Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Watch the Lamb



We have decided to get started on our family so are now raising a lamb. She is very cute and then more cute. We feed her a bottle 3 times a day and then she has a milk mustache. She follows us where ever we go, until her feet get all tangled up in the leash. We haven't really named her yet; any suggestions?

Christmas break is upon us and the kids are out of school. I am still tutoring some students over the holidays and I have taken on a few more whom I worked with in school and wanted to continue with over the holidays so that we don't loose momentem (did I spell that right? And I'm a teacher!).

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Chris' parents have come!

Chris' parents have come to visit. We have visited Lamani (Mayan Ruins) and Shipyard (Old Colony Mennonites).

Today was very boring for them. I (Cory) had to work in the morning at the school. Then I had Spanish lessons (yes I am taking Spanish now) at 1:30-3:00 and then tutoring from 3:00-7:00. The motorbike broke down today, so I rode my bicycle to a few of my appointments. Man, didn't realize how much out of shape I was. Then when I did get the truck, the tail gate fell off!!!!

The Trinity Sermon

I preached on the Trinity last Saturday night in San Felipe. I had a great time during the week pouring over the subject and trying to put together what God has been teaching these last 10 years or so. I was very excited to present it. I think it went okay but it was very difficult because it was being translated and I had too much content and was trying to chop it out as I was preaching. All the same I think it made some sense and I really hope God used it.

The translator asked for a copy of the manuscript and he is going to translate it into Spanish and then give it to the people in the church so they will be able to understand it better.

I have put the English transcript online.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Unity

I preached last Sunday in San Felipe about unity. Willy translated for me. It was his first time and he is more used to Creole than English but he did great. The text was Eph 4:1-6 on how God has given us all a high calling.

Here is my summary:

- Ephesians 4 says that we have a calling to live up to

- We need to live a life of humility, gentleness, patience and we must bear with each other in love

- I shared a story about how I was wronged and maybe you too feel you have been wronged by someone. We must let it go and seek to live in love, everyone is watching us, this is our high calling in Christ

- I shared stories about how when I was a youth pastor all the churches got together and prayed and we saw God move among our city. Churches that were divided found healing and people came to Christ.

- I shared how there are churches all around the world and we all worship differently but we are all one body.

- We have one body, one spirit, one hope, one Lord, one faith and one baptism.

- I challenged you to unite with all the other churches in San Felipe and the world to bring Christ to the lost

- But I also warned you that there is a bad teaching that we are one with everyone

- Not everyone is our brother. Some people worship some other Jesus.

- Then I asked how we should treat them

- I warned about how the church did bad in the middle ages by killing those who did not agree

- Instead we need to be like Jesus who died for those who did not believe in him

- And then I shared stories of how in my city we have an event called “Love Abbotsford” and all the churches get together to do acts of kindness to the people in our city.

And now I want to close with a prayer from Jesus. In this prayer he actually prays for you and me and He reveals one of his greatest desires for us today.

John 17:20-23


When we were done Willy asked for the manuscript. He is one of the elders and he really wanted to go over it again and then discuss next Sunday how they could implement it. His challenge to the congregation was that too often we hear things and it goes in one year and out the other (this is a rough translation from his body language). We need to take this to heart.

So please be in prayer for that little town. I told them that they could not just take what we do in Canada and put it into their village, it has to be translated into their own setting. I am excited to see what God will bring about.

I will preach again then on Saturday the 25th of November. The topic will be on the Trinity in hope to be able to help them some with a teaching in that village called "Jesus only". That teaching claims that there is only Jesus and not the Father or Spirit.

Thanks once again for joining us on our adventures.

Chris

Monday, November 06, 2006

Prayer for San Felipe

I was sick with a headcold (they call it snod' a'nieze here) last week so couldn't make it San Felipe. We made it last Saturday night though and it went really well. My Spanish is still really poor so I did not catch most of the service but I did recognize two songs and the elder who was preaching told me it was on 1 Kings 18 (Elijah prays for rain).

10 people were baptized last Sunday morning in that church and the pastor is very excited about the growth in it. I'm signed up for preaching next Sunday at 9am. I asked them what topic to preach on so the pastor called a little meeting of all the elders right there in the middle of the pews. It was fun to watch them talk about it and try to figure out what the greatest need was, especially since the service was about to start and this delayed them (which is fine in Spanish culture). The topic they chose was inter-church unity. Cory suggested I preach from John 17 where Jesus prays for us (that we would be united). She also suggested bringing in some stories from love Abbotsford (do any of you have any you could send me?)

Feel free to post any content you have on inter-church unity in the comments section or email me.

I also value your prayers for this little church and our ministry there.

Chris

Friday, October 27, 2006

First Week

It has been an eventful first week.

Thursday - arrived, no water and lots of power problems, slept at Carl and Margarets.
Friday - Fixed the water
Saturday - Can't remember but I think that was the night we went out for dinner and had some really good connections with friends.
Sunday - Went to Church - great sermon on the lost coin and how God wants us to reach the lost around us
Monday - Fixed the power, the breaker and some fuses were blown
Tuesday - First day for Cory back at school, great meeting with Principal, lots of potential. Got the gas to work in the house.
Wednesday - Cory went to school and helped students, Chris went to Spanish Lookup to pickup 5000 teak trees, Chris comes home very dirty. And great news we now have hot water for the shower.
Thursday - Cory got bitten by lots of fire ants and had an allergic reaction. Praise God she made it to the nurse who had a shot to lower her adrenalin.
Friday - Cory continues to help at the school and is tutoring students after school. Chris managed to get some trees to the field and is working with some fellows to plant them.

