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BROOK
HENKEL '05 USES FULBRIGHT GRANT TO TEACH IN GERMANY
“I’ve always been interested
in the pedagogical problems of teaching foreign languages at a high
school level,” says Brook Henkel ’05. He admires the
European system of teaching English, as well as other languages,
to students beginning at a very young age.
As recipient of a Fulbright grant, Henkel will have a chance to
further explore Europe’s methods of language instruction.
He’ll spend the 2005-2006 academic year in Hamburg, Germany,
working as a foreign language teaching assistant at a college preparatory
school. The assignment is being facilitated through Pädagogischer
Austauschdienst (PAD, translated as “Pedagogical Exchange
Service”), an organization that places teachers at secondary
schools throughout Germany. Paired with a German instructor in an
English language class, Henkel will help plan lessons, lead discussions,
and organize speaking activities among small groups of students.
A resident of Lancaster, Pa., Henkel left high school with a rudimentary
understanding of German vocabulary and grammar. “When I got
to Haverford, I started from the ground up,” he says. Originally
intending to study physics or astronomy alone, he was influenced
by his coursework with Associate Professor of German Ulrich Schönherr:
“His approach to teaching and languages is incredible.”
Henkel changed his majors to German and astronomy, with a particular
interest in German literature, and recently completed his senior
thesis (with Schönherr as his advisor) on contemporary German
author W.G. Sebald and his collection of stories, The Emigrants.
“As a double major in German and astronomy, Brook certainly
embodies all the characteristics of an ideal Haverford student whose
intellectual curiosity goes further than one particular division
or discipline,” says Schönherr. “Of the many undergraduate
students I have gotten to know over the last 10 years, he is probably
the most self-directed, self-motivated, and original student I have
had the pleasure of working with.”
While in Hamburg next year, Henkel plans to continue his studies
in German literature by auditing some university classes. He became
familiar with the country’s higher education system, which
allows anyone of any age to sit in on courses, while studying in
the city of Freiburg during the second semester of his junior year.
Upon returning to the United States, Henkel may apply to graduate
school, but he eventually hopes to apply his experiences as a teacher
to the American system of foreign language education. “So
many languages, such as Spanish, should be required from kindergarten
on up,” he says. “You can deconstruct nationalism and
inherent racism by going through the process of learning another
language.”
Sponsored by the United States Department of State, Bureau of Educational
and Cultural Affairs, the Fulbright
Scholar Program sends 800 U.S. faculty and professionals abroad
each year to lecture and conduct research in a variety of fields.
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