Who Is My Neighbor? is a field-tested resource through which English speakers of any church and congregation can learn basic Spanish-speaking skills to be able to communicate and provide a welcoming atmosphere to the Hispanic communities surrounding them. The six-session resource developed by the Northern Illinois Conference covers basic conversational Spanish, and simple and easy to follow Spanish-language worship material. The program encourages openness toward Spanish-speaking neighbors, understanding of different cultures, and compassion for those who struggle to learn English. This resource is easily implemented by congregations of any size, and it results in a program of hospitality that will help include Hispanic communities in your church congregation.
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Ruth Cassel Hoffman, PhD, has been a lover of languages since childhood. She first experienced the power of speaking another s language as hospitality on a UMC youth mission trip to Vieques, PR. She earned her doctorate in Romance Languages from the University of Chicago and taught French at St. Mary s College in Notre Dame, IN. Ruth founded Language Resources Ltd. in 1983, providing corporate foreign language training, translation, and interpretation, and has developed active curricula in French and Spanish for students from preschoolers to adults. She is an active member and a former Lay Leader of Kingswood United Methodist Church in Buffalo Grove, IL. She lives in Lake Zurich, Illinois with her husband Miles and their dog Isabella.
Joyce Carrasco, is a retired teacher from the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools where she served for over two decades as a lower school teacher, curriculum writer, director of the Lab Summer Program, and chair of Faculty II. She holds a BA from LaGrange College and a Master of Theological Studies from Emory University s Candler School of Theology. She is an American Montessori certified 3-6 teacher and a certified Director of Christian Education. As a young college graduate, Joyce served with the Board of Global Ministries of the United Methodist Church as a Latin America 3 missionary in Chile. Joyce is married to Rev. Oscar Carrasco, a District Superintendent of the Northern Illinois Conference of the UMC. Joyce lives in Elgin, Illinois with her husband, and they have four children and eight grandchildren.
Ngoc-Diep Nguyen, PhD, is a professor of education at Northeastern Illinois University, specializing in bilingual education. She has been a Spanish and French High School teacher, a teacher trainer and a school administrator. Ngoc-Diep is a member of Our Redeemer United Methodist Church, Schaumburg, IL. Together, these three women designed the curriculum, taught it, and trained instructors in how to use it.
"What are you doing this evening?" the woman who cuts my hair asked me.
"I'm going to a Spanish-as-Second-Language class."
"What's that?" she asked.
I explained to her that I wanted the people in the churches that I serve to learn to speak Spanish so that they can be more hospitable toward their neighbors. Not only in Illinois but throughout the United States, there is a large and/or growing population of Spanish-speaking people. While most of these new immigrants are eager to learn English and attend English classes, it's hospitable to at least attempt Spanish when we connect with them in our communities and in our churches.
"Wow! I never heard of anything like that! That's cool!" she said. Then she added, "I'd like to do that." I assured her that it wasn't exclusively for United Methodists but anyone who was interested.
This represents a typical conversation when talking about the Spanish-as-Second- Language classes being held in the Northern Illinois Annual Conference. After coming to Northern Illinois, I called together a small group of United Methodist linguists with my vision of a curriculum. I imagined it to be an adult learning experience that would enable us to speak if only minimally, sing with greater confidence, and pray together in our culturally diverse communities, churches and annual conference. These dedicated United Methodist linguists developed this curriculum that can assist us in being buenos vecinos (good neighbors).
The orientation for teachers and host church representatives is very important so that those who teach understand the spirit of the curriculum. It's also important that the host churches provide hospitality to those who come; many times people would come from other churches and from the community at large.
I went to the first orientation for the teachers and host church representatives after I signed up for my own six-week course but I was anxious about being able to learn any Spanish. I have a "foreign language anxiety." I learned at the orientation for the teachers and hosts that we would learn Spanish the way a child learns a language; not by conjugating verbs or memorizing long lists of words. We learned our first language by listening to it, seeking to comprehend it even when we didn't totally understand every word, and then slowly beginning to speak it ... very slowly. Speaking is the hardest part and usually language courses quickly "force" adults into speaking before they're really comfortable doing it.
My foreign language anxiety was heightened again as I went to my first class but it was quickly reduced as the teacher guided us through the lesson plan. This curriculum is a model of adult learning with many participatory activities which resulted in lots of fun and laughter.
After attending several classes, I was privileged to attend the installation of the presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church on the campus of the University of Chicago. And wouldn't you know? The person sitting next to me was the only Lutheran woman bishop in Latin America. There were no other Spanish-speaking persons around her. She spoke very little English and I spoke very, very little Spanish but she was patient and kind with me and I know she appreciated that I even tried. These experiences happen all the time in our daily lives, in the life of our church, and in our communities. It will happen to you and when it does, you'll be able to demonstrate hospitality through a few kind words!
This curriculum has been a labor of love by the women who have developed, tested and revised it over the last two years and I highly recommend it even (or maybe especially) if you have foreign language anxiety. In the classes I took, there were people with various levels of ability to speak Spanish already and this added to the class immensely. Whether you know no Spanish whatsoever or you took Spanish in high school (and it's been years since you used it), you'll benefit from this curriculum.
All of us live in communities where our neighbors are Spanish-speakers. It says a lot about the openness of our hearts, minds and doors when we speak a word to them, even if it is halting and without the right verb conjugation ...
Bishop Sally Dyck
Excerpted from ¿Quién es mi vecino? Who Is My Neighbor? by Joyce Carrasco, Ruth Cassel Hoffman, Ngoc-Diep Nguyen. Copyright © 2015 Abingdon Press. Excerpted by permission of Abingdon Press.
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Taschenbuch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - Who Is My Neighbor is a field-tested resource through which English speakers of any church and congregation can learn basic Spanish-speaking skills to be able to communicate and provide a welcoming atmosphere to the Hispanic communities surrounding them. The six-session resource developed by the Northern Illinois Conference covers basic conversational Spanish, and simple and easy to follow Spanish-language worship material. The program encourages openness toward Spanish-speaking neighbors, understanding of different cultures, and compassion for those who struggle to learn English. This resource is easily implemented by congregations of any size, and it results in a program of hospitality that will help include Hispanic communities in your church congregation. Artikel-Nr. 9781501803659
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