Doug Hertzler Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/doug-hertzler/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Fri, 05 Sep 2014 19:11:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Washington Community Scholars’ Center can be a springboard to future work /now/news/2014/washington-community-scholars-center-as-a-springboard-to-future-work/ Fri, 07 Mar 2014 15:42:28 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=20731 鈥淭his program聽is for any 黑料正能量 student,鈥 says former WCSC associate director Doug Hertzler 鈥88. 鈥淵ou can position yourself to do anything you want after college through this program.鈥

Hertzler himself is a case in point: he interned with Washington Inner City Self-Help while a student in the then-named WSSY program during the 1986-87 school year, went into anthropology, and wound back up as professor at now-named WCSC. (Hertzler moved into a new job with Action Aid International in November聽2012.) Numerous alumni of the WSSY/WCSC program continue to draw directly from their internship experience in their jobs today, scattered across a wide variety of career fields. Some examples:

Pharmaceuticals

鈥淎 lot of the things I learned during my WSSY year really played into what I鈥檝e done,鈥 said Fikir Tilahun 鈥00 Sanders, most recently employed in corporate social responsibility for a large pharmaceutical company. During her year in Washington, Sanders was an intern with Bread for the City, a nonprofit that provided healthcare, legal assistance and other support to low-income and homeless people. Sanders worked in the organization鈥檚 clinic and helped clients fill out paperwork to enroll in various 鈥減atient assistance programs,鈥 through which many drug companies provide free medication to people in financial need.

Sanders found herself working on the same issue from a very different angle: the redesign of her own company鈥檚 patient-assistance program.

鈥淭he regulation has changed since I was doing it [in Washington], but it was interesting to work on the other side of it,鈥 she said, noting that her experience helping patients enroll in programs like the one she鈥檚 redesigned played a role in the decisions she made.

Journalism

Samantha Cole
Samantha Cole 鈥11, pictured at left, did her internship at Al Jazeera during the 2011 “Arab Spring.” She is now a reporter at the Daily News-Record in Harrisonburg, Va.

As an intern in the interview production department of the Al Jazeera English network, Samantha Cole 鈥11 lined up experts on various topics to speak on-air to the station鈥檚 anchors during her semester in the WCSC program.

The spring of 2011 was a momentous time to be at the network. As the events of the Arab Spring unfolded, the routine rush of 鈥渁nswering three phones at once would pause, to watch what was happening on our own coverage: our reporters being beaten by police, satellite trucks burning, revolutionaries waving banners with the Al Jazeera logo. It was surreal to be on the other side of the camera, helping give voice to the long unheard,鈥 she said.

Soon after her semester in Washington ended, Cole began working as a features writer for the Daily News-Record back on 黑料正能量鈥檚 home turf in Harrisonburg.

鈥淢y internship definitely played a part in sticking with journalism. I learned the importance of thorough, careful retelling of stories. Sources aren鈥檛 just soundbites, but people who trust the journalist with the most precious thing they own: their story,鈥 she said.

Natural Resource Management

Justin Hawkins
Justin Hawkins 鈥06, a native of Harrisonburg, Va., started as an intern with the U.S. Forest Service and now manages eight campgrounds and other recreational facilities, serving 100,000 to 200,000 visitors, on federally owned land near Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming.

Working for the U.S. Forest Service in its International Programs office, Justin Hawkins 鈥06 had an opportunity to learn more about the behind-the-scenes workings of the agency he still works for. Now based in Cody, Wyoming, as a supervisory recreation technician for the Shoshone National Forest, Hawkins manages eight campgrounds and other recreational facilities near Yellowstone National Park that serve 100,000 to 200,000 visitors each year. While his work in the field now bears little similarity to his day-to-day tasks as an intern, the experience gave him broader understanding of the Forest Service as well as a 鈥渇oot in the door鈥 that helped him land the job in Wyoming after graduating from 黑料正能量.

Digital Media

Mark Fenton 鈥10 sees a clear line from his internship with Bread for the World to his job as a media specialist with a marketing agency in Harrisonburg. At Bread for the World, Fenton worked in a variety of digital media to support the organization鈥檚 marketing and communications efforts. Focusing primarily on photography, Fenton helped the organization develop a photography database. His pictures appeared in numerous Bread for the World publications. In his current job, he works on a variety of projects that include email marketing, web strategy and video production for his agency鈥檚 clients.