Upcoming. We have some of the new teachers coming over for supper tonight and hope to be able to have some games and be able to encourage them. Saturday I hope to make it to San Felipe and see how the church there is doing and how I (Chris) can help out.

Saturday, October 21, 2006

We arrived safe

Thanks for all your prayers. Cory and I are safe in Belize. We have spent the last couple days setting up our house. We have running water now (I am so thankful for even a trickle right now) and are able to get the doors closed (they were a bit too tight before but I borrowed a grinder and trimmed them down).

We have met up with lots of friends and are starting to settle in.

Prayer requests

- That God will show us which open doors we should take to best use His time here
- For great friendships and relationships to grow and be a blessing
- That we will experience God in the small parts of life.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

On our way

Our bags are packed and we are ready to go. We should be rolling out in less than an hour. Thanks for all your prayers and blessings on this trip. I sure hope God does some awesome stuff. Oh ya, something really neat is Cory met someone from our church who does training for dyslexic seminars and he really gave her some great tips.

We'll be in Belize for noon Thursday

Chris

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Working on my grad essay

After seven years I am almost finished my grad program. If everything goes right I should be done by Christmas because I only have 2 things left to do: 60 page grad essay and a correspondance course on Mennonite history.

Since we pushed back leaving for Belize a couple weeks I have been spending some time in the library cranking out my grad essay. Thankfully I've written about 60 pages in just over a week. Mind you I've been doing research for over a year and just needed to pull it all together.

I've attached a very draft version of the final summary

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Research Question: How does the primary purpose of the World Wide Web reveal how it can most effectively be used for the website of a local church?

Answer: People use the web because they are looking for answers. The web is more than just information however but it is the interaction of people represented as their writtings posted and then interlinked with the writtings of others. For the church the web is a place to have a voice where people can come and ask it questions.

Conclusion (this is taken from page 65 (obviously there is more detail above) (unedited):

In order for computers to help people find the answers they need the data has to be organized. The Semantic Web and Information Commons argue that the greatest weakness of the web is that it is not organized in a fashion that a computer can best help find answers. If Licklider and Englebart’s vision is to be realized the web has to be restructured in order to make sense. In the second part of this paper it was proposed that the church needs to design its site to use XML (Extensible Markup Language). When this happens then computers will be able to recognize which items are events, photos, news, sermons, addresses and be able to interpret what that item is about and then use it to make new systems. Nelson called this transclusion, which is the ability to take bits and pieces from other works and combine them together to make a new work. His hypertext model allows the church to break its information down into small parts but the current implementation on the web does not allow those bits to be put back together logically. By moving towards a more structured web elements that are found in the Web 2.0 movement such as mashing up content from one page with a tool from another now become possible. In addition the church web page is no longer stuck on the churches site but can be mixed into personal calendars, mapping software, feed readers, iPods and accessed from cell-phones, palm computers and whatever new medium is yet to be invented.

Although the above concentrates on how to communicate information the goal of the web is not only on the information but on the people who read and write that information. Like other communication mediums, the web gives people a voice and allows them to interact with others. Howard Rheingold argues that the web creates virtual communities and the individual postings and responses garnered on the web are actual social interactions. In light of this every posting on the web is posted by a person and every link on the web represents the link between the sayings of one person and another. Thus the web is a representation of the interactions of people and not just data. By extension the church web site is a representation of the collective voice and interaction of the people of God in a local settings and not just raw data about the church. Considering that Bernes-Lee dream is that the web is a place to “Enquire within” that means that people come to the church web page in order to find answers. Licklider’s and Englebart adds that the primary role of the computer is to augement peoples abilty to find their answers. With all these concepts combined the purpose of the web for the local church is to be the church’s voice to the people who go online to find answers to their questions about the church.

The church does not need to worry about answering every question but only the questions people are asking about it and the questions people will ask online. The church still needs a method to answer questions offline since not everyone has access to the web nor will everyone use the web to find their anwers. The web is only one voice of the church but it is an important one. The task for the church is to determine which questions it should answer online and what is the best way to answer those questions. In order to do this the church must follow five steps:

1. Determine the questions that the users are asking

2. Prioritize the questions in light of the mission of the church

3. Determine what unique data this church can add to that question

4. Determine how does this data relate to other components

5. Leverage the web’s uniqueness to best answer the question

Although it may be nice to have a cookie-cutter approach to making a web page the reality is that no two church web sites can really be the same. Each web site is an expression of the voice of all the saints in the church striving to accomplish the mission they believe God has given them. Since each church is made up of a different combination of saints and are called to reach out in a different location to different people then the voice will look different on the web depending on the people asking and the people answering the questions. The church web site however does not stand alone but is part of the greater collection of voices tied together through hyperlink into a tapestry called the web. The next step for church web pages is to find ways to tie its voice back into the greater web. This will require the church to not see its page as an end destination but a small piece that contributes its voice into a larger pool of answers. Practically this means the church will need to start a pages like theology statements but then send the user to other sites like the denominational headquarters to attain more pieces to the question that puzzles them. Likewise when the church writes about news it should send the reader to pages with more information. The church should also draw information from other sources such as members photo galleries, blogs and profile pages. This information can be transcluded onto the church web page and take on new forms that advance the mission of the church. For instance if a the church’s mission includes enhancing fellowship it could blend together the photos its members post on other sites and deliver then as a new compilation on the church site. Likewise the members and other sites can take the information on the church site and blend it with information from other sites so it appears in their calendars or desktop of their computer.

