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Calvin News

Calvin College, Bridge Street House of Prayer partnering to help students succeed

Wed, Apr 05, 2017
Anna Delph

As of January, Calvin has launched a new partnership with a local gap-year program allowing its students to earn Calvin credits.

Students who participate in the Mission School program at the 聽are now able to earn six elective credit hours and fulfill Calvin鈥檚 Cross-Cultural Engagement core requirement.

Bridging the gap

Bridge years鈥攁lso referred to as gap years鈥攁re becoming more and more popular among college-bound high school graduates. Many choose to delay college enrollment for a year or more so they can work, travel, participate in development programs, or take time to consider what they want to study. Gap-year participation has been growing in the past decade, and recent research from the American Gap Association indicates that 90-percent of gap-year participants go to college within a year.

Will Katerberg, associate dean for programs and partnerships at Calvin, says gap years can serve as a bridge for students who aren鈥檛 sure where they want to go after high school. A gap year program gives them the time and experiential learning they need to figure things out without having to wager a huge investment in college tuition.

鈥淲e know there are students who might come to Calvin but they鈥檙e reluctant at the moment, because they鈥檙e not sure or don鈥檛 feel ready鈥 said Katerberg. 鈥淔or some of these students, a gap year can help them decide if coming to Calvin, or a college like Calvin, is the right choice. And when they do come, they鈥檙e much more likely to flourish.鈥

Developing relationships and skills

The Bridge Street House of Prayer (BSHOP, pronounced 鈥bee-shop鈥) is a nonprofit urban ministry organization near downtown Grand Rapids which focuses on community development and youth discipleship. In addition to events like worship nights and spiritual development trips for youth groups, BSHOP runs a gap-year program called Mission School.

Participants (17-30 years old) spend eight months taking spiritual development classes, doing volunteer work in Grand Rapids and developing skills to help them perform missions work. Two of those months are spent in a foreign country assisting long-term missionaries.

BSHOP executive director Ryan Waalkes 鈥02聽is a Calvin alumnus himself and has seen the significant influence the Mission School program has had on young adults.

鈥淔our years into the program, the vast majority of our students have shown significant growth in their relationship with God, their sense of calling that he has placed on their life, and their commitment to follow and serve him,鈥 said Waalkes. 鈥淚n a time in history when many young people are leaving the church after high school, most, if not all [students in the BSHOP program], are connected to and involved in a local church, and they are actively pursuing the training that will help them excel in their calling and passion.鈥

Preparing聽for college

Two Calvin students who participated in this program, Jacob Melton 鈥19 (Northpointe Christian H.S., Grand Rapids) and Megan Sloterbeek 鈥19 (South Christian H.S., Grand Rapids), said they were attracted to Mission School because of its intense focus on spiritual development and study.

鈥淚 liked the idea of being able to pursue something like that wholeheartedly without all the other class stuff on the side,鈥 said Melton.

鈥淢y senior year of high school, I was looking for more,鈥 said Sloterbeek. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what I wanted to do in college, I didn鈥檛 have very clear ambitions for a career, and I didn鈥檛 want to just spin my wheels taking general ed courses somewhere. I was really hungry for God. I wanted to build a foundation in what really matters, and I felt like I didn鈥檛 have anything to lose by doing the gap year.鈥

Students who take a break between high school and college with a mission driven gap year program can also bring a fresh perspective to traditional campus culture. These students are often distinctly focused and driven and pursue their education very intentionally.

鈥淭here were some challenges transitioning and getting back into the academic mindset,鈥 said Sloterbeek. 鈥淏ut it was really refreshing to come back. I viewed studying not as a requirement or something imposed on me, but as something I鈥檇 chosen. I鈥檇 chosen to come into a place that was going to help me gain skills in something I care about as opposed to just doing something that was expected of me.鈥

鈥淸Taking a gap year] has definitely given me a drive for doing school in light of the fact that there is more outside of academics,鈥 said Melton. 鈥淚鈥檓 not necessarily looking to escape.鈥

Committing to student success

Both sides of the partnership hope that BSHOP students will also find Calvin鈥檚 culture and mission to be familiar and easy to get behind.

鈥淥ur hope is that as our students continue on to schools such as Calvin,鈥 said Waalkes, 鈥渢hat they will help contribute to and strengthen the spiritual atmosphere of the school, even taking leadership positions on campus to help their peers also continue to pursue Jesus in their studies.鈥

鈥淸BSHOP students] will be really ready in general to take on their undergrad studies with the sense of awareness of calling and mission that they developed at BSHOP,鈥 said Katerberg.

鈥淒oing missions with BSHOP gave me a better understanding of Calvin鈥檚 mission,鈥 said Melton, 鈥渢hat academics is a means to think deeply and act justly.鈥

Research shows that gap years are a growing phenomena, and Katerberg hopes that more opportunities might become available in the future to recruit students from organizations with missions congruent with Calvin鈥檚.

鈥淲e are interested in recruiting students who are eager to learn and ready to succeed,鈥 said Katerberg. 鈥淕ap year programs like BSHOP are a great source for such students.鈥