Hutchison 8th-graders get long-distance lesson in global awareness
Feature profile for The Commercial Appeal
May 11, 2010
John Stephany traveled nearly 7,000 miles to teach his eighth-grade students at Hutchison School a lesson.
Stephany, a world history teacher, recently visited South Korea with the Group Study Exchange, a program aimed at promoting cultural awareness for 25- to 40-year-old professionals.
The four young professionals chosen for this trip by the sponsoring organization, Rotary International district 6800 of Germantown, include an auditor, logistics manager with Smith & Nephew, a publicist with Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital and Stephany, who used the experience to teach his students back home about life in other cultures.
“Rotary is about trying to encourage communication, cultural awareness and things of this nature,” Stephany said.
Even before Stephany was chosen for the trip, the world history curriculum at Hutchison was being expanded farther east from China and India to Korea and Japan. “I applied for this trip before I knew this was happening.”
Stephany is no newcomer to travel; he has spent the last five summers teaching high school seniors at the School of Public Service at St. Albans School in Washington. He has also “bummed around Ireland,” spent time backpacking around western Europe and visiting Germany, Prague and Poland. He visited China in 2008 on a trip sponsored by the Columbia University National Consortium for Teaching About Asia that also acted as a teaching tool for his students back home. He sees his time in Korea as an extension of that trip and an addendum to any textbook he might quote … (read more)