Friday, October 06, 2006

Update

Our friend Karen is healing well. The funeral is today at 2pm. I have been asked to say something but I am not sure yet what to say. Perhaps something along the lines of how we met - which was Dave's surprise birthday party - Surprise! You don't even know me yet. I would also like to share about how he loved the Lord.

We have moved our plane tickets to the 18th of October. This will give us some more time to visit with Karen and to help her in her healing. Thanks again for all your prayers.

Monday, October 02, 2006

Change of Plans

One of the hardest parts of being a youth pastor was when the phone rang late at night, you always knew it was not good. Last Saturday night the phone rang. We had been planning to get together with some of our best friends (Dave and Karen), ones we swapped being in each others wedding parties. When we picked up the phone we had thought it might be them but it turned out to be his mom. It turns out that they were in a car accident. She was in a comma and he did not make it. It is amazing how life changes in just an instant.

We made it to the hospital today, she is out of the comma and is doing well. We had a time of swapping stories, praying and grieving.

Fortunately our airline is willing to move our tickets without losing the whole cost we put into it. We are very thankful that we have this chance to support her and her family.

Please continue to pray for Karen and her family and that God would use us to help in her healing.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

We bought our tickets!

We found a great deal for for tickets for our trip back to Belize this year. We will be leaving October 4th. We will be spending Christmas in Belize this year (can you imagine swimming in the river on Christmas day and not even being cold, crazy hugh?). It was about the same price to come home and then go out a second time so we have booked a trip back home for Jan 26. This will give us a chance to visit our family again, I'm sure we'll be mighty homesick by then.

Of course the quesiton your probably asking is: what are you going to be doing this year?

Most of our focus will be on Cory's ministry this year. She really found an incredible niche in helping dyslexic students last year. I believe she has a gift because we saw students who were failing pass last year and actually do quite well near the end. Check some of our past entries for some great stories. So Cory will be focusing on that as her main thing.

As for me, I was told by my Seminary that I have to get finished my degree. After working on it for 6 or 7 years they are pushing me to get it done. Quite frankly, I can hardly wait to be done. So I'm going to finish my grad essay (thesis) on using the Web for local churches and doing a directed study on the history of Mennonites. With that history course I am hoping to put together a study to help those in the village and on the colony. I don't want to dream too far but I wonder if understanding their roots will really help the old colony find freedom in Christ. We'll see, keep praying. I've also been invited to preach in a church in the neighboring village and that pastor was quite eager for me to get back even before we left last spring.

So keep us in your prayers.

Friday, August 11, 2006

Had a baby, it's a niece!

The long wait is over. Kim and Lance (my brother) had their third child today. It was a baby girl 8.3oz. Cory is over at their house looking after the kids now. I hope to be able to go to the hospital when she gets back this afternoon.

Monday, July 31, 2006

Nothing New to Report

For all those asking -- we are not pregnant and not dead.

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Working at TWU

I'm back to work at TWU. I took a class last week on "Building Healthy Churches". It went well but I am more excited about the assignment where I am writting a paper on how the internet can be "unhealthy" for the local church. This should be a good step towards my larger grad essay which will deal with what the internet is and how it can best used to support the local Church.

This week I'm re-connecting with collegues and doing some planning with them on the myTWU site. Right now however my computer is in the "shop". Good news about that though because I have a great tech who is re-installing it and will hopefully make it dual-boot (as either XP or Linux)

That's it for me now. Oh ya, and we're trying to sell the condo.

Sunday, May 28, 2006

Graduation

Last night was graduation. We had 5 grads this year and it was a joy to see them finish and walk the isle. Three are off to Canadian schools and two are staying here (one will even be a teacher next year).

One of my joys was to have some of the students (from all grades) come up to me and thank-me for being their teacher. Some almost had tears in their eyes. This is especially significant since I have had a somewhat challenging year and have often wondered if I was doing any good. I thought it was going to be many more years before they came to appreciate what I had done but last night one of the girls said, "I want to thank-you for teaching us this year. I know I have not always appreciated you the way I should..." Another student came up to me that night as well. He did not finish very well this year. On the last day he wrote on the wall "I hate school" and then took off. When I called him on his cell he told me that he wasn't coming back and was quitting. Last night after seeing the grads make it I saw him talking to the school board and then he came up to my truck as we were pulling out and said, "I know I haven't been that easy on you this year. I just wanted to thank-you and let you know that I will be going back next year." It's going to be another three years for that guy and he knows it but I am so glad he is going to try.

