Module 3 - Families

1) In FellowshipOne, we thought about groupings of people in terms of households. In Rock, we think of people groupings as families. It might not seem like a big deal, but it’s important to recognize the difference and how it affects how we group people in our system.

Watch this brief video about how to do basic manipulations of families in Rock.

 
 

2) Watch this brief video about relationships between people in different families in Rock. We are exploring two kinds of special relationships - joint custody and known relationships. (Move Bombur out of Dwalin’s family, add Nori to Bombur’s family - joint custody. Go to Nori - Make it so Kili can check in Nori).

 
 


3) Watch this video of me cleaning up Drew’s family in Rock. Take note of how the children that are not actually part of his immediate family are moved to their own family and a known relationship for check-in is established.

 
 

4) Please review your own family in Rock (search for yourself and take a look at the family section) and make sure known relationships are established and that everything appears up to date.

5) Please set aside 10-15 minutes for this next part. Try to think of at least two families at Northridge that you know check in children that are not in their own household? (Maybe grandparents who check in their grandkids who don’t live with them? Maybe a young couple that brings their niece or nephew to church with them?) Look up the family in Rock by searching for one of the adults and confirm that the known relationship is correctly reflected. If it is not, fix the relationships.

Depending on the situation, you’ll either be moving the child into their own household and establishing the check-in relationship, or you’ll be finding the child in our system and connecting them through a check-in relationship.

6) Complete the survey below to confirm that you have completed Module 3.