|
It isn’t only Erin
Sytsma’s resume, laden with academic honors and volunteer work,
which earned her a prestigious award from the Michigan Association of
Colleges for Teacher Education (MACTE). “It’s this heart
of service,” said Larry Louters, a Calvin chemistry professor
and one of Sytsma’s mentors.
Sytsma was chosen
as the first runner-up for the MACTE scholarship from a group of nearly
60 Michigan student teachers. Colleges from all over the state nominate
their student teachers for the award. Sytsma received $500 and a commemorative
plaque at a May 2 luncheon honoring the award winners.
“She’s
one of those students who come around once in a while, who from the
beginning wanted to do chem ed, but whose grade point and experience
would let her do anything she wanted to,” Louters said. “She
has the aptitude and academic ability to go to graduate school and to
medical school, if that was her inclination, but she wanted to go into
education. Which is wonderful. I encouraged her to do that.”
Sytsma, who is
currently student teaching in her major at West Catholic High School,
has spent years working and volunteering with children in a variety
of contexts: She has tutored, taught vacation Bible school and Sunday
school, coached high school students in Science Olympiads, served as
a camp counselor, taught chemistry in inner city classrooms, and worked
as an activities director at a camp for children for special needs.
One project that
made her an ideal candidate for the MACTE award, said Louters, was a
science curriculum Sytsma created for gifted and talented students at
Calvin’s summer science camp. Paired with Mark Vogel, a Calvin
alumnus currently teaching chemistry at Grand Rapids Christian, Sytsma
both developed and taught the curriculum. The partners in science will
teach the curriculum for a second year after their July 18 marriage
— “right as soon as they get back from their honeymoon,”
Louters said.
Sytsma traces her
affinity for chemistry back to an 11th grade chemistry class, when she
was a student at Grand Rapids Christian. Her affinity for children goes
back even further. “I’ve always liked teaching and spending
time with kids — all my life. I like it when the kids finally
understand it … something they have seen finally makes sense to
them,” she said.
She recounted a
recent experiment as an example: “We took a vacuum and put a Peeps
marshmallow bunny in it. If you decrease the pressure, you increase
the volume. The Peep grows huge,” The kids had more than a scientific
interest in the demonstration, she admitted: “They all wanted
to eat it after that.”
“She wanted to work
with people,” Louters said. “Chemistry is her field to deal
with kids. And those are the people who make the best teachers. …
A heart of service is a wonderful place to start.”
~written by
media relations staff writer Myrna Anderson
|