鈥淭he internship helped me step into the working world,鈥 Fenton said. 鈥淚t gave me experience in a real work setting, with demands and deadlines . . . . It helped push me to become more persistent, hard-working and confident.鈥

Physical Therapy

Entering her WSSY experience in 1988, Amy Smith 鈥90 Mumbauer was trying to decide whether she wanted to pursue graduate study in medicine or physical therapy. Her internship, assisting a physical therapist at an Easter Seals preschool in Washington, made the choice an easy one.

鈥淢rs. Horowitz [her supervisor] taught me how to provide hands-on care for children with disabilities,鈥 said Mumbauer, who went on to graduate school in physical therapy and has spent much of the past 20 years working in adult rehabilitation and orthopedics. 鈥淭he handling skills that I learned in my internship with the children have been useful to me in many settings. . . . Communicating with patients and families, as I watched Mrs. Horowitz do, is a skill that I use daily.鈥

Guidance Counseling/Coaching

It was at Archbishop John Carroll Catholic High School in Washington, D.C. where Dwight Gingerich 鈥81 first discovered the similarities between counseling and coaching. Splitting his internship between the guidance office and assisting the varsity basketball team during the school鈥檚 run to the city basketball championship game, Gingerich learned that effective listening and benevolence are characteristics equally important to counselors and coaches. Now a guidance counselor, athletic director and head boys basketball coach at Iowa Mennonite School, Gingerich said that lessons he learned in Washington remain as relevant in rural Iowa as they were more than three decades ago in the inner city.

Information Technology

Francis Johnson
Francis Johnson 鈥07 started as an intern at 501c TECH and was hired into a full-time job there, where he continues to work. He is now a senior engineer.

Francis Johnson 鈥07 enjoys an extremely close connection between his internship through WCSC and his job today as an IT engineer in Washington D.C. 鈥 he was hired on at 501cTECH full-time a week after his internship there ended. The nonprofit organization, formerly known as NPower Greater DC Region, provides IT support and services to other nonprofits across the D.C. metro area.

Johnson entered WCSC for his final semester of college knowing the internship would provide him with real-world experience, and he hoped, lead to post-college job opportunities. Getting hired directly by his internship, he said, was a best-case scenario.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I hoped would happen with the WCSC program,鈥 said Johnson, a senior 501cTECH engineer, who works with clients on technical support, network maintenance, assessments and other projects.

Learning how to live and interact with a large group of fellow students, plus taking classes at Howard University, made his experience in D.C. worth it for more than the job he landed.

鈥淚 benefitted in many ways,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淚鈥檇 do it again 鈥 not just because of the great job opportunity, but because of the other unique experiences that came with it.鈥 鈥 Andrew Jenner ’04

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In the ‘real world’ of DC students wrestle with values and career /now/news/2014/in-the-real-world-of-dc-students-wrestle-with-values-and-career/ Fri, 07 Mar 2014 15:35:20 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=20728 Photos by Jon Styer.

Shoulder鈥搕o-Shoulder,聽a Washington D.C.-based interfaith coalition that works to end anti-Muslim sentiment in the United States, has its work cut out for it. Political campaigns throughout the 2012 election season made use of xenophobic language, and vandalism of mosques made headlines repeatedly over the past year, including an incident at a mosque a few miles from 黑料正能量.

As an intern with the organization, Bekah Enns 鈥13 has put to work her experience as a co-editor of The Weather Vane, 黑料正能量鈥檚 student newspaper, by producing a bi-weekly newsletter, compiling fact sheets, and otherwise pitching in on the group鈥檚 various initiatives and campaigns.

Bekah Enns 鈥13
Bekah Enns 鈥13

One of Shoulder-to-Shoulder鈥檚 priorities is trying to replace the commonly used label 鈥淢uslim American鈥 with 鈥淎merican Muslim鈥 鈥 a term consciously chosen to emphasize to the 鈥淎merican-ness鈥 that unites people of all faiths who live in the United States. While it seems a worthwhile project to Enns, she鈥檚 also well aware of how this appeal to secular, American values is somewhat at odds with the Mennonite tradition of emphasizing primary allegiance to God rather than country.

