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Dorm Parenting | Dorm Parenting |
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An hour’s drive from Nairobi, in a forest of wild olive and pencil cedar trees, a school looks over the Great Rift Valley. Much has changed in Africa since Teddy Roosevelt laid the cornerstone for the first academic building 100 years ago. The school itself has changed: modern curriculum, expanded programs, new buildings.
It takes dorm parents.
Jeff: After about two years, we had done all the orientation and jumped through all the hoops and raised all our support. We packed our bags and sold everything we owned and moved in.
Joyellen: We try to be a constant presence, to be around 24/7. During the school day, they are off and running. They might come in and have you sign this paper or get some medicine or ask a question here and there, but the days are pretty light. We’ve got 9th and 10th-grade boys. We’re at capacity with 22, which we’ve had almost every year. We get the boys in 9th grade and close to half are actually new kids. They’re new to boarding, new to RVA, some are even new to missions. In 9th grade, they’re just coming out of junior high. They’re still goofy, but trying to be cool because they’re in high school now. They still like to have toilet paper fights in the dorm, but they don’t want the girls to know. It’s kind of a fun time.
Joyellen: Usually we will have seven or eight nationalities in a dorm of 20 students. We have some who are missionary kids, some whose parents work for the government or are business people in Nairobi. You have kids that are not Christians, that are Muslim or whatever. Just all different nationalities and backgrounds. Some that are very, very conservative. Some from different missions organizations. We have interesting debates with the boys because they all come from different places.
Jeff: To 25 kids. Twenty in the dorm, three of our own, and two more dorm kids next term.
Joyellen: Evenings can be the hardest time of the day because we’ve got homework and bedtime over here at our house and we’ve got homework and bedtime over there. That’s why it’s nice to be a team. Usually we will divide and conquer.
Jeff: Even the dorm guys will step in. If I have an away soccer game and don’t get back until 8:30, I’ll come in and Megan is sitting there on the couch reading a book with one of the boys and Joyellen is over helping someone else with homework. They step in and help out.
Joyellen: When we were on furlough in the States, the kids were like, “Man, our house in Kenya was bigger.” They are thinking about the dorm. They asked, “Where are all the dorm boys?” That’s what they’re used to. It’s all they’ve known. Joyellen: The boys really like princess movies and Veggie Tales. (laughs) Jeff: It’s funny how many 10th grade boys you’ll find sitting down and watching Elmo. You’ll get 15 guys and they’re sucked in. Joyellen: Sometimes our kids will leave the room— Jeff: And we’ll turn off the TV and say, “Alright, it’s time to go outside and play,” and groans come from the 10th-graders, not from our kids. It’s kind of funny.
Jeff: When Megan and Lindsey were little, the dorm guys at the time would put them in the stroller and take them for a walk. Of course that was a chick magnet. (laughs)
Jeff: It is really hard to set boundaries between our work in the dorm and all of the other obligations we have. You don’t have one job at RVA, you have a hundred other things. I run the IT network here and all the internet and email