Calvin prof awarded Fulbright to teach in Nepal
In Ekatappa, a rural village of near Mount Everest, a ceremony at the local school was planned to begin at 11:30 a.m., celebrating the visit of Herb '94 and Shelli DeWindt Fynewever '92.聽 But the two honorees were not going to be on time. It was already 12:45 p.m., and the Fynewevers were still drinking tea down the road. Their Nepali friend with whom they were staying was insisting that the Fynewevers visit many old friends, neighbors and villagers, chatting, laughing and sipping tea at leisure. Shelli, a former 聽volunteer, speaks Nepali and translated their conversations to English for Herb. Herb was feeling worried about being late.
Finally, more than an hour and a half past the scheduled start time, the Fynewevers arrived at the ceremony. They needn't have worried.聽 Only a few villagers had even arrived鈥攏ot because it was a modest occasion, but because nobody was planning on being on time.
Gradually, more villagers arrived, unhurried, along with some musicians and instrumentalists who began to play music. Villagers danced and brought gifts, bracelets and a wooden replica of the Nepali flag. At last, the ceremony officially began with long and flowery speeches from many village VIPs鈥攖he principal of the school, the head of the school board, the owner of the mill鈥攊n honor of the Fynewevers. A plaque which the school presented to them said, 鈥淵our work in our village and school will be remembered beyond the end of the earth; your work will continue to be effective even beyond the destruction of the world.鈥
A different pace, perspective
鈥淭his whole ceremony takes most of the day,鈥 said , recollecting his experience in Nepal in January 2013, 鈥渁nd the whole time I鈥檓 thinking, 鈥榗an鈥檛 we just get on with this, get to the point?鈥 But I was really missing the point. The whole point was the coming together. It was the long process, it was the ceremony, it was the small gifts, it was the decorations. The whole thing was to celebrate our relationships, to show honor and respect.鈥
The prolonged ceremony in the Fynewevers' honor was characteristic of Nepal鈥檚 relationally oriented culture, in contrast to more results-driven cultures like the United States.
鈥淭here are being cultures and doing cultures,鈥 said Fynewever, professor of at Calvin College, who will be spending seven months at in Nepal starting in January 2015. 鈥淭he U.S. is very much a doing culture 鈥 Everything starts when we say it鈥檚 going to start. We can set appointments and plan on people being there鈥e have agendas for meetings and we go linearly through the agenda. And a successful meeting is one where we get through the agenda and everything鈥檚 settled. So that鈥檚 a doing culture. Nepal is much more a being culture. So a successful meeting for them is one where relationships are cemented, and built on, and people are heard, and there isn鈥檛 necessarily an agenda.鈥
A new laboratory
Fynewever was just awarded a , a national cultural exchange program designed 鈥渢o increase mutual understanding between the peoples of the United States and other countries, through the exchange of persons, knowledge and skills.鈥澛 Fynewever鈥檚 Fulbright grant will comprise about 80 percent teaching and 20 percent research. He will teach general chemistry at Kathmandu University and research various subjects concerning culture, teaching and student-instructor interaction.
How do college instructors teach science? How do they communicate with their students? How do they measure what their students are learning? How do they give their students feedback? How do they communicate? These are some of the questions that Fynewever plans to probe while in Kathmandu.
鈥淎nd then to look at how [these questions] change in a different cultural context will add a whole new dimension to my research,鈥 he said.
While he has plans and ideas for research鈥攕uch as observing science instructors, collecting syllabi and exams, and interviewing professors to learn more about formative assessment鈥攈e also realizes that his agenda might have to adapt to Nepal鈥檚 relational, tea-drinking, 鈥渂eing鈥 culture.
A second home
Fynewever鈥檚 initial interest in applying for a Fulbright grant to Nepal was spurred by his wife, Shelli, who had lived and worked for two-and-a-half years in the village of聽 Ekatappa as a Peace Corps Vounteer from 1993-1995. "She has a second home and second family there. They cared for her like she was their own. We want to go and renew those relationships. And build on them."
鈥淲e liked the idea of living abroad with our family, especially in a place that is so near and dear to Shelli's heart,鈥 Fynewever said. 鈥淚 think this will be so good for our family. Nepal will be very different. It鈥檚 a developing country, one of the poorest countries. Going to Nepal gives us and our children, so much: new eyes again to see the American way isn鈥檛 the only way, and not even always the best way. It gives us an opportunity to appreciate the material prosperity that we have, and recognize the relational poverty that we live in sometimes because of our wealth.聽 Living there, we can be immersed in another culture, get a chance to be a minority and nurture a compassion for those who are minorities in our country.
More to the mission
鈥淎nd we can spread the love of God. A huge part of our going, too, is that the gospel is spreading quickly in Nepal, and because of Shelli鈥檚 relationships, and the respect that the folks in Ekatappa have for us, we think the village may be open to hearing the story of the gospel from us. Shelli also wants to work with Crossway Church and Higher Ground ministries (founded by Calvin Theological Seminary alum Arbin Pokharel and Calvin College alum Bimala Shrestha Pokharel '99) which sends out mission groups and does tremendous work to raise awareness and funds for preventing child trafficking through education."
Fynewever anticipates the overseas experience to cultivate his future interaction with international students at Calvin.
鈥淲hen I bring that back to Calvin, that will personally help me when I鈥檓 working with students from a central-Asian culture, or even similar cultures to the central-Asian culture, so that I can recognize and value the advantages of their way of doing things, and then also help to accommodate them into how we do things here,鈥 Fynewever said.
While living and teaching in Nepal, Fynewever also hopes to learn about both the advantages and drawbacks of its educational structure.
鈥淚n many other countries鈥he way that they do education is much more specialized early on,鈥 Fynewever explained. 鈥淟iberal arts is pretty much unknown in a country like Nepal. So when students are still in high school, they鈥檒l be tested and tracked鈥nd the reason is, if you can specialize, then your citizens can go faster and farther within their specialization, because they don鈥檛 spend time taking history and English, and they can just take more advanced science and math courses.鈥
But since there are pros and cons to both approaches, Fynewever hopes that his immersion in Nepal will equip him with insights that will contribute to future conversations at Calvin about core curriculum and liberal arts.
鈥淎s the world gets more and more globalized, we have to think about how we best prepare our students,鈥 he said. 鈥淒o we want to pursue this philosophy of earlier specialization so they can go faster and farther within their discipline, or do we need the breadth to prepare them for careers that will be more at the interface between disciplines, and give them the soft skills so that they can not only have the technical knowledge, but then know how to explain their technical knowledge, and persuade people with their technical knowledge, so they can communicate about technical areas?鈥