And so, Enns鈥 internship through 黑料正能量鈥檚 , or WCSC, has become something more than just a taste of real-world work and an opportunity to develop contacts, ideas and credentials for life after college. It鈥檚 also a launching point for deeper examination of the relationship between faith, values and career.

鈥淗ow do we as Mennonites engage the state, and how much do we build our alternative systems?鈥 asks Enns, a history major with minors in political science, pre-law and peacebuilding and development.

What relationship, exactly, should a person of faith hold toward advocacy in a secular environment, she wonders? Doesn鈥檛 a faith like hers, one that prescribes action on behalf of the least among us, require this sort of entanglement with the wider world? But does this very entanglement with the wider world undermine the foundations of her faith?

Sitting at the kitchen table in the WCSC house, Enns 鈥 approaching the end of her semester in Washington 鈥撀爃asn鈥檛 hit on any answers to her questions yet. At the same time, she knows she would like to continue doing faith-based advocacy work after she graduates.

鈥淲ashington is often viewed as the quintessential 鈥楥ity on a Hill鈥 because of the power that exists here,鈥 says Sheldon C. Good, WCSC assistant director. 鈥淎nd yet, Jesus professed an upside-down kingdom that turned power on its head, and that鈥檚 what students have to grapple with.鈥

Questions like those raised by Enns lie at the heart of the Washington Community Scholars鈥 Center experience, says Kimberly Schmidt, the program鈥檚 director since 1999. While most internship programs in Washington D.C. focus on career-building, WCSC pushes students to think more broadly about vocation, where one鈥檚 work and one鈥檚 values align. Another key feature of the WCSC internship programs is its emphasis on serving other people rather than just one鈥檚 own interests.

鈥淎 lot of people come to D.C. and they just want to pad their r茅sum茅s and network,鈥 says Schmidt, who takes satisfaction in seeing students struggle with deeper questions during their WCSC experience. 鈥淏ut we really want our students to come in with an attitude of service.鈥

This concept of 鈥渟ervant-leadership鈥 has been a part of the WCSC program since its inception in 1976 and remains very much at the center of its focus.

At the same time, that doesn鈥檛 mean that student internships remain limited to ones like Shoulder-to-Shoulder, with an overt mission of service or advocacy.

Instead, Schmidt and Good place students in a wide variety of internships that match career interests, and then work with them to 鈥渋magine themselves as servant-leaders in that particular sector.鈥

Christine Baer '14
Christine Baer ’14

The academic component of the WCSC program places great emphasis on the differences, diversity and contradictions encountered by students during their semester in the city. A student鈥檚 day could begin in one of the poorest neighborhoods in the country and could end at the Kennedy Center, a few miles away and several worlds apart. Schmidt and former associate director Doug Hertzler 鈥88 (after more than a decade with the program, he took a new job in the late fall of 2012) intentionally expose students to these different realities 鈥 鈥減olarities and disparities,鈥 as Schmidt refers to them 鈥 during the seminars on urban history, anthropology and life that the directors lead each semester.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what 鈥榞entrification鈥 meant before coming here this semester,鈥 says Christine Baer 鈥14, calling her class in urban anthropology one of the highlights of her WCSC experience.

Through a variety of field trips, guest speakers and readings, she and her classmates studied the dynamics of race, class and politics at work in the rapidly changing city. (Since WCSC was established in the 鈥70s, for example, the African-American share of the city鈥檚 population has fallen from 70 percent to 50 percent.)

Like many in the WCSC program, Baer finds city life exhilarating. After graduation, she plans to look for work in the human services field in a large city, with D.C. high on her list.

The endless opportunity for new experiences, encounters and entertainment, the public transportation that zips you around, the crowds, everything seemingly at her fingertips 鈥 all of these are also a highlight of the experience for Taylor Swantz 鈥13.

