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Teaching the gospel

(unfinished) Up here I'll put a handful of the Key, Basic, Fundamental, Often Used Skills Methods and Tools that new teachers need to know and learn to use.

Using questions effectively.

Asking followup questions. 

Leading classroom discussions (it should probably be mentioned that the first page will help you lead classroom discussion on questions page)

The stuff below currently this only containts material from teaching ideas for variety but I will also include ideas from other obolete manual and other sources like Anthony Sweat’s video on translating scripture.

There are so many different teaching methods, tools, and skills to use in your teaching. Use this page to help you find what you're looking for.

I want something to help...

involve the whole class
Reading aloud as a class
Everyone reads the verses together in unison.

Stop sign
All students listen and raise a hand (or say “Stop”) together when they hear the key truth.

True or false
Every student shows agreement/disagreement on a statement simultaneously.

Participation cards
Each student holds up a colored/card cue to answer questions or signal they’re ready to share.

Poll the class
Everyone submits an answer—on paper or via a polling app—and you display the collective results.

Idea board
Each student writes an application idea on a sticky note and posts it to a shared board.

Sticky board
Similar to the idea board, but students tag which questions or verses they’ll comment on—again, as a group.

Word Cloud
All students contribute important words/phrases; you aggregate them into a cloud in real time.

Pass the paper
Papers circulate so each student writes one response in turn, folding to hide prior answers.

Simulation
The whole class recreates a setting (jail cell, pioneer company, etc.) and steps through the story together.

Video pause
You watch a video as a group and pause at key moments for everyone to discuss or answer prompts.

Create study stations
The class splits into small groups and rotates through stations, with each student contributing at every station.

Study snake
Cards on desks give instructions—students rotate seats and follow each card together in sequence.

Experts (jigsaw)
Students first become “experts” in small teams, then re-form into new groups so everyone teaches and learns.

Scripture bracket
In paired or small‐group rounds, the class debates which of 16 passages “wins,” eventually crowning one passage together.
Art interpretation
Use gospel art to prompt students to locate and discuss the actual verses depicted, noticing what’s in the text versus artistic interpretation.

Add dialogue to an illustration
Students write word-bubbles for characters in Scripture Stories art, forcing them to identify who says what and why.

News story or book report
Each student studies a block of verses, then summarizes characters, storyline, lessons learned (with verse citations), and applications.

Identifying questions
After reading, students generate thoughtful, open-ended questions their verses could answer—and later seek those answers in the text.

Interview the author
Students role-play as the “author” of a scripture passage, explaining main points and desired applications based entirely on the text.

Plot diagramming
Breaking a narrative into beginning, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution engages learners in dissecting how events build doctrinal understanding.

Define
Having students research and define difficult terms using scripture tools cultivates deep lexical and contextual analysis.

Line upon line
Writing out each sentence of a passage and pausing to reflect on cross-references and nuanced meaning encourages methodical, layered study.

Mind map
Visually mapping a central doctrine with branching scriptures, quotes, and questions promotes complex connections and multi-angle thinking.

Overlapping ideas
Using a Venn diagram to compare two topics (people, covenants, teachings) compels students to analyze similarities, differences, and subtleties.

Randomly select a quote
Drawing prophetic quotes at random and relating each back to supporting scriptures challenges students to critically evaluate relevance and context.

Scripture bracket
Debating in pairs which of two verses more powerfully teaches a principle (round by round) drives deep textual comparison and defense of viewpoints.

Experts (jigsaw)
Each “expert” group masters a different passage or quote and then teaches peers, requiring thorough analysis before presentation.

Create your own footnotes
Linking verses to cross-references and prophetic statements in margins makes students dig deeply into interconnected doctrine.

Analyze a passage
Listing all possible questions about one verse and then seeking answers fosters investigative thinking and careful textual examination.

Topic web
Starting with a bolded truth at the center and radiating out related scriptures, insights, and questions helps students unpack a doctrine’s full scope.