As we wrap up here I often think what kind of mark I would give myself. Honestly, I am not sure. I know I have tried hard and we God has used me to do so amazing things (including getting the students to lead chapels and memorize whole chapters of the Bible) but I also know I would do some things differently (like be more strict in the beginning and stuck to my guns more when the students opposed me and telling the students I love them more often). In the end I am glad God is the one who gives me my mark. I have had to learn this year to just be faithful and not to worry what my students or others think. I have been working on the discipline of finishing well. I have also learnt a very valuable lesson that I do not have to shine in every ministry but sometimes I just need to sludge through it and trust that God will do something with it in the end.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Half acre planted (all it took was a shovel, a string, gas and a lighter)

Last night it rained really hard. Our wheel barrow had 4" of rain in it just from one night. That is almost a week of good rain so I guess rainy season is upon us now. When I got to the nursery this morning our trees were flooded (some almost to the top of the bags). So Carl and I figured it is time to plant the little suckers.

So we loaded up the truck and headed out to the first plot. A nice 8 acres hill with some rich top soil at the bottom. It was this bottom piece we planted today.

We learnt a lesson last Saturday about how slow and silly it is to try to line up the border by eye (same location but we only planted 60 trees then). This time we brought some string and tied it to two poles on either side of the field. Then we marked off every 8 feet. Then we put the trees under the markings on the string and then moved the poles over another 8 feet. In so doing we have nice straight rows for the tractor and mower to keep it clean later on. Silly thing is we could not get the poles in a straight line so for now the trees are only straight one way.

During this time we found a line of leaf cutting ants. Those guys find plants, climb them and cut all the leaves off and carry them in long rows back to their home. It looks really cool to see them but they can take out 200 saplings in a day. I follewed their line and stuck a stick in it to deal with it. Funny thing, Carl moved the truck and parked right on top of it. So we looked and looked for their nest.

We unloaded all the rest of the plants (remember where the truck was) and headed out for lunch. The rain made the road a mud-bog so when we came back we had to hike it in (half mile). By the time we were back they had already started on the trees. This time we brought gas and a lighter. We poured the gas down their little holes, lit a stick on fire and threw it at them. It is so cool to watch the little puffs of fire come out of the holes as the fumes work their way underground.

It took us about 3-4 hours between the three of us to plant 200 mahogany saplings. So we had time to spare. I had heard that direct seedings works just as good as going to all the hassle of growing the plants in a nursery so we grabbed some seeds and plucked 3 down in between every tree. Wonder how those will turn out?

In the end, 200 saplings and 600 seeds. (Well I caught Carl dumping about 60 cedar seeds into one hole so maybe 6000 seeds). The funny thing is I kept wondering why Carl was saying, "Man, we are going to a have a lot of trees in a few weeks...."

Monday, May 15, 2006

Moving....


This summer will be full of a lot of moves for Cory and I. On June 4th we drive to Mexico then take a 5hr bus to Cancun then 8 hour flight to Seattle.

When we get home we need to set up our condo again. Second week of June I am taking a course from ACTS (only 2 more to go till graduation).

Then I'm back at TWU full-time for 2 weeks launching a new project and connecting with my team.

Starting first week of July, Cory and I are in Kelowna. My brother has released an online kid-safe chat this year called club penguin. He needs my help to build some backend stuff to make it run smoother. It should be a really awesome project and I am most of all looking forward to time with family (both Cory's brother and my brother live in that area). Kim (my brother's wife) will be having a baby during this time and we really want to be there to support them and greet this new member of our family.

We're still looking for a house for July but August and Sept we are house sitting. We even get a dog!

Then at the end of Sept we are returning back to Abbotsford to help TWU get the new school year kicked off. Then back to Belize. Cory will be continuing her awesome ministry with tutoring students. She has really found a gift there. I hope to plant trees, host authentic walk seminars in the local churches, write a book or two and help out my brother and TWU part-time over the internet.

Sunday, April 30, 2006

Unexpected Ministry


Last Sunday Cory and I travelled to the neighboring village called San Philepe to find a Church. We drove around in our old pickup until we found a group sitting around a tree outside a Church. We called out the window, "Are you guys a Church"

"Yes", they replied.

"English or Spanish?".

"Spanish" they called back. So we waved goodbye and kept up our search. The problem was we could not find anything that was open. So we turned the truck around and went back to our little circle under the tree.

When we got there they invited us to join them. As soon as we sat down they asked us to share. "I thought this was Spanish?"

"Yes, but we also speak English too"

"What would you like me to share on?" I asked.

"Teach us from Revelation chapter 10". So I flipped open my Bible and took a look. After a quick glance I knew I was not ready for this one. Oddly enough we happen to be studying Revelation in class right now and had just finished chapter 8. So instead I shared my testimony. What was neat is that at the end of it I said that every story has a beginning and an end and everything that is in the middle is understood in light of how the story began and how it will end. In just the same way the Bible starts in Genesis and works it's way through to Revelation. The history in between (including our lives) are the threads that weave this story together. So just as in my story God has a journey that he is taking me on that is part of His greater plan, so each of our lives (I explained to them) has a purpose and is part of that bigger picture.

Afterwards we met the pastor and were invited over to lunch by a very nice family. The pastor asked if we could come back and speak at the Church. At first I said not at this time because we are so busy with the closing of school but I really felt I needed to so I found him later that day and arranged to come in two weeks time.

This will be for Saturday night May 6th and the topic will be Evangelism. Interestingly enough, 25% of the town goes to an evangelical Church. It should be interesting...

Thanks again for all your prayers.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006


Recently, Chris and I organized a weekend with a few of the other international teachers to go into the Cayo district (about a 3 hour drive) and go cave tubing. In true Belizean style, since our truck did not have enough room for all 6 of us, four sat in the cab and 2 rode in flatbed...perfectly legal in Belize. But my! Did they get sun!

