Social Work
Major
Jane Wolterstorff (â82) has worked and learned in the social work profession since she graduated from Dordt. That summer, just as she had previous years, she headed to Michigan to work at a youth camp. Sheâs been working in her major field ever since she marched down the center aisle of the B.J. Haan Auditorium in 1982.
Jane doesnât remember making a conscious decision to major in social work. What she came to understand in a high school sociology class was that she cared a lot, even loved thinking aboutâand studyingâpeople.
âAt that minute,â she says, âI knew thatâs what I wanted to do.â So, when she packed her bags for Dordt, she had an idea of her academic plans, even though she didnât know how exactly things might go.
Wolterstorffâs interest in sociology found a fitting home in a brand-new degree program at Dordt. The college had recently recruited Social Worker Ken Venhuizen, who was working in Korea at the time, to teach courses and create a program that would lead to a social work degree. Four years later, she was one of 10 of the institutionâs first social work graduates.
After graduation, knowing her career would last a lifetime, her dad told her, âJust go back to camp Have a great time.â She had worked at Michiganâs Camp Roger for several summers during her college years and loved it.
âYou know, I spent time outdoors all day longâI was waterfront director, taught swimming lessons at Dordt, was a lifeguard all through high school,â she recalls. Camping for one more summer was almost a dream.
Meanwhile, she looked around Western Michigan, put in one application at a place called St. Johnâs Home, and, just like that, come fall, had a job.
St. Johnâs Home was a residential treatment center, and Wolterstorff lived with girls who were either removed from their homes or had some delinquency on their recordsâa tough bunch of clients for a recent college grad. Her shift was in the afternoons, which meant hanging out after classes with as many as a dozen girls, who would be doing homework, eating dinner, watching TV.
She loved it. âI liked people. Social work, I thought, is going to be about peopleâand I liked people,â she says.
The mission at St. Johnâs was to get kids back into their own homes. âI learned a lot there because, after every shift, weâd sit down and describe what we did and how it wentâand weâd evaluate our own behavior,â she says. âSome of it was correction too, for us, I mean; but it was great training every night.â
Those moments were a valuable part of her education, she says. But then, Jane Wolterstorff would say that life is all about learning. A diploma never meant education was completed.
Two years later, Jane and a colleague at St. Johnâs began teaching lifeguarding to other staff members because taking kids canoeing or swimming required a registered lifeguard to be present. Staff from other area agencies who wanted and needed lifeguarding joined in, including staff from a place called Wedgwood Acres, an agency that dealt primarily with kids who didnât require lock-up but could come and go.
Not long after, she moved to Wedgwood. She got poached and says âthat kind of poaching goes on often. These days, I know someone almost everywhere in the city.â
Wedgwood needed a Jane W-type, and Wedgwood was an upfront faith-based institution, a place she thought sheâd feel at home, faith-wise.
After six months there, two positions opened at Wedgwood boysâ homes. âI always loved the outdoorsâbackpacking, canoeing, swimming. So, âactivity therapyâ looked really good to me.â An activity therapist is what she becameâat two boysâ homes, almost like going back to camp.
Wolterstorff and her colleagues taught emotionally impaired kids, boys, the kinds of communication skills that would enable them to get along, kids who were often either abused or neglected as children. The mission was similar to St. Johnâsâ mission: help the kid heal to the extent that he or she could move out and back, not stay.
Outdoor activities did wonders for many kids. Sheâd create group tasks to teach trust and team buildingâlike making rope swings or building12-foot walls. She and the kids had great fun out in the woods making things.
By the early 1990s, the âexperiential education movementâ had begun, she says. Wedgwood Acres sent her to Georgia for advanced training for the types of outdoor activities she was already doing. Research indicates, she says, that experiential education in the outdoors yields positive changes in emotionally impaired kids, changes in self-concept, social adjustment, academic achievement, and group cohesion. Whatâs more, it was funâlike camp.
Wedgwood soon began to offer its experiential outdoor education programs to other agencies. When a friend wanted to bring her group of sexual abuse survivors into the program to see how they might profit from outdoor experience, Wolterstorff was more than ready. What she discovered was that the abused suffer a physical wound that can be significantly helped by physical programs like ropes courses.
