the widely used book on
parliamentary procedures. The procedures used by the Tennessee State
Senate can be found here. Student
Senators are judged on the delivery of their speech, its organization,
content, logic, documented support, oral and physical presentation and
style. To see a sample of the Ballot for judging the Student
Congressperson, click here. Our
Judges will be from the community. We hope to have some of our state
legislators, along with Will Estrada, Director of Generation Joshua and
an attorney, judging for us. Homeschool students knowledgeable of
parliamentary procedure will be serving as parliamentarians for each of
the Congress Chambers. Two Middle Tennessee Student Congress Coaching Opportunities Two
up-coming Middle Tennessee Student Congress coaching opportunities are
planned. On Wednesday, February, 27th from 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon,
Suzanne Myhre will coach interested homeschool students in the details
of this event at the Franklin home of Cynthia Griffin. For information
about directions to her home, e-mail Cynthia at
cynthiagriffin@comcast.net. The
second Middle Tennessee Student Congress coaching opportunity will take
place at the Grace Christian Assembly,
http://www.salvationbygrace.org/, 904 Hazelwood Drive in Smyrna, TN.,
on March 19th from 1:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. with coaching by Malinda
Tuggle. Here’s a link for directions to the church, which meets in a
home: http://www.salvationbygrace.org/default.aspx?ct=sub/directions Speech & Debate Opportunities in East and West Tennessee For
information on Junior & Senior Speech & Debate Club in the
Jackson, TN., area, contact Judith Ann Cartwright at
cartwrightsfarm@aol.com. For information on coaching opportunities for Student Congress in East TN, contact Pam Cooper at cooper7@gmail.com.
SARA LEE HARRIS WORLDVIEW ORATORY CONTESTS Cash Prizes For Senior & Junior Division 1ST, 2ND, & 3RD Place Winners These
special oratorical contests for THEA members, sponsored by THEA and CCT
are named in honor of a Home School Grandmother who is now in heaven,
who loved to study and to share her Christian faith, who also was
skilled in and loved public speaking. Her family contributed the prize
money which will be awarded to the first, second and third place
winners in both the Senior Division and Junior Division on Rally Day,
April 8th. The
first place winners of each Division will also win the privilege to
present their Speech on the platform in the War Memorial Auditorium on
Rally Day. The Senior Division is for students age 12 by January 1,
2008 and older. The Junior Division is for students ages 8 – 11. This
year the two divisions will each participate in a different event; the
Junior Division students will compete in an Apologetics Worldview
Speech Competition and the Senior Division will compete in Mars Hill
Speech Competition. JUNIOR DIVISION: A Worldview Apologetics Oratory Competition The
Junior Division Contest will be a Worldview Apologetics Speech
Competition. Worldview Apologetics Speech competition deals with issues
of faith. The goal of Worldview Apologetics is to motivate students to
study their Christian faith and be prepared to articulate a defense of
what they believe. Junior Division students will prepare a 3-minute
maximum speech on one of the topics from the CCT web site. Listed on
the CCT web site are the topics from which students in the Junior
Divisions will choose one topic to address in this competition. Worldview Apologetics The
Worldview Apologetics Speech Event is intended to train students to
live out 1 Peter 3:15: "… always be ready to give a defense to everyone
who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you, with meekness and
fear;" Students
will choose from the list of possible questions regarding their faith
listed on the CCT web site, www.cctennessee.org. These are questions
that commonly come up in discussing God with unbelievers. Participants
will choose a question to answer, write out their speech and mail this
to THEA (see address & registration details below). This
category of speech falls under the classification of Original Oratory.
NFL gives this explanation about Original Oratory. As an orator you
will be expected to research and speak intelligently, with a degree of
originality, in an interesting manner, and with some profit to your
audience, about the topic you have chosen. An orator is judged on the
effectiveness of development and presentation. A Worldview Apologetics
Speech can have as its goal to strengthen the audience’s understanding
of and, even, devotion to a particular aspect of the Christian
worldview and faith. Judges
will evaluate the competitor based on the soundness of their defense,
the biblical and logical support they bring to it, the sincerity and
passion which they demonstrate, and their ability to put it into
everyday conversational language which can be easily understood.