Ians Caves Branch is one of the few places in Belize where they offer adventures in Cave Tubing. A guide told me that while the caves belong to the government, the entrance to the cave is located on Ians Caves Branch property so they are the only one who has access to that particular cave.

We arrived at Ians Caves Branch, after first stopping in Spanish Lookout for ice cream of course!

Our cabin, while spacious enough, had no electricity...pardon me, it has electricity enough to run a single ceiling fan, for everything else we used oil lamps. We ladies were lucky enough to (without realizing it beforehand) pick the cabin with a bathroom (no shower, just a toilet and sink -- and yes, no electricity in there either). The showers at this "resort" were jungle showers -- with hot water.


I choose to believe that the "resort" was saving us money by cutting back on electricity and showers in every cabana. However, they do not claim to be a resort and even state "we are not sanitized from the jungle, we are apart of it".

The first adventure we went on was cave tubing. That of which, I have not developed the pictures as yet since they were taken with a 35 mm water camera. I will post pictures as soon as I can. And explain about the trip too.
The second adventure we went on was a jungle walk in which a guide explained to us many different medicinal uses of trees and leaves...etc.

This tree is called a Sabor Tree. It is the national tree of Guatemala and thus is also protected in Belize. The ancient Mayans believed that the roots of the Sabor Tree were actually the stalactites of the caves (the big boulders that hang down from the ceilings of caves). They believed that if they offered sacrifices in the caves, the stalactites would carry the sacrifices use the roots of the tree, through the tree, and into the heavens. That is why they used caves for doing their religious sacrifices. This particular tree (in the picture) is about 300 years old.


This is Santa Maria. Add lemon or hot sauce for favor. It is good for a toothache as eating it turns the mouth numb. (Looks like celery, doesn't it?)


This plant is good for curing malaria.



I thought the way these vines crept up the trees was just beautiful.







Our guide (Neko) told us that terminates are good to eat.
And true enough, they were crunchy and surprisingly minty. It would sure take a lot of terminates to be full. (Yes, that is my tongue! -- Cory)
He said that you could take a terminates nest, divide it into four and burn each at the corner of a camp to keep away mosquitoes.

These leaves (the small ones), if boiled and made into a tea, are good for toothaches (not sure if it numbs the mouth this time). This tea, however, is not to be drunk, just swished around in the mouth and then spat out. Notice this before picture (on the left) and then the after picture (on the right). Before shows before the leaves are touched, and after shows after they have been touched. The leaves retract inward as a defence mechanism. And it works, since when cows come by to eat the leaves, when they are touched and they curl inward, the cow is fooled and moves on to find a different leaf to eat.


The roots of the cohune tree are good to eat. As well as the nuts (which are on the ground). They grow into beautiful trees.

We don't have a picture of the harball tree. That one, if you cut the bark or open its fruit, it seeps glue!

We also went to the Blue Hole National Park. I believe it is because of a natural underground spring, but a section of this "pool" is a brilliant blue, almost like the ocean.
Funny thing is, I discovered that if you spit in the water, small fish jump up to the surface of the water and eat it. Gross, but it sure is cool.

We hiked around in the park a bit...and came across this beautiful sunset:



In this national park there was also St. Herman's Cave.


These are stalactites. Which are actually mineral deposits coming down from the ceiling. Eventually, they will combine with stalagmites that come up from the floor to form a column. But the ancient Mayans did not understand this geology and just thought the stalactites were the roots of the trees and that the trees were their access to their gods in the heavens.


We traveled through the cave and thankfully emerged on the other side. Thank God! I was never so happy to see daylight.

Oh, and our truck ran out of gas 1 mile from home!

That's our Cayo trip with Phil (from North Carolina), Rebekah (from Manitoba), Alicia (from Manitoba), Noelle (from BC), and Chris and I (also from BC).

Stay tuned for the tubing pictures and commentary.

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Reading is her favorite!

"Reading is her favorite!" she said.

How exciting to hear that. This from a girl who has struggled with reading immensely. And now, she loves it. I feel so blessed to have been given these glimpses into knowing how my work (tutoring in this case) is making a difference in people's lives.

Update on the spelling-memory game: her spelling tests are better than normal.

So a student I (Cory) work with while volunteering at the school....I am amazed at how far he has come in his math. He has improved like night-and-day in his cognitive ability in math. Just the other day, he came early for our time together. He told me that they were finished Bible early and just playing some games, but he wanted to come and do math. "I used to hate math; but now I like it". How encouraging to hear!

A typical week for Cory:
Monday -- all day at the school volunteering (first one-on-one Math with a grade 5 student; then helping out in the grade 2 classroom as an extra set of hands; then after lunch working one-on-one with two dyslexic students from grade 3; then reading with 4 grade 1 students who need some extra practice; then as needed working a small group from grade 4 in whatever area needs to be covered that day; tutoring after school for 1-2 hours)

Tuesday -- Math with a grade 5 student; then going home and making lunch, only to bring it back at lunch time for 6 six teachers; doing one-on-one with grade 3 students; then tutoring for 1-2 hours; then a second tutoring job for 1 hour.

Wednesday -- Math with a grade 5 student; after lunch doing one-on-one with grade 3 students; reading with 4 grade 1 students; working with a small group of kids from grade 4 who need some extra help; tutoring after school for 1-2 hours.