鈥淚 love the city,鈥 says Swantz, who grew up in rural Iowa and has an internship with a psychologist at a therapy center in College Park, Maryland.

Taylor Swantz '13
Taylor Swantz ’13

Good points out that it鈥檚 simply fun to live in one of the world鈥檚 most important cities.

鈥淪tudents have plenty of opportunities to experience city life and build community together,鈥 he says.

(The night before Crossroads鈥 visit to the WCSC program, several students were out late, taking in the spectacle of President Barack Obama鈥檚 re-election outside the White House and along U Street, where celebration erupted after the result was announced.)

But even when there are great times to be had and great questions to ponder, there are still groceries to buy and bathrooms to clean, and here again, WCSC students are thrust into the real (and banal) world, where there is no cafeteria or custodial staff to lean on.

Because she is one of the few students with a car in the city, Baer became one of the grocery shoppers, making regular trips to Aldis for the deals and Giant for everything else, plus a few agreed-upon luxuries, like caramel macchiato-flavored coffee creamer. She and her classmates also have organized weekly meetings and set up cooking and cleaning rotations to keep the house in order 鈥 tasks that the WCSC staffers leave up to the students to figure out.

鈥淚 feel more adult here,鈥 says Kiersten Rossetto 鈥13, mentioning the greater freedoms and greater responsibilities given students in WCSC compared to life on campus in Harrisonburg.

While Schmidt and the rest of the WCSC staff emphasize the way the program develops students beyond simple career enhancement, job opportunities frequently do present themselves through the internships in D.C. During some semesters, 90 percent of the students have received job offers through, or directly because of, their internship placements, Schmidt says.

Kiersten Rossetto 鈥13
Kiersten Rossetto 鈥13

And even when the internship doesn鈥檛 culminate in a full-fledged job, the experience at the very least lets students give the urban vocation a full-dress rehearsal.

Baer, interning with Maryland Citizens Against State Executions, has both enjoyed her work 颅assisting the organization in its campaign to abolish the death penalty in Maryland, and figured out that working on a policy level 颅鈥 emailing, letter-writing, bending legislators鈥 ears 鈥 is a little too impersonal for her tastes.

鈥淚t is really valuable work, but I think I get my energy elsewhere,鈥 says Baer, who has figured out over the course of the semester that she prefers service and advocacy work that involves more direct contact with constituents.

Rossetto, an intern with the immigrant advocacy group Casa de Maryland, feels very much drawn to that field, which she also studied from a very different angle as a student on 黑料正能量鈥檚 Guatemala and U.S.-Mexico border cross-cultural. Now considering work with the Peace Corps or Mennonite Central Committee, though, Rossetto isn鈥檛 yet exactly sure where or how her skills and values frame a vocational calling.

鈥淚 really like nonprofit work and organizing, but I鈥檓 still on that journey,鈥 Rossetto says. 鈥淚鈥檓 still figuring it out.鈥 鈥 Andrew Jenner ’04

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The history of the Washington Community Scholars’ Center /now/news/2014/washington-community-scholars-center/ Fri, 07 Mar 2014 15:19:54 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=20724 In the fall of 1976,聽Phil Baker-Shenk arrived in Washington D.C., intending to advance the causes of international human rights and nuclear disarmament through an internship with the Friends Committee on National Legislation. However, as an 18-year-old college undergrad at the bottom of the organization鈥檚 rungs, he found himself shuffled to its underfunded and understaffed Native American advocacy program.

He didn鈥檛 know it yet, but the assignment sparked an interest that was to become his life鈥檚 work.

After graduating from 黑料正能量 in 1979, Baker-Shenk worked for two years for the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs before earning his law degree at Catholic University in D.C. He then returned to working on issues affecting Native American tribes, including three more years as an aide in the U.S. Senate. Now a partner in the Holland & Knight law firm, for the past 25 years he has been representing tribal governments across the country facing a variety of challenges to their sovereignty and self-governance authorities. It all goes back to that formative year he spent in Washington, which almost didn鈥檛 happen in the first place.

Nelson on tractor
Nelson Good on a tractor at Rolling Ridge, where he and his family sought occasional respite from the intensity of living in D.C.

