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Calvin News

Students research child welfare system in China

Fri, Aug 29, 2014
Amanda Greenhoe

An estimated 66,000 orphans live in China鈥檚 social welfare institutions. Recently, a Calvin course set out to gather information about best practices for their care.  

The idea started a world away with , an advocate for Chinese children who have special needs. Bing, who partners with Bethany Christian Services, aims to reform the Chinese orphanage and foster care systems, with a particular interest in the wellbeing of children with special needs.

Calvin professors Judith Vander Woude (program director) and Jill Bates (clinic director) relied on Bing鈥檚 expertise and ongoing work in orphan care to coordinate their May interim course, Adoption and Foster Care for Chinese Children with Special Needs.

Jumping right in

After getting a crash course in Chinese culture in Beijing, Vander Woude and Bates traveled with two graduate and 18 undergraduate students to the city of Zhengzhou, located in the Henan Province. Under Bing鈥檚 guidance, they worked with children and caregivers at the Zhengzhou Child Welfare Institute, and with foster care families in neighboring communities.

With translation help from university students in China, developmental assessments were made for over 230 children with special needs between the ages of one month and 14 years, Vander Woude said.

While the research, once analyzed, will likely serve to document the merits of foster care, the class鈥檚 work also produces tangible benefits for the institutionalized children who participated. 鈥淲e also trained their rehabilitation staff and provided suggestions for each child's caregiver,鈥 Vander Woude explained.

Building relationships

Participants also benefitted by walking alongside students and employees they met through their walk. 鈥淏eing able to have meaningful conversations with the Zhengzhou students who helped us about our faith and to also establish relationships with the persons who serve children with special needs in this province was incredible,鈥 said Vander Woude.

Recent graduate Stephanie Toering (鈥13 BA, 鈥14 MA) also valued her time spent with caretakers. 鈥淚鈥檒l never forget the deep love and concern that the foster parents shared for their children. Watching a caretaker or foster parent see their child do something for the first time, whether it be sitting up, babbling or laughing, was a tremendous blessing,鈥 she reflected. 鈥淲e were reminded that God cares about all of His children and that He truly does have the whole world in His hands.鈥 

Toering, whose parents adopted two of her siblings from China, considers it a privilege to have worked with children in the Chinese social welfare system before graduating from Calvin鈥檚 speech pathology and audiology master鈥檚 program in August. Said Toering: 鈥淭his trip was an incredible opportunity to tie in the clinical skills and knowledge that I鈥檝e gained in Calvin's speech pathology program with my passion for these kids.鈥 

Ongoing research

Vander Woude says she hopes to return within a year for further research on the children's development, comparing the differences between children in institutions and children in foster homes.