Teachers transform Nicaraguan communities

shining light for Christ in Nicaragua

This story originally appeared in the print edition of ChristianWeek. View it here.

Pablo is a trained lawyer, but he knows the immense potential Christian education has to impact his country of Nicaragua for Christ. He currently serves as the executive director for ACECEN, an association of Christian schools in Nicaragua that partners with EduDeo Ministries, a Canadian Christian mission organization.

ACECEN provides training and me­­ntoring to a network of 95 schools from a variety of socio-economic backgrounds, encouraging them to support one another by sharing resources and expertise. At the same time, essential relationships are built and school leaders are able to uphold each other in prayer as they work to be a shining light for Christ in their communities.

Pablo says mentoring is a big part of ACECEN’s mandate as the association works to train key facilitators who focus on training groups of teachers to also train others, creating a fascinating ripple effect that has spread throughout the Nicaraguan education system. This has allowed ACECEN to impact more than 900 teachers, who in turn have reached more than 24,000 students.

“This kind of impact could never be made working only with students,” explains Pablo. While EduDeo Ministries’ mission is to advance Christ-centred education for children worldwide, it often works with teachers to make a difference in the lives of children and their families. The success of EduDeo’s partnership with ACECEN can be seen through stories of teachers who live out their calling to serve and mentor not only their students but the surrounding community as well.

Read stories of teachers making a difference here.

Dear Readers:

If ChristianWeek has made a difference in your life, please take a minute and donate to help give voice to stories that inform, encourage and inspire.

Donations of $20 or more will receive a charitable receipt.
Thank you, from Christianweek.

About the author

Finding our way in the Digital Age

Striving for greater relevance in a media-saturated world

I became a journalist at an interesting time. When I was learning the ins and outs of newspaper reporting (with a dash of radio and television thrown in), the digital era was just barely coming to life.

We did some research online, but it was a tedious process. A few of the most fortunate students had digital cameras, the rest of us were learning to operate manual SLRs and developing wet film in the dark room. Interviews were done in person, or via (corded!) telephone.

No Google. No Skype or Facebook. No texting or tweeting. No clouds or dropboxes. The dark ages. But we put out some really fine newspapers, if I do say so myself. Quality information for the masses.

In today’s world, however, what we published—sometimes requiring a lead-time of up to two months—would be considered irrelevant by the time it reached its intended audience.

In the last few years time and space have shrunk enormously, at least in a virtual sense. Many of those holding to the old journalistic paradigm of find a story, research, interview, write and deliver are hard-pressed to compete in the age of instant news, spread worldwide tweet by tweet, moments after it happens.

In a recent post on his blog Making the News Canada, long-time journalist John Longhurst observes, “Making people wait a day, week or months to get information is a path to a different kind of ruin today—the ruin of irrelevance. When people can Tweet or Facebook about events in real time, nobody needs a publication that promises to tell them tomorrow what happened yesterday.

“For communicators accustomed to bundling material into packages, this is a scary time. But there’s no going back. No longer does it make any sense to make readers wait until we’re ready to share information. They’re ready now.”

Here is the rub for ChristianWeek. For close to 30 years, we have done our best to publish news, comment and features that help to make sense of the world from a faithful Christian perspective. Technology evolved along the way, but the way we gathered and disseminated the news remained the basically the same for many years.

But now we’re finding the demand for instant, accessible content is changing the way we have to do things as we strive to remain relevant in a media-saturated market. As Longhurst observes, “nobody needs a publication that promises to tell them tomorrow what happened yesterday.”

This is the challenge that we are rising to meet, to share with readers information that is up-to-date, vital and life-changing, maintaining our decades-old mandate in a fresh new way.

You will notice more current, informative content on our website, as well as on our social media accounts such as Facebook and Twitter. Please come check us out, give us a “like” or share content that you find especially helpful or interesting. Don’t forget to sign-up for our special e-news that comes out once a week, straight to your inbox, highlighting some of the top stories you may have otherwise missed.

Meanwhile, our print edition still publishes once a month. It provides more insight and analysis, telling the “story behind the story,” getting a little deeper into the issues.

It’s a brave new world, and as we find our way through, we appreciate your support so very much. Thank you for donating to ChristianWeek. Your financial gifts mean we can keep telling stories of what God is doing in Canada and beyond, both in print and online.

Relevance is where it’s at.

 

 

Dear Readers:

If ChristianWeek has made a difference in your life, please take a minute and donate to help give voice to stories that inform, encourage and inspire.

Donations of $20 or more will receive a charitable receipt.
Thank you, from Christianweek.

About the author

Kelly Rempel is the Senior Editor for ChristianWeek.