Thursday -- Math with a grade 5 student; working as an extra set of hands in the grade 2 classroom; after lunch working one-on-one with 2 grade 3 studnets; tutoring for 1-2 hours; then another tutoring job for 1 hour.

Friday -- Math with a grade 5 student; going home and making lunch for 15 people (to be brought to the school for teachers and students who need it); after lunch reading with 4 grade 1 students; tutoring for 1-2 hours. I do like it that when I am done for the day, then I am done. As\na full-time teacher I found that I was taking the work home with me --\nmarking and planning...etc. And was up till late at night trying\nto get everything ready. As a volunteer and tutor, there is\npractically no prep work. However, since I work with 3 dyslexic\nstudents (2 at school and one I tutor after school), I am reading some\nbooks that will help me best meet their needs...and boy am I learning a\nlot about dyslexia! Oh my, it is amazing what I didn\'t\nknow. Check out "The Gift of Dyslexia" and the "Gift of Learning"\nby Ron Davis. A dyslexic himself, he has actually discovered a\ntermendous method of helping dyslexics overcome all that which holds\nthem back. When I mentioned above that "reading is now her\nfavorite subject" -- that is state only weeks after using Davis\' method\nas outline in his books with her. He has some wonderful methods\non helping students with ADD, Math, and handwritting problems...not to\nmention getting beyond the normal hurdles of dyslexia (e.g., making the\nletters that float around stop floating).

I do like it that when I am done for the day, then I am done. As a full-time teacher I found that I was taking the work home with me -- marking and planning...etc. And was up till late at night trying to get everything ready. As a volunteer and tutor, there is practically no prep work. However, since I work with 3 dyslexic students (2 at school and one I tutor after school), I am reading some books that will help me best meet their needs...and boy am I learning a lot about dyslexia! Oh my, it is amazing what I didn't know. Check out "The Gift of Dyslexia" and the "Gift of Learning" by Ron Davis. A dyslexic himself, he has actually discovered a termendous method of helping dyslexics overcome all that which holds them back. When I mentioned above that "reading is now her favorite subject" -- that is state only weeks after using Davis' method as outline in his books with her. He has some wonderful methods on helping students with ADD, Math, and handwritting problems...not to mention getting beyond the normal hurdles of dyslexia (e.g., making the letters that float around stop floating).

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Creative Spelling

So today I went to one of my tutoree's houses
to work with her for an hour or so. In preparation,
I made small cards containing two lists of her
current spelling words. Then we played "memory"
with them. The trick? Everytime her or I flipped
over a card we had to say the word and spell it, then
flip over another card to find its match, saying and
spelling that word too. If we came across vocabulary
words, then we had to say, spell, and read the
vocabulary words. She enjoyed it so much that we
played three times! And still she was not tired of it!
in essence, we went through her spelling words
about 6 times verbally. Verbal is good for her since
she has a learning disability and learns better verbally.

Soon, I want to try practicing spelling words with
pudding...the kid has to spell the word with their
finger in pudding! I'll see if I can't take some pictures.

Cory

Monday, March 06, 2006

Amazing! Her reading is the best it has been all year!

I have been having a wonderful past couple of weeks. Where does this joy stem from? From being able to help the students at Linda Vista School, particular students that is. As a volunteer special needs teacher, I come along side their regular teacher and help as needed. I have a few dyslexic students that I work with one-on-one and I decided that I needed to learn more about dyslexia so that I could better help these students. It is as if God knew this over a year ago, because when I worked for the bookstore I bought some learning books but had not read them, yet I took them along to Belize. Now, I zipped through the one book in just a week (and it was a complicated book) and am starting on the second one, eager to read it. I am a novel girl...books that are just information are not that interesting for me, and yet I am so drawn to these books that I have not read the novels I have sitting on the shelf.

Anyways...what has happened? I have been trying different methods (methods geared toward helping students with learning disabilities) and have found that grades are going up. One method of reading that works better for dyslexic kids is that instead of using phonics to sound out words, to use the spell-read system. That is where if they have trouble with a word, to spell the word, then I say the word and they repeat it. I have tried this method and found that they are better able to pick up on that same word in the future. Why? Probably because they have such good memories that they remember the spelling of the word and how it is pronounced...as opposed to sounding it out.

Another process I have been trying is doing clay-spelling with spelling words. One student, after doing this for 20 minutes the day before his spelling test (and only working on about 6-8 words of 30 (actually, he only did 3-4 and I did the other 3-4 words, to which I made him check my spelling and then spell the word after that without looking)), he got the best on his spelling test all term (the term is almost over)!

Another student, we spent 2 hours on Saturday afternoon creating the alphabet out of playdoe, then saying it forwards and backwards many times. Then I would ask her, "find the letter N" and she would locate it. Then I would say "what are the letters around P?" And she would tell me that. Forwards and backwards, the capitals and the smaller case. In the end, her teacher told me today (Monday) that her reading has been the best it has been all year. "What did you do?" She asked. "We just went over the alphabet for 2 hours". Praise God that the little girl really enjoyed it (since we were playing with playdoe). I think what happened is that dyslexic kids are known for having really good memories, and just as the spell-read system works by them memorizing the spelling of a word and linking that with it's pronounciation, so too when they get really good with knowing the letters of the alphabet, then their reading is effected in a positive way too.