Art interpretation

Use gospel art to connect specific verses with scenes in the story, prompting students to describe what’s happening and how it unfolds step by step.

Add dialogue to an illustration

Have students write word-bubbles for characters in Scripture Stories art, clarifying each character’s role and how their interactions drive the narrative.

News story or book report

Assign each student a block of verses and ask them to outline the main characters, storyline events (with exact verse citations), and how those events connect to the broader narrative.

Picture time line

Display a set of images that represent key moments in a scripture account; students read the related verses and then arrange the pictures in the correct chronological order.

Plot diagramming

Guide students through identifying the beginning situation, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution—having them cite verses for each plot element.

Puzzle

Turn a scene from the passage into a simple jigsaw: write scripture references on the back of each piece, then have groups study their verses, summarize them, and assemble the puzzle to reveal the full scene.

Reader’s theater

Transform dialogue-rich passages into a script so students take on parts, following and performing the storyline in sequence through the verses they read.

Scripture dig

Prepare a series of slips with questions in the order the story unfolds; students fetch each question, find the answer in the text, and thereby trace the narrative from start to finish.

Simulation

Recreate the physical setting of the account (e.g., a jail cell or pioneer camp) so students move through the space as the story characters would, reinforcing the sequence of events.

Student summary

Have one or more students prepare and present a concise, verse-by-verse summary of the passage’s storyline before opening it to class discussion.

Visualization

Lead students through a guided mental “walk” of the story—asking them to picture each scene, character, and action in order as you read or describe the verses.

Identifying questions

Invite students to list meaningful, open-ended questions that their scripture block could answer—then have them search the text for those answers, which helps them pinpoint the underlying doctrines and principles.

Interview the author

Students role-play as the “author” of a passage, answering questions about main points and intended applications, forcing them to articulate the doctrines the verses teach.

Matching

Have students pair scripture references with doctrinal truths in mixed-up columns, requiring careful study of each verse to discern the principle it illustrates.

Most important truth

Individually identify the top three or four truths in a passage, then work in teams to narrow them first to two and finally to the single most important gospel principle, citing verses for each.

Plot diagramming

Break a narrative into beginning situation, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution—then ask students to cite and discuss the doctrine or principle revealed at each plot point.

Create your own footnotes

Encourage students to add margin notes linking their passage to cross-references in other scriptures and prophetic quotes, building a web of doctrinal connections.

Define

Challenge students to pick a difficult word or concept in the text, research it using scripture study tools (Topical Guide, Guide to the Scriptures), and craft their own definition grounded in doctrine.

Line upon line

Have students rewrite a scripture one sentence at a time in their journals, pausing after each to reflect on meaning, find cross-references, and identify embedded principles.

Mind map

Place the central doctrine or principle from a passage in the middle of a diagram, then branch out with supporting verses, related quotes, and student insights that deepen doctrinal understanding.

Overlapping ideas

Use a Venn-diagram to compare two topics or accounts—students identify shared and distinct principles by examining the verses that teach each aspect.

Topic web

Start with a bolded truth or principle in the center circle and draw lines to outer circles, labeling each with supporting scriptures, related truths, or probing questions to flesh out the doctrine.

Scripture bracket

Run a “tournament” with 16 scripture references: in each round, student pairs read two passages and defend which better teaches the principle, ultimately crowning the verse that most clearly conveys the doctrine.

Student choice study activities

After identifying a gospel principle, let students roll dice or draw cards to select one of six focused tasks—such as finding a doctrinal mastery passage, locating an example story, or citing a prophetic statement—that reinforce their grasp of the doctrine.

Create study stations

Students rotate through stations that each feature different scriptures or quotes and targeted questions, allowing them to compare insights and deepen their grasp of doctrine and context.

Create your own footnotes

Learners link verses to cross-references and prophetic statements—either in their margins or digitally—so they actively build a network of supporting scriptures.

