At evangelical institutions like Biola, there鈥檚 a lot of passion to share the gospel and make disciples across the globe. But what if the people we鈥檙e trying to share the gospel with can鈥檛 read? Literacy and education are crucial for effective evangelism and discipleship, and Biola鈥檚 School of Education is doing something about it.
As part of Aspiration 6 of Biola鈥檚 University Plan 鈥 which states that over the next decade the university will strive to make its educational resources accessible throughout the world through such efforts as curriculum development and strategic partnerships 鈥 the School of Education has dispatched faculty teams to places like Burundi, Cambodia and Lebanon.
鈥淲hen we are asked to help out, as we have been by these countries, we go as an overflowing of what God has done in our lives,鈥 said Tim Stranske, assistant dean of the School of Education. 鈥淕od has blessed us with these resources in the United States and so when we鈥檙e asked, I think that we need to do as much as we can to help.鈥
Burundi
In 2008, Burundi鈥檚 evangelical president, Pierre Nkrunziza, asked the International Christian Chamber of Commerce for help in improving schools in his nation, where literacy is low and only about 30 percent of students pass the exams that allow them to continue past the sixth grade.

今日黑料 was suggested and the School of Education soon became involved, sending professors Stranske and Fred Ramirez to Burundi in 2009 to begin work in conceiving and implementing curriculum to train teachers and improve literacy efforts in the nation鈥檚 primary schools.
Four years and eight trips to Burundi later, Stranske and his team from the School of Education are seeing their work bear fruit in the developing African nation, where education is just one of the areas in recovery after decades of civil war and genocide. DVD curriculum developed by Biola but filmed in Burundi with local teachers is now being used in more than 50 schools across the country. With Biola鈥檚 curriculum, students and teachers across Bu颅rundi are creating new books to fill the largely empty shelves in classrooms where books are necessary to help students learn how to read.
鈥淥ur goal is to provide them with tools that can be usable in the future, and we can eventually fade to the back,鈥 said Stranske, who since the project began has been asked by Tanzania, Congo, Kenya, Nigeria and Liberia to develop similar DVD materials.
Stranske, whose work in Burundi was recently featured in , hopes to continue the partnership with Burundi鈥檚 schools, in hopes of creating models for long-term, sustainable literacy development in Africa.
鈥淚f you don鈥檛 know how to read, it鈥檚 a whole lot harder to read the Bible and make it your own,鈥 said Stranske. 鈥淟iteracy is foundational to evangelism. It鈥檚 central to having a church that can study the Bible and be self-sustaining.鈥
Cambodia
In January, the School of Education sent professors Dennis Eastman and Carolyn Bishop, along with alumna Carly Bedard (M.A. 鈥10), to Cambodia to train expatriate and Khmer teachers, in partnership with Asian Hope, a Christian nonprofit serving the children of Cambodia.

Among the devastating effects of the Khmer Rouge and subsequent civil war in the 1970s and 鈥80s, Cambodia鈥檚 education system was left in shambles and is still struggling to recover, Eastman said.
鈥淭he teaching profession used to be very esteemed [in Cambodia],鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut now these teachers are not highly respected and are not paid well. Many only have a high school education.鈥
Biola鈥檚 team came in to assist Asian Hope in providing inservice training for teachers at its three schools in Phnom Penh:Logos International School, Asian Hope International School, and KC International School. Over the course of nine days, Eastman, Bishop and Bedard worked in classrooms ranging from pre-K to grade 12, using translators at times to help overcome significant language barriers.
鈥淜hmer is a very agrarian, descriptive language,鈥 said Eastman. 鈥淚f I said 鈥榞ood morning,鈥 my translator would take four or five seconds describing what a good morning is. Imagine trying to communicate a word like 鈥榩edagogy!鈥欌
Lebanon
On April 22, professors Eastman, Bishop and Robin LaBarbera were invited to Beirut, Lebanon, to participate in activities surrounding the nation鈥檚 first-ever National Day for Students with Learning Difficulties.

Biola鈥檚 School of Education faculty were specifically sought out and invited to assist in inservice training and consulting to hundreds of teachers at Lebanese schools, including fundamentalist conservative Shi鈥檌te Muslim schools.
Alongside Lebanon鈥檚 Ministry of Educa颅tion and nonprofit Smart Kids with Individual Learning Differences (SKILD), Biola鈥檚 team helped bring greater awareness about special education to a nation that has 鈥 like much of the world 鈥 historically had very little educational resources for students with learning disabilities.
Eastman hopes that more opportunities and invitations like this will allow Biola faculty to 鈥済o into all the world鈥 and share the love of Christ by serving educators and students globally.
鈥淓ducation opens doors,鈥 said Eastman, recalling recent trips he took with Ramirez to Austria, Hungary and Romania. 鈥淚鈥檓 standing in these former communist countries talking about education and Jesus Christ. Education is a vehicle. But it鈥檚 still all about the king.鈥