Worldview Apologetics and the Mars Hill Speech competitions epitomize
our hopes for training true ambassadors for Christ and the mission
statement of CCT which is to train tomorrow’s leaders today. SENIOR DIVISION: A Mars Hill Oratory Competition To compete in this Contest, Senior Division students will prepare an 8-minute maximum Mars Hill Speech. Mars Hill Speech Event This
event is named after the address that the Apostle Paul gave to the
Greeks on Mars Hill (recorded in Acts 17: 16-34). Paul found himself in
the midst of a culture which did not understand the God whom he
proclaimed and certainly not the specific teachings of Jesus Christ. In
addressing them, Paul found a point of connection with his audience by
first referring to their own religion and poetry. He then used this
point of contact to transition into a discussion of Christ. The
Mars Hill speech event is intended to train speakers to similarly
engage their culture with the purpose of penetrating it with the truth
of Christ. To be salt and light in this way will require that speakers
first know something about the culture in which they live---perhaps its
movies, songs, creeds, core beliefs, etc. Knowing and understanding the
worldviews of our culture and the need within the heart of man for the
love, joy, forgiveness and peace which comes from Christ alone. In the
Mars Hill Speech event, students use their understanding of our culture
and with wisdom and skill; use this knowledge as a point of contact to
introduce the hearer to the truth of Christ just like Paul did. A
caution is needed here. Psalm 101.3 tells us, "I will set nothing
worthless before my eyes." We are not in the least encouraging our
students to put before their eyes or ears things which are worthless or
worse. However, much can be learned about one's culture by a little
attention to reviews of movies, books, and music without immersing
oneself in it. That is the kind of purposeful observation we are
speaking of here. (For example, one can read a review about the Harry
Potter books and understand the impact they have on the culture without
reading the books.) There are many good internet sites from which our
students can read reviews of movies and not have to see the movie to
understand it and critique, to find the worldview within the movie. One
such site is Internet Movie Data Base, www.imdb.com. There are
Christian web sites which provide this information, too. Sites such as
Focus on the Family’s Plugged In:
http://www.pluggedinonline.com/movies/ are excellent resources. In
short, this event is an 8 minute prepared speech using one or more
propositions expressed by our culture (in song, movie, commercials,
print or other media) as a point of contact from which some truth of
the gospel is drawn. How to Participate in the Sara Lee Harris Worldview Oratory Contest To
enter the Sara Lee Harris Worldview Oratory Contest students must mail
to THEA a $5.00 registration fee (checks made out to THEA) with a typed
copy of their speech to: SLH Oratory Contest, c/o Claiborne Thornton.
PO Box 681652, Franklin, TN., 37068. The mailing must be post-marked by
Monday, March 10, 2008. This
year we are not requiring audio copies of your speeches. We may return
to that next year. So mail your printed copy of your speech to the
address above. Be sure to have it post-marked by Monday, March 10th! To
join THEA and be eligible to compete, please go to the Organizations
tab and select the area of the state in which you live and contact your
local group to join. More on the Judging Criteria The
criteria judges will use in evaluating the Apologetics and Mars Hill
Speeches include an analysis of the content of the Speech. Questions
covering the content include; did the student adhere to the topic,
supporting assertions with outside evidence, properly citing sources,
and most importantly, did the student provide a biblical basis for
their position? The
judges will also evaluate the Apologetics speeches by whether their
defense is logical and well-reasoned. This is not primarily a
devotional speech, but a well-reasoned, logical defense of a Biblical
position. Organization
and Analysis evaluation includes these criteria; did the student relate
a clear thesis statement? Did the student demonstrate a thorough,
working knowledge of their topic, of Scripture and other sources; did
the student appropriately use analysis and reasoning, presenting a
logical, well-reasoned flow of ideas. Failure
to address the topic is, of course, a major flaw in the Sara Lee Harris
Worldview Oratory Contest can result in disqualification of the Speech. The Awards schedule for the Sara Lee Harris Worldview Oratory Contest is: Senior Division: 1st place-$500 2nd place-$200 3rd place-$125 Junior Division: 1st place-$100 2nd place-$50 3rd place-$25 Opportunities for coaching in Worldview Apologetics and Mars Hill Speech Middle
TN: Every other Friday night, the next being Friday, Feb. 22nd, from
6:00 - 9:00 p.m., home school & MTSU graduate, Matthew Bullington
teaches youth about these events, coaching them in identifying
worldviews and analyzing our culture from a Biblical perspective. For
more information, contact Matthew at: matthew.bullington@yahoo.com. Numerous
Tutorials throughout Middle TN have Worldview classes. See
www.chettn.org. Laurie Mingus teaches a Biblical Worldview class in her
home. Contact her at: homeschool_news@yahoo.com. West
TN: For information on a Junior & Senior Speech Club in the
Jackson, TN., area, contact Judith Ann Cartwright at:
cartwrightsfarm@aol.com. East
TN: For information on training for Worldview Apologetics and Mars Hill
in East TN, contact Pam Cooper at: cooper7@gmail.com. Cory Bennett also
teaches classes on Christian Worldview for homeschool students. Contact
Cory at: corygb@charter.net. A few photos from Rally Day 2006
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Thank you to all who
participated in Rally Day 2007! It was a great success! |
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