The idea of an 黑料正能量-sponsored academic program in D.C. began with Nelson Good 鈥68, who spent two years after graduation in D.C. as a conscientious objector volunteering at a community center. He later became an administrator of two Mennonite-run voluntary service units in Washington and soon became convinced that a service-year experience would be improved if a formal academic component were added.

Good approached 黑料正能量 with his idea, but it was not immediately embraced by the administration. The college was facing a period of financial uncertainty in the mid-鈥70s, and was hesitant to start such an innovative program. This came as a disappointment to Baker-Shenk and a group of students who had become excited about Good鈥檚 proposal. They decided to take matters into their own hands in the spring of 1976.

鈥淲e organized together, and said to the administration, 鈥榃e鈥檙e going to go elsewhere unless 黑料正能量 starts this program,鈥欌 remembers Baker-Shenk.

Their effort paid off, and the university took a gamble on the idea. Good became the first director of the Washington Study-Service Year (WSSY), a position he would hold for the next 11 years, and Baker-Shenk was one of the first nine students in the first WSSY program during its initial year, from 1976 to 1977.

鈥淭hanks to EMC鈥檚 vision, and thanks to WSSY and Nelson Good, I stumbled into a life-long passion and vocation that I would have never predicted ever happening to a little Mennonite farm kid from Pennsylvania potato fields,鈥 Baker-Shenk said.

WSSY
Nelson Good in 1987 with college students at Rolling Ridge, a rustic retreat center in West Virginia regularly used by WCSC. From left, Deborah Weaver ’89, Kay Zehr’ 87 Diller, Nelson Good ’68, Craig Snider ’88, Mary Jo Swartzendruber (class of ’89), and Steve Mumbauer ’88

From the beginning, the WSSY program (renamed the , or WCSC, in 2002) was structured much like it is today. Students lived together in a group house and split their time between internships and academic courses, either taken at universities in the D.C. area or taught by 黑料正能量 faculty staffing the program. Throughout its history, the program has afforded students the opportunity to live, study and gain valuable, real-world work and cross-cultural experience in the middle of one of the world鈥檚 most important cities.

鈥淚t was just such a thrilling year on multiple levels for me,鈥 said Rolando Santiago 鈥79, a student during the second year of the WSSY program, beginning in the fall of 1977. 鈥淲hen I look back on it, I鈥檓 not sure that I鈥檝e ever had such a rich, stimulating year since.鈥

Now the executive director of the Lancaster Mennonite Historical Society, Santiago said his internship with Ayuda, a legal aid agency that primarily served Hispanic immigrants, gave him 鈥渄eep appreciation for, and understanding of, the role that community-based organizations can have in enriching the life of an entire population.鈥

He said that mindset also heavily informed his work in mental health for the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and as executive director of Mennonite Central Committee U.S. from 2004 to 2010.

Originally from rural Puerto Rico, Santiago got his first taste of urban living in Washington, and intentionally stretched himself by taking courses at the University of Maryland that weren鈥檛 available then at 黑料正能量. He also became involved in the Hispanic Mennonite Church in D.C. and capitalized on the spontaneous learning opportunities he encountered, such as a course he took on Marxism and Leninism taught by a person he鈥檇 met through Ayuda.

鈥淚t was a bit scary for me because I was always taught that that was not something you touch, intellectually or otherwise,鈥 said Santiago, who later expanded his housemates鈥 horizons by arranging for the teacher to give a lecture on Marxism to the entire WSSY program.

One of his classmates that year, Dawn Longenecker 鈥80, also described the experience as one that stretched, challenged and transformed her in important ways.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a really wonderful place where people can struggle and grapple and build community all at the same time,鈥 said Longenecker, director of Discipleship Year, a voluntary service program in Washington D.C. run by the Church of the Saviour.