Define

By researching difficult words or concepts in the Topical Guide, Guide to the Scriptures, or other tools, students sharpen their vocabulary and unveil richer layers of meaning.

Doodle notes

Structured sketch-and-write pages let students visually annotate their reflections and discoveries, reinforcing comprehension through drawing and summarizing.

Experts (jigsaw)

Small “expert” teams study different passages or quotes, then re-group so each student teaches a peer, ensuring everyone engages with multiple sources and perspectives.

For the Strength of Youth connections

Linking FSY booklet statements to standard-work passages helps students see how prophetic counsel amplifies scriptural truths.

Line upon line

Writing out each sentence of a passage in their journals—and pausing to reflect on meaning and cross-references—encourages meticulous, layer-by-layer study.

Mind map

Placing a central doctrine or principle in the center of a diagram, students branch out with related verses, quotes, and questions to broaden and deepen their understanding.

Overlapping ideas

A Venn-diagram approach invites students to compare two topics—such as two prophets or two covenants—and analyze where their teachings intersect and diverge.

Sharing insights

Quick rounds of written insights passed among classmates let students see a variety of perspectives on the same text, enriching their own interpretations.

Randomly select a quote

Drawing prophetic quotes from a hat and relating each back to supporting scriptures deepens appreciation for how leaders’ words echo foundational texts.

Scripture bracket

A “tournament” of 16 passages prompts small-group debates over which verses most powerfully teach a principle, culminating in a class-wide reflection on why the winning scripture stands out.

Student choice study activities

After identifying a central truth, students roll dice or draw cards to select from six focused tasks (e.g., find a doctrinal mastery verse, locate an application story), offering varied pathways to deeper insights.

Study snake

Cards placed on desks assign brief reading or reflection tasks; as students rotate seats and tackle each card, they cumulatively engage with every snippet of scripture or quote.

Topic web

Starting with a bolded truth in the center, students draw lines to outer bubbles and label them with supporting scriptures, questions, or related doctrines—building a holistic map of the concept.

Video pause

Pausing a relevant video at key moments and asking how specific scriptures or quotes apply helps students connect multimedia examples back to textual study.

Idea board

Students write application ideas on sticky notes and post them, articulating insights in writing and visually representing collective thoughts.

Pass the paper

Each student writes a response on a shared sheet, folds it over, and passes it on—building a layered representation of class thinking.

Power phrases

Providing sentence-starters (e.g., “A lesson to take away is…”) helps students articulate their discoveries in clear, meaningful statements.

Participation cards

Visual cards (true/false, “Ready to Share,” options A–D) let students signal answers or readiness, turning individual responses into a real-time class display.

Sticky board

Students place their names next to questions or verses they’ll comment on, creating a visible map of who will share what.

Write before you share

Giving time for journal entries or brief notes ensures students have words ready to articulate when called upon.

Acrostic poem

Using the letters of a key word (like FAITH) to craft a poem forces students to represent doctrinal takeaways in a creative, structured format.

Chiasmus

Building a mirrored statement around a central truth helps students represent doctrine in a precise, literary structure.

Comic strip study

Drawing panels to illustrate scripture events and then captioning them enables students to visually and textually represent narrative lessons.

Create a lesson outline

Designing an organizer with title, key verses, examples, and testimony boxes allows students to map their understanding in a formal, shareable outline.

Create a pamphlet

Folding a sheet into thirds to craft a trifold handout encourages students to represent their learnings in a compact, publication-style format.

Flowchart

Diagramming decision points or doctrinal steps (e.g., faith → action → blessing) helps students represent relationships between concepts.

Hands–on building

Using blocks or clay to build a model (e.g., fortifications, tree of life) turns abstract principles into physical representations.

Image collage

Gathering photos or digital images to illustrate a principle prompts students to create a visual montage of scriptural truths.