I can't take all the credit, because I have found that God has given me a unique ability to understand these books on dyslexia (which is where I am learning all these different methods of teaching). "The Gift of Dyslexia" by Ron Davis and "The Gift of Learning" by Ron Davis. Excellent, phenomenal books on how to help students with not only dyslexia, but also math problems, hand writting problems, ADD, and ADHD. Read them if your child or student is in need of some help. It is amazing the suggestions they give. I have seen 3 cases (students) of dramatic improvement in just 5 days! And I only started reading the books just over a week ago!

Wow! I hope God can use me to help more kids!

Cory

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Recruiting New Teachers

I got the update from the board last weekend. Here is what next year is looking like.
  • Kindergarten: Pending response from current teacher
  • Grade 1: Filled
  • Grade 2: Has an applicant
  • Grade 3: Pending response from current teacher
  • Grade 4: Open
  • Grade 5: Open
  • Grade 6: Open
  • Grade 7: Open
  • Grade 8: Open
  • Highschool: Filled
  • Highschool: Pending response from current teacher
  • Highschool: Open
So I posted an add on goabroad.com and updated our web page with the latest data.

I could really use your help. Do you know of anyone who might be interested in coming down here to teach next year? If so send them to our web site at http://www.authenticwalk.com/belize/index.php

Things in Perspective

In Bible class today we were studying about the start of the American Missionary Movement with Judson's trip to Burma. Man that guy suffered a lot. He was imprisoned at one point for 3 years in terrible conditions chained with only his beaten and whipped shoulders touching the ground, no light and the stench. For 6 years he never saw one person become a Christian. Yet in the end he led a movement that God used to lead thousands to Christ.

As I read this from our textbook I could feel the cracking sensation of the sunburn on my back. Last Saturday I was out a bit too long working on the trees and burnt myself. Monday it was almost unbearable trying to get through class. My students were quite compassionate. As I read this story I thought my sufferings are small. My pain is from my own silliness and will pass in a few days (it is not that bad), his went on year after year.

Anyhow after reading this I was really impressed by how easy I got it.

PS Some time soon I need to send you pictures of our trees...

Saturday, February 25, 2006

Wall of Prayer

During staff meeting last Tuesday I shared some
of the struggles I have been having.  It seems
some of the other staff are feeling the same.  In
response we took some time and prayed about
this.  In addition the teachers are getting together
after school and praying in the middle of the field
and many of you on my prayer team have expressed
your support and prayers.

In response I sense God's presence like a wall
around the school.  It is not easy for many of us
but I sense hope rising.  Please continue to pray
for us all.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Discouraged

I am hesitant to write about things like this but what is the point of
having a support team like yourself and not sharing with you the
lows instead of just the highs.

I find teaching really hard.  I think everyone is getting tired.  We are
now almost 3/4 the way through the year and both the students and
myself wish we were done.  .

Sometimes I wonder what I am doing here,  why did I leave so much?
I came to make a difference and to help those who really wanted to
grow.  At times I do not feel wanted.  My students argue with me in
class, they get angry about how I mark, they tell me I am doing it
wrong, and the class gets out of hand.  I wish I had taken some courses
in classroom management.  They are still really good kids and to the most
part stay out of trouble, I just feel worn down inside and need prayer for the
strength to press on.  I also need help knowing which things to call for the
students, which to let go, and to embrace opportunties for life-change.

Sorry for ranting and I hope I have not dishonored my students.  Maybe
the biggest prayer I need is that I will love these students with the same
love God has for them.

Friday, February 03, 2006

100 Words Per Minute

In Keyboarding class today one of my students broke 100
WPM.  That is so incredible!  I felt inspired and since I had
not tested myself for a while I did their speed test along
with them.  That one student and I raced to beat each other
and almost tied.   For the first time in my life I got 101
WPM (less 5 WPM for errors).  I never knew I was so fast...
it was only a little while ago I thought I was doing 55 WPM,
I should have figured that after typing every day for 7 years
after that test I might have gotten a little bit better :)

Now I have to figure out what I can get my student for such
a big accomplishment.  Any ideas?

Wednesday, February 01, 2006

The Adventures of Cory and Chris

The Adventures of Cory and Chris
January is now over. We have been to 4 countries since the new year has begun...starting in Canada, traveling through the US and Mexico on our way to Belize. And then, just the other Sunday, Chris and I took a leisurely walk through La Union, Mexico. In Blue Creek, we live literally a 1 minute drive from the Mexican border. After paying a boatman $1 Bz to travel across the river, you arrive in Mexico.

With the change in schedules for us (whereas, we used to both go to school for 7:30am [or earlier] and both leave around 5:30 or 6pm) now, since, I am not teaching full time, we have different transportation needs and so we decided to get a bike. Gas in Belize is very expensive (about $5 a gallon) and the bike only costs $4 US to fill. We think we can ride it for about 5 days or so on a full tank (which is only about 1 gallon). It is perfect for our needs. And we can resell it in the end, probably for the same amount that we bought this used bike for. Although not common in Belize, we believe in wearing helmets!