As a WSSY student, Longenecker discovered a lifelong passion for advocacy and social change through her internship with the Gray Panthers, a grassroots organizing and advocacy group for elderly people. Longenecker recalls wrestling with the other WSSY students over questions of faith, justice and application of the Gospel, and said her mind was 鈥渂lown on multiple levels.鈥

鈥淚t was an incredible year,鈥 said Longenecker, who has remained in Washington ever since, mostly doing social work. 鈥淢y whole life journey came from WSSY. My whole life was transformed.鈥

The formal academic component of the program includes classes taught by WCSC faculty, plus the option of studying at a number of different universities in the Washington D.C. area. At the beginning of the program, the University of Maryland was the main partner institution; today, students can enroll at Trinity University, the University of the District of Columbia, the Corcoran College of Art and Design and others, including Howard University and Catholic University.

Students are also required to take a weekly academic seminar. Until recently, WCSC director Kimberly Schmidt taught some seminar topics, while former associate director Doug Hertzler 鈥88 focused on others. (At the end of the fall 2012 semester, Hertzler departed WCSC for another job.) Schmidt and Hertzler 鈥撀爓hose academic specialties are history and anthropology, respectively 鈥 used the city as a giant textbook as they examined issues of race, class, urban life and faith.

鈥淭he cultural and historical studies at WCSC have greatly informed my life,鈥 said Mark Fenton 鈥10. 鈥淟ooking at the gentrification of D.C. and issues of race and politics during the history of the city, has made me a more informed and better-rounded person.鈥

WCSC also represents 黑料正能量鈥檚 longest running cross-cultural, established several years before cross-cultural education found its way into the university鈥檚 required curriculum. When the program began, about 70 percent of Washington D.C.鈥檚 population was African-American, giving many students 鈥 particularly in the early days of the program 鈥 their first extended experience surrounded by people whose race and culture were different from their own, which tended to be largely white, rural populations.

鈥淚 remember the moment when I realized I wasn鈥檛 seeing race when I was working with kids,鈥 said Dwight Gingerich 鈥81, who coached basketball at a predominantly African-American school during his year in the WSSY program. 鈥淥ur neighborhood was 99 percent African-American, and it was a great cross-cultural experience for me.鈥

While many WCSC students today also participate in other cross-cultural programs offered at 黑料正能量, the program in Washington still fulfills that requirement for students.

Many alumni recall the importance of the informal, day-to-day aspects of the experience.

鈥淚鈥檓 much more confident in finding my way around places, because I biked all over the city, and finding my way around transit systems isn鈥檛 so daunting,鈥 said Fenton.

Amy Smith 鈥90 Mumbauer remembers learning about the challenges of sticking to a tight budget while shopping for her 12-student house at the Shoppers Food Warehouse and Glut, a food co-op. Like most WCSC groups, hers shared cooking and cleaning duties. They ate together around a long wooden table beneath a ceiling occasionally dangling spaghetti 鈥撀爐he result of tests for pasta done-ness.

By the late 鈥90s, the WSSY program was beginning to have trouble filling all its spots, facing competition from 黑料正能量鈥檚 growing cross-cultural program and increasingly rigid academic requirements that made it difficult for students to spend an entire year off campus. Even with a handful of students from other Mennonite colleges entering the program each year, low enrollment was a significant concern when Schmidt became director in 1999.

After two more lean years, Schmidt and others at 黑料正能量 made a difficult decision to reduce the program from a year to a semester in length. With the 鈥測ear鈥 part removed from the WSSY equation, a name-change was also in order. They chose the term 鈥淐ommunity Scholars鈥 to emphasize the academic rigor of the program 鈥 one of its major distinguishing factors from the many other college internship programs that exist in Washington D.C. 鈥淐ommunity Scholars,鈥 Schmidt says, also connotes an emphasis on social justice, which has always been a focus of the program. Finally, 鈥淐enter鈥 was chosen to emphasize the partnership 黑料正能量 has with other Mennonite universities that regularly send students to the Washington Community Scholars鈥 Center, or WCSC.

Today, Bluffton University in Ohio is 黑料正能量鈥檚 biggest partner school in the program, sending up to five students per year. In addition to two semester-long sessions each year, WCSC also offers a 10-week summer program that places more emphasis on the internship experience and allows students to accumulate the same number of internship hours as those who spend the whole semester in Washington.

鈥淚 really admire how 黑料正能量 took a longstanding program and wasn鈥檛 afraid to redesign it in a way that more people would benefit from,鈥 said Fikir Tilahun 鈥00 Sanders, a member of one of the last groups of students to spend two semesters in the WSSY program.