Make a meme

Crafting a catchy phrase plus an illustration encourages concise, contemporary representation of a doctrine.

Recipes

Framing a principle as “ingredients” and “instructions” lets students articulate steps of living doctrine in a familiar, metaphorical format.

Role-play

Acting out a scenario or dialogue brings learned principles to life and helps students articulate beliefs through dramatic representation.

Short video

Storyboarding and filming a brief clip requires students to script and visually convey the essence of their lesson.

Social media post

Writing a mock post or response to a leader’s message challenges students to articulate their testimony or insights in a modern communication style.

Visual display

Creating posters or wall charts with key verses, questions, and images gives a shared, gallery-style representation of class learning.

Write an article for a Church magazine

Composing a For the Strength of Youth / Friend / Liahona–style article pushes students to articulate their study in polished, publishable prose.

Silent reading

Students read the passage quietly to themselves, giving time for personal reflection and absorption of the text.

Identifying questions

Learners jot down their own meaningful questions about a scripture block and then search the text for answers, guiding self-directed inquiry.

Translate a verse

Each student selects a verse to paraphrase or rewrite in their own words, deepening comprehension through personal engagement with language.

True or false

Individuals assess written statements about a passage, marking each as true or false and then correcting misconceptions by referring back to the text.

Define

Students pick a challenging word or concept and use scripture study tools (Topical Guide, Guide to the Scriptures) to craft a personal definition grounded in context.

Doodle notes

Using a template with thought bubbles or sections, learners draw and write their discoveries as they study, reinforcing understanding through visual notes.

Line upon line

In their journals, students copy a scripture one line or sentence at a time—pausing after each to reflect on meaning, find cross-references, and record insights.

Mind map

Placing a central doctrine or principle in the middle of a page, each student branches out with supporting verses, quotes, and personal observations.

Visualization

Individually, learners close their eyes and mentally “step into” the story, picturing scenes and characters as they read or listen to the text.

Word Cloud

Students list significant words and phrases from a passage, then create a personal word cloud (by hand or digitally) to highlight what resonated most.

Create your own footnotes

In the margins of their scriptures or journal, learners link passages to related verses and prophetic quotes, building a personal network of cross-references.

Acrostic poem

Using the letters of a key word (e.g., FAITH), each student composes a poetic acrostic that encapsulates lessons learned.

Create a pamphlet

Folding a sheet of paper into thirds, individuals produce a trifold handout summarizing doctrine, key verses, and personal applications.

Make a meme

Students design a single-panel illustration with a catchy phrase and scripture reference, distilling a principle into a concise, creative format.

Letters for the future

Each learner writes a letter—to themselves, family, or future students—articulating insights and testimony to be opened at a significant later date.

News story or book report

In the small-group variation, each student takes one role (characters, storyline, lessons, application) and then they synthesize their parts into a coherent report.

Most important truth

Students pair up to pick their top two truths, then join another pair to debate and agree on the single most important idea together.

Experts (jigsaw)

Small “expert” teams dive into different topics or passages, then re-form into mixed groups so each student teaches their area of expertise to peers.

Create study stations

Groups rotate through stations, discussing different scriptures or quotes and recording insights on large paper to share with the whole class.

Scripture dig

Teams answer a sequence of scripture-based questions on slips of paper—racing back and forth to uncover each layer of the text together.

Scripture bracket

Pairs or trios debate which of two paired verses best illustrates a principle, advancing their choice in a tournament bracket until one passage “wins.”

Student choice study activities

Small groups roll dice or draw cards to select from a menu of six focused tasks (finding mastery verses, examples, quotes, etc.), then teach their findings to each other.

Puzzle

Each group receives a puzzle piece with scripture references on the back; they study and summarize their verses before assembling the picture as a team.

Visual display

In groups, students curate verses, quotes, and images onto posters or wall charts—then tour each other’s displays to discuss varied interpretations.

