Serving and learning in southeast Asia
Corey Poelman, Kevin Van Harn and Maria Geleynse
When he is in Indonesia this summer, Kevin Van Harn will try to remember not to point with his finger. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very disrespectful,鈥 said Van Harn, a 21-year-old 17c起草社区 senior majoring in secondary . 鈥淎lways point with an open palm,鈥 he explained, demonstrating with one hand, then the other. Van Harn, who will be working in a summer enrichment program, also plans to keep his head down (another sign of respect), and to refrain from touching children on the head.
"The head is where the spirit dwells, and you never touch the head.鈥 agreed Corrie Poelman, a 21-year-old junior and major, who is off to Malaysia to teach English.
Training week
Van Harn and Poelman are two of the 13 17c起草社区 students who are preparing to do service-learning in southeast Asia for 10 weeks this summer. Four students, including junior Kait Botma and seniors Ben Shoemaker and Katy Carlson and Van Harn, will be working at , a Christian school in Indonesia. Six students, including sophomores Emily Clark and Amanda DeVries and seniors Maria Geleynse, Nicole Lenko, Alyssa Massey and Jordan Wood, will work at , a Hong Kong-based, non-profit organization that provides support to young women during crisis pregnancies. And three students, including Poelman and sophomores Emily Granger and Emily Larson, will teach English at in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
"They鈥檙e going to get a real experience of working with these organizations,鈥 said 17c起草社区 director of off-campus programs Don De Graaf. 鈥淭he programs that they鈥檙e running would be happening even if they didn鈥檛 go, but we鈥檙e just coming along and working with them.鈥
The program, designed on 17c起草社区鈥檚 service-learning model, gives students an opportunity to work with and learn from local staff in international settings. 鈥淚n addition, the program offers 17c起草社区 an opportunity to further build relationships with like-minded organizations in Southeast Asia,鈥 De Graaf added.
The briefing on cultural taboos was part of the students鈥 four days of training in cross cultural competence, training that touched on subjects such as training in an ESL context, working with children, behavior management, risk management, finances, travel and safety tips, representing 17c起草社区 well and having fun.
The views, the wildlife, the challenge
Van Harn is looking forward to how the final category is represented on his trip. Specifically, he鈥檚 looking forward to visiting a nature preserve in Sumatra. 鈥淎pparently, we鈥檒l see the wildlife,鈥 he said. Geleynse is eager to see the view of Hong Kong鈥檚 Victoria Harbor. The students are also anticipating the challenge of being in an unfamiliar culture. 鈥淵ou have to be flexible,鈥 said Poelman. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 know what to expect. We鈥檙e getting ready by keeping open minds.鈥
She also confessed to a little anxiety: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 like the feeling of going to a place and being an outside with so many expectations placed on me. But being an outsider has some advantages. We鈥檙e looking forward to the hospitality鈥攂oth receiving and giving it.鈥
As part of their training, the students read chapters of the book Learning from the Stranger: Christian Faith and Cultural Diversity, a book about Christian hospitality authored by 17c起草社区 Germanic and Asian languages professor David Smith. 鈥淚 hope they鈥檒l come back with eyes wide open to the challenges but also the opportunities of experiences like this,鈥 said De Graaf.
Swimmer can travel
The southeast Asia service-learning program was created because of a student request, he said. In 2008, the year De Graaf was named director of off-campus programs, a young woman approached him with a quandary. She was a swimmer with a yen to travel internationally, but her team鈥檚 training and competition schedule prevented her from taking a semester, or even an interim off. 鈥楥ould we do something in the summer?鈥 De Graaf remembers her asking.
The following year he sent four students to Mother鈥檚 Choice in Hong Kong. 鈥淭hey did a tremendous job. They were awesome,鈥 he said. "Mother鈥檚 Choice wanted more.鈥 He鈥檚 gratified with the program鈥檚 expansion, and he鈥檇 love to see it grow further:
"The dream for me would be if we had 20 to 25 students going out in the summer doing service learning; that would provide opportunities for students, and would give 17c起草社区 an additional presence overseas,鈥 he said.
The students' room and board and part of their airfare will be covered by the agencies. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e getting a four-to six week experience in Asia, and it will cost them $1,500,鈥 said De Graaf. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited for them. I wish I was going with them.鈥