In 2006, the newly revamped WCSC program underwent another change. Faced with expensive and cumbersome renovations to the original building in northeast Washington, the program moved a relatively short distance to a new building on Taylor Street. The new home gave the program more space and more convenient access to a Metro station.

Nelson Good & Jay Good
Nelson and contractor Jay Good at the newly purchased building for WCSC, not long before Nelson’s death of cancer in 2005.

The location also sits in an ideal neighborhood, neither sheltered nor unsafe. It is characterized by mixed incomes and ethnic diversity, said Hertzler. The diversity immediately surrounding the house, he added, made it very easy for students to conduct the direct participant-observation projects he assigned for the urban anthropology courses he taught.

The building is called the Nelson Good House, named in honor of the program鈥檚 founder and first director who was diagnosed with cancer as he was overseeing renovations of the new WCSC building in D.C. Good passed away in 2005, soon before the move was made.

Schmidt noted that the concept of 鈥渟ervant-leadership鈥 remains at the heart of the WCSC experience and has been a core emphasis of the program since its inception. Servant-leadership, she explained, entails following Christ鈥檚 example in vocation by aligning faith and values with career goals; it characterizes the best leaders as motivated by a sense of service. In Washington D.C., she added, students have the additional opportunity to explore and apply Anabaptist values of servanthood and nonconformity in the geographic and figurative seat of American power.

鈥淚 came to understand in WSSY that institutions, and positions of leadership within institutions, are opportunities for serving,鈥 said John Stahl-Wert 鈥81, who studied in the program during the 1977-78 school year.

The author of several books, including The Serving Leader, Stahl-Wert said that WSSY鈥檚 emphasis on servant-leadership, and a book the group read 鈥撀Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power and Greatness by Robert Greenleaf 鈥 became the basis for his work today. In addition to writing, Stahl-Wert is also a leadership coach and speaker based in Pittsburgh.

鈥淐riticizing institutions and leaders is one of the weaker 鈥 if sometimes necessary 鈥 acts of contributing good to the world,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e must step into difficult positions of responsibility.鈥

Stahl-Wert interned with the Juvenile Probation Office of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. He recalls feeling immediately at home in the city even though he grew up in rural Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. During his WSSY experience, he said Washington D.C. became the first of many cities he now loves.

First exposure to big-city life is another important element for many in the WCSC program.

鈥淚 came to WSSY with very little experience in an urban setting,鈥 said Trent Wagler 鈥02. 鈥淭he first lesson I learned was that I鈥檓 a very, very small blip in this huge journey. . . . Coming from a small Kansas high school to a small Mennonite college campus, it was pretty easy to get an inflated sense of my importance in the world. My year in Washington put that into some perspective.鈥

Wagler interned with the Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company. That opportunity led to work as an actor and musician at a professional theater in rural Virginia, which later inspired his career now fronting his nationally touring band, The Steel Wheels.

With its interconnected emphases on learning and service, diverse opportunities for students to explore career interests, and location in the heart of a major city, the program exerts an impact on students in multiple ways, say alumni.

鈥淢y D.C. semester was one of the best choices I made at 黑料正能量,鈥 said Fenton, who is now a media specialist with the Gravity Group in Harrisonburg. 鈥淚t helped me focus my goals and work toward them, building myself as a person, as a professional, and more. I am very glad for every way that my time in Washington changed me. It has all been for the better.鈥澛 鈥 Andrew Jenner ’04

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Washington Community Scholars鈥 Center (WCSC) /now/news/video/washington-community-scholars-center-wcsc/ /now/news/video/washington-community-scholars-center-wcsc/#respond Sun, 19 Sep 2010 20:32:03 +0000 http://emu.edu/blog/video/?p=19 Who says college isn’t the real world? The Washington Community Scholars’ Center (WCSC) is a semester-long service-learning internship program that includes聽 20 hours per week learning on-the-job at an internship, group living with up to 15 students from other Mennonite colleges, two core classes on DC history, culture, and social issues, and the option to take an additional class at a DC university.

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