I (Cory) am volunteering these days and enjoying it. I find that I do indeed fill a need in the school for someone to come along side the teachers and provide an extra set of hands, eyes, and help in the classroom. I have spoken with the teachers from grades 1 to 5, asking their needs and have arranged to come in during certain times of the days. For example, the grade 5 class needs some help from 8:30-9:15; the grade 4 class needs help from 9:15-9:45; the grade 2 class needs help from 10-11:30; the grade 3 class needs help from 12:30-1:30; and the grade 1 class needs help from 1:30-3. It is so amazing how God has designed it so that, I can help out in so many different classes throughout the day...what a difference I feel that I am making.

Some classes just need someone to come in and read with the kids in their reading circles, freeing up the teacher to help the other kids one-on-one with their seat work (or I can do the seatwork and the teacher can do the reading circle). Some classes, need someone to take a child or two aside, providing them with some extra practice reading time. Some classes need an extra person to come along and help the students with their math work.

Today's schedule was: 8:30-9:45 with grade 4's doing math; 12:30-1 with a grade 5 student working one-on-one with his math; 1-1:30 fifteen minutes each with 2 grade 3 students who needed some one-on-one extra reading time; 1:30-2 with six or seven grade 1's helping them to understand how to count money; 2:15-3 with three grade 1 students who needed some extra reading time. This last bunch I had a lot of fun with as we read a small story a few times, then we tried to see who could read it the fastest. We will keep record and give a prize at the end of the week. (And extra points were given if you followed along while the others were doing their verbal readings). I don't know if I have ever seen kids so excited about reading...and these are the kids who are struggling!

I am also providing lunch (for a small fee to help cover the cost of the food) on Tuesdays and Fridays. This is a big venture for me as I don't really cook that well...and yet it is an opportunity to learn a new skill. So far, I am doing well with the meals and breaking even on the money collected compared with the expenses incurred. I know what is was like as a teacher, trying to figure out what to eat for lunch everyday while living in a foreign country where food is not quite the same as you are used to in your country of origin. (E.g., in Canada I would have a sandwich for lunch practically everyday. Here, it is difficult to find good sandwich meat).

That's it for now.
Cory

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

2000 trees planted

Last weekend Cory and I got together and planted a few thousand trees. At first we were putting them in plastic bags (to transplant later) but that was taking far too long. So we just made a garden and threw all the seeds in it and buried them. In about 4-6 weeks when they come out of the ground we can put them in bags.

The plan is the following

- 2000 mahogany
- 2000 spanish cedar
- 500 teak
- 500 maligna

We are just about finished buying 10 acres of land. I found out yesterday the guy we are buying off also moonlights as a logger so I booked him to log it with me in a couple weeks. That will be fun!

So what is the point? Well if we plant trees now then when we retire we can sell them for about $2000 each. I'll let you do the math but if it works out it should really be a great way to free us up for ministry.

Tuesday, January 17, 2006

God of Second Chances

I am preaching in chapel tomorrow. I have been
working on this sermon entitled "The God of Second
Chances." I want to start off with New Years and ask
what is there Christian about it? Then I want to ask
the same about Christmas which was originally a pagan
holiday. And then the cross of Easter which was an
instrument of torture.

The key is conversion. God is the one who loves to
convert things.

He took an old rugged cross that was used for torture
and used it as the symbol of love.

He took the pagan ritual of the darkest day of the year
and turned into the festival of the coming of light.

And He took the New Year and gave us all a fresh
start.

"Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation;
the old has gone, the new has come" - 2 Cor 5:17

For me, when I was younger I used to have a temper.
Last Christmas my dad asked, "When did you finally
settle down so that I no longer had to sit on you?"

A young gangster named Nicki Cruz stood face to
face with a preacher of the gospel but then God
changed him and turned him into a preacher of the
gospel.

And then I want to turn to the students and ask,
"And what about you?" What are you now?
What do you want God to change you into?

After letting them think on that I am hoping I can
have them turn to their friends beside them and
share what they really want God to change in them
and then have them pray in circles.

It is a good question though, "If God really is the
God of second chances, what do I want a second
chance in?"

Sunday, January 08, 2006

Home Safe

After three days of travel we are home safe. Thanks for all your
prayers today went much better. We made it through customs
okay and had to pay some money in duty but they were quite
understanding that most of it was donations to the school.

Also we got a ride from some people from Blue Creek which
we were very thankful for since they had to wait for us b/c
our bus was full and we had to take a later one.

We went and saw Noelle and Rebekah. The are both in a
sling but one has the right arm and the other the left so I
guess they can work together. I saw the x-rays, Rebekah
has 7 screws in her arm cause the bone was broken right
through. Boy does it look weird.

Cory will be helping Noelle this week with her class. Oh ya, and
Rodney (from Blue Creek) will be taking over Cory's class for the
rest of the semester.

So tomorrow I start teaching again. I am looking forward to it.
Hoping and praying that things will go smoother with the classroom
management.

Thanks for being on our team!

Saturday, January 07, 2006

Please pray for us as we travel

Cory and I are enroute back to Belize. We made it through to Mexico
today and are staying the night. So far it has been really tough. In
Seattle they found out the person in Cancun took all my tickets away
and I had to put up money to buy a ticket till they research to find
the ones the guy took. Good news though I found the guy who did it in
Cancun and he remembers he did it wrong.

Also in Cancun we had a terrible time getting through customs as we
have lots of old computer parts and they were afraid we were going to
sell it. Finally they let us through at no cost but it was scary for
a bit with looking at over 200 in tax

Pray for our border crossing in Belize tomorrow which likely will have
similiar problems. And safety.

God's peace be with you

Chris