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Calvin News

Vander Woude named top teacher

Sun, Feb 17, 2008
Myrna Anderson

These days, as a at Calvin, Vander Woude is fond of telling her students that God has given them two ears, two eyes and one mouth for a reason.

"It's important," she tells students, "to look and to listen before you open your mouth." For her this concept goes beyond empathy to something she calls deep listening, a place where students' old assumptions get shaken up and they see things in the world in new ways.

"This field will shake up their world a little bit," she says. "It's not easy. Working with a stroke patient can be a really hard thing. Or working with a child who has language development problems. But I love it when students get it, when they take what we've worked on in the classroom and put it into practice. As a teacher that's still such a satisfying moment."

Vander Woude's colleagues say she's brought a lot of students to that moment over the years, a big reason why she is the college's 2008 recipient of the Presidential Award for Exemplary Teaching.

She is the 16th winner of Calvin's top teaching honor -- dating back to the first honoree, Ken Kuiper, in 1993 -- and will receive a one-of-a-kind medallion and a significant financial stipend from the George B. and Margaret K. Tinholt Endowment Fund, established at Calvin by a donor in honor of George Tinholt, a former member of the Calvin board of trustees.

For Vander Woude word of the award came at the end of a fall semester where she felt like anything but an exemplary teacher. She had been working on a new literacy program for a trio of pilot schools in Grand Rapids, finishing up a manuscript and dealing with a mother who had suffered a stroke. In the midst of all of that she worried that she was letting her students down, that she was not doing a good job teaching what they needed to know to become speech pathologists. And then came that call from Calvin president Gaylen Byker congratulating her on the college's most prestigious faculty award.

"I just thought why me," recalls Vander Woude. "There are some really good professors here who I think need to be recognized. Being singled out in this way is really uncomfortable for me."

Fellow members of the at Calvin say that Vander Woude is deserving of the recognition.

Department chair Helen Sterk notes that Calvin's speech pathology and audiology major makes the college one of only three Christian colleges in the country to offer the degree. And, she adds, under Vander Woude's leadership Calvin's program has grown from only a handful of students in the mid 1990s, when the program almost went defunct, to some 70 majors a year now.

In addition Calvin's placement rate for students who go on to graduate school is close to 100 percent over the last decade.

"Most years," says Sterk, "everyone of our graduates who applies to graduate school gets in. That's a wonderful testimony to the curriculum that Dr. Vander Woude has developed at Calvin and the real-world experiences she provides for her majors."

Those experiences include an on-site stroke clinic in the DeVos Communications Center at Calvin, as well as speech pathology programs for school-age children, audiology testing and much more.

Graduates of the program say that blend of top-notch academic instruction and hands-on application of what they've learned in the classroom makes for a great combination.

In supporting Vander Woude's nomination for the teaching award one graduate wrote: "In the area of academics professor Vander Woude set high standards for the students. These standards were crucial for preparing students for graduate school. Through her leadership and organization a clinic was set up in order for students to engage in therapy with students and put book knowledge into action. This experience was unique for undergraduate students and set a firm foundation for clinical experiences in graduate school."

Another graduate in writing to support Vander Woude noted especially her ability to bring her faith to bear in the classroom She said simply: "Dr. Vander Woude encouraged me in my studies and my walk with God, and she also challenged me."

For Vander Woude it's all a little much. She says she just loves to teach.

"When I walked into the classroom the first day of second semester," she recalls, "I was thinking 'yeah this is fun.' You can talk about serious things, you can push students, but you can have fun too."

Yet behind the fun is a well-thought-out approach to what it means to be a teacher.

In her (required by the college as part of the reappointment and tenure process) Vander Woude said: "Although most of us can appear externally to function according to society鈥檚 standards, individuals with communicative disorders generally cannot. Their forms of brokenness brand them publicly as imperfect individuals. My hermeneutical goal is to encourage students to reflect on what it is like to live both publicly and privately with a communication disorder. I want them to seek, as Christians, to understand what it is like to have trouble communicating, to encounter odd responses from others, or even worse, to be ignored in everyday situations."

That encompassing vision for her craft is not missed by Calvin students.

As one former Vander Woude student wrote: "What I will remember most from my time at Calvin with professor Vander Woude was her caring nature and love for her students. And in all she did I was able to see her faith in action."

That kind of feedback, says Vander Woude, means more than any teaching award ever could.

"Making a difference in the lives of students is very satisfying," she says, "and I know that's not just true for me, but also for my colleagues across the campus. It's why we do what we do."