Create study stations

Each station centers on a short scripture passage or prophetic quote, with focused questions to unpack its meaning before rotating groups through every station.

Create your own footnotes

Students add margin notes linking a central verse to supporting scriptures and prophetic quotes, making those short citations the anchor of their study.

For the Strength of Youth connections

Place targeted FSY statements alongside key verses, having students match or discuss how each quote amplifies the scriptural truth.

Line upon line

Students rewrite one sentence of a passage at a time, leaving space to annotate with cross-references or related quotes before moving to the next line.

Mind map

Put a concise quote or scripture reference in the center and branch out with related verses, quotes, and student-generated insights.

Overlapping ideas

Use a Venn diagram with two core verses or quotes in each circle—students identify shared and unique teachings of each.

Sharing insights

Give each student a scripture snippet or quote on paper. After a timed read, they jot a quick insight, then pass the paper to add a new observation, centering discussion on those snippets.

Randomly select a quote

Place several church leader quotes in a hat. Volunteers draw one, read it aloud, then link it to a scripture passage that supports or expands its message.

Scripture bracket

Seed a “tournament” with 16 brief verses; in head-to-head rounds, pairs defend which verse most powerfully teaches the doctrine, spotlighting those short texts.

Student choice study activities

After identifying a central principle, students roll or draw to select tasks like “Find a doctrinal-mastery verse” or “Locate a prophetic quote,” making those short citations the lesson’s focus.

Topic web

Start with a bolded scripture verse or quote in the middle; students draw spokes to related citations, questions, or ideas, creating a web anchored on that core text.

Study snake

Cards placed around the room each contain a scripture reference or quote. Students rotate to read and reflect briefly, tracing a “snake” of interconnected snippets through the lesson.

Video pause

While playing a gospel video, pause at moments tied to a short verse or quote displayed on screen—students read the text aloud and discuss how it illuminates the scene.

Art interpretation
Breaking a picture into pieces and inviting students to hypothesize what’s happening helps them generate new insights and connect verses to unseen details.

Identifying questions
Asking learners to craft their own meaningful questions drives them to explore the text in search of answers they hadn’t previously considered.

Interview the author
Role-playing as the “author” forces students to probe the passage deeply, uncovering nuances and motivations they might otherwise miss.

Define
Tasking students to research and define challenging terms using scripture study tools leads them into fresh discoveries about doctrinal language.

Create study stations
Rotating through focused stations—with different scriptures, quotes, and open-ended prompts—immerses students in varied content and encourages unexpected connections.

Experts (jigsaw)
When each student becomes an “expert” on one portion and then teaches peers, they uncover layers of meaning in passages they hadn’t explored before.

Scripture dig
Hunting for answers on slip-paper questions sends learners on a treasure-hunt through the text, unearthing verses and insights they might have overlooked.

Simulation
Physically enacting the story’s setting (jail cell, pioneer camp, etc.) sparks fresh curiosity about details and context that reading alone can’t convey.

Randomly select a quote
Drawing prophetic quotes at random and relating them back to scriptures pushes students to find new linkages and personal applications.

Scripture bracket
Pairing passages in a competitive “tournament” challenges students to defend and compare verses, revealing unexpected truths in each selection.

Student choice study activities
Letting students pick or randomly draw from a menu of study tasks (finding doctrinal mastery passages, application stories, etc.) opens pathways to discoveries tailored to their curiosity.

Study snake
Following a rotating sequence of desk-cards with varied tasks guides students through bite-sized explorations, each uncovering something new about the lesson.

Topic web
Building a visual web around a central truth and branching to related scriptures or questions helps learners map out and discover connections they didn’t know existed.

Video pause
Pausing a relevant video at key moments and asking how specific scriptures apply encourages students to unearth fresh insights by linking media to text.

Word Cloud
Identifying and charting the most frequent or striking words in a passage surfaces themes and emphases students might not have noticed in a linear read.

