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Just two decades ago Larry
Herzberg taught four students in Calvin's first Chinese language class.
Now student demand has led
to the creation of a new Asian Studies major at the college.
In fact, enrollments in both
Chinese and Japanese courses at Calvin College have been on a steady
increase in recent years with the 2003-2004 school year seeing an all-time
record for the number of students taking the two languages.
History professor
Daniel Bays (above), director of Calvin's Asian Studies Program, says
the new major is a response to a steadily increasing number of students
putting together specialized majors that were in effect Asian studies
majors.
Calvin already is the only
Christian college in the country that offers four continuous years of
language studies in Chinese and Japanese. Now it becomes the only Christian
college where students can major in Asian Studies.
"Our curriculum is more
in the category of a university," says Bays. "We now draw
students to Calvin (specifically) for Asian language studies."
For Herzberg the new major
is simply "a dream come true."
The Asian Studies major will
offer students three possible tracks.
One will require eight Chinese
language classes and four classes in Asian history, religion, philosophy,
art history or political science. A second track is identical, but will
focus on Japanese studies. The third track will require four language
classes in either Chinese or Japanese and eight in Asian studies from
other fields.
The interdisciplinary scope
of the major was easily achieved thanks to the extra focus on Asia in
recent years across several Calvin departments. Calvin’s history
department added Asian history to the curriculum 20 years ago, while
the Calvin philosophy department sponsors both faculty and student exchanges
with major Chinese universities.
Calvin also is sending increasing
numbers of students to study in China, Japan, Korea and Hong Kong, through
semester abroad and summer programs. A dozen Calvin students will be
involved in such programs this summer alone.
Many of these cultural exchanges
are funded through an $800,000 grant from the Freeman Foundation, which
has also enabled Calvin's Asian Studies program to expand its library
resources.
Calvin' growing interest
in Asia reflects the growing place of Asia in the worldwide church as
well as on the world stage says Bays.
"The body of Christ
worldwide is Asian, it’s African, and it’s Latin American
more than it is European and North American in terms of where the really
dynamic growth is happening," Bays notes. "And of course,
there are some practical things such as China becoming a powerhouse
economically and politically around the world. It’s not an option
to ignore Asia. A lot of our students are instinctively aware of that."
~written by media relations
staff writer Myrna Anderson
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