Stretch two cables between two trees, for instance. Ask the kids to each step on one cable, then grab each otherâs hands for balance as they slowly move down the cable. Sexual abuse, Jane says, destroys trust. Two cables across a chasm requires teamwork that can help the abused recover something of what theyâve either lost or never had. It was, she says, a joy to discover.
The activities were followed by intense conversations about what the campers had experienced, deep questions that begged them to open up feelings long ago locked in some corner in the mind and heart, to relate the cables trek to what it was they felt at the hands of their abusers.
âIâve spent hours in the woods with a group of kids,â she says, âtrying to help them figure out what happened.â âSocial work,â she says, âis incremental.â Unwinding from trauma is not at all easy; it requires time to open up and to heal.
It was tough work, but she stayed with it. âI like people,â she still says. It shows.
One of the toughest lessons she learned was about herself.
âYouâre trained with all kinds of knowledge, but what I had to learn was that I didnât have the answers.â Counseling didnât mean delivering answers but helping kids find their answers to adverse childhood experiences.
Anything that happens to a child that is highly emotional and affects day-to-day life can be traumatic, and âtrauma disrupts the emotional health of all of us.â Examples? âBeing a latch-key kid can be a trauma. To some kids it is, while to others itâs not. A family member goes to prisonâthatâs a trauma. All kinds of things are traumatic and disrupt the emotional processing system.â
After 18 years at Wedgwood, Wolterstorff traveled to Russia with a church group, determined to find work there. She found herself in the dark of a steep Russian winter, with no exit, and suffered alone through difficulties in a world of ice.
That experience was a kind of trauma that created and carried its own dark memories. When she returned home, she did data entry for a while, then slowly edged back into social work, eventually ending up at place called Steepletown. Once again, she became a case manager (now called an âadvocateâ) in a program designed to get clients help to pass their GED exams and then offer specific job training in a number of trades. Steepletown was a great learning experienceââa non-profit, on the street, with people who really needed help.â
At Steepletown she had to be a cheerleader to kids who believed themselves to be losers. Time and time again, sheâd say, âYou arenât failingâyou arenât dumb.â And sheâd meant it. Always sheâd meant it.
At Steepletown, she confronted mental and emotional health issues that arose from poverty and systemic racism. There was, for instance, the gang member who snuck into the place because he didnât want his buddies to see him working on his GED. He wanted the degree, and eventually, years later, got it and could get into the Army. âThe day he came back into the office dressed up in his uniformâWow! Some tears were shed,â she says.
Learning has continued to be a lifelong process. She has learned, she says, that there is such a thing as systemic racism. She experienced it herself when accompanying a client into a bank and watching the clerk turn down the young ladyâs request for cash even though she had an account. She witnessed thatâand more.
Racism is trauma, too. âGenerational poverty does things to you,â she says. Going with clients to the Department of Human Services, and seeing firsthand how broken the system is were lessons that were difficult to navigate, almost impossible for some.
Throughout her long career as a social worker, Wolterstorff never pursued management opportunities or supervisory positions; she always preferred being with people, âalways did, always have.â
Amy Westra, who today is Dordtâs Associate Director of Career Development, worked with Wolterstorff for several years at Wedgwood and has known her for years. âShe is a social worker who loves people, walks alongside them, and believes in them,â says Westra. âShe has shown me how to love and serve those on the fringes in a way that speaks life into them personally as she strives to create a more equitable society.â
Since March of 2021, Jane Wolterstorff has been with âGraceâs Table,â a program for young moms, married or single. She oversees a team of staff and volunteers who offer programs and care for the individual needs of participants. Part of her job description includes facilitating and participating in continuous, shared learnings.
âSharing learningsâ seems an apt description of Jane Wolterstorffâs long and social work career. She hasnât just been a provider, an answer book, a dispenser of wisdom. Sheâs spent 40 years in the muddle of abuse and poverty and racism. Sheâs learned that neither quick cures nor ideological yelping can touch the trauma in human hearts that are pierced by emotional wounds. Through her learning, she has come to understand that social workers have to listen, have to serve, have to love. Really. Love.
As all of us do.