Mind map
Centering a principle and radiating out supporting verses, quotes, and questions drives students to explore and discover deeper layers of meaning.

Overlapping ideas
Using a Venn diagram to compare two topics or accounts uncovers both shared and unique truths, prompting learners to discover distinctions they hadn’t seen.

Line upon line
Writing out each sentence of a passage and pausing to reflect—with cross-references—leads students step by step into new personal revelations.
Art interpretation
Studying a piece of gospel art and probing what’s depicted (versus what’s inferred) pushes students to analyze symbolism and relate it back to specific verses.

Identifying questions
Challenging students to craft meaningful, open-ended questions demands they think critically about the text’s implications before hunting for answers.

Interview the author
Role-playing an “author” of the scripture forces students to articulate main points, infer motivations, and examine the deeper purposes behind the words.

Plot diagramming
Breaking a narrative into beginning, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution engages learners in dissecting how events build doctrinal understanding.

Define
Having students research and define difficult terms using scripture tools cultivates deep lexical and contextual analysis.

Line upon line
Writing out each sentence of a passage and pausing to reflect on cross-references and nuanced meaning encourages methodical, layered study.

Mind map
Visually mapping a central doctrine with branching scriptures, quotes, and questions promotes complex connections and multi-angle thinking.

Overlapping ideas
Using a Venn diagram to compare two topics (people, covenants, teachings) compels students to analyze similarities, differences, and subtleties.

Randomly select a quote
Drawing prophetic quotes at random and relating each back to supporting scriptures challenges students to critically evaluate relevance and context.

Scripture bracket
Debating in pairs which of two verses more powerfully teaches a principle (round by round) drives deep textual comparison and defense of viewpoints.

Experts (jigsaw)
Each “expert” group masters a different passage or quote and then teaches peers, requiring thorough analysis before presentation.

Create your own footnotes
Linking verses to cross-references and prophetic statements in margins makes students dig deeply into interconnected doctrine.

Analyze a passage
Listing all possible questions about one verse and then seeking answers fosters investigative thinking and careful textual examination.

Topic web
Starting with a bolded truth at the center and radiating out related scriptures, insights, and questions helps students unpack a doctrine’s full scope.

This is so sad there’s no ideas here yet 🙁 come back soon and there should be some idea ideas.

Art interpretation (piece-by-piece reveal)
Begin by showing just a fragment of a gospel image, inviting students to guess what’s happening—heightening curiosity before diving into the text.

Video pause
Play a short video clip and pause at a suspenseful moment, asking “What do you think will happen next?” to prime their attention and link to the upcoming lesson.

Scenario starter
Present an incomplete scenario (e.g., “Julia just received this text…”), and have students fill in details—drawing them into the context of the main activity.

Use a photo / Take a picture
Show a striking photo (either from your device or theirs) and ask “What gospel principle does this image remind you of?” to spark connection and anticipation.

Stop sign
Slowly read a verse and have students say “Stop!” when they notice a key word or phrase, engaging them actively from the first lines.

Poll the class
Launch a quick anonymous vote (paper slip or app) on a thought-provoking question related to the lesson, then display results as a transition into deeper study.

Power phrases
Display a handful of sentence starters (e.g., “A verse I love is…”) and invite volunteers to complete one—getting everyone thinking in gospel-focused terms.

Sticky board
Post several opening questions and have students place their name cards next to the one they’re most curious about, setting the stage for the main discussion.

Speed friendshipping
Pair students for 30-second rounds of “What excites you most about today’s topic?”—energizing them through rapid, focused sharing before the lesson begins.

Study snake
Scatter brief instruction cards around the room; as students rotate to each card, they complete a quick prompt (a one-sentence insight or question), warming up their minds for the main activity.

Have a topic or activity idea? Let me know!

Principles Tips & Cautions for choosing methods.

60 second memorization. whats the speed game called.

Created with ❤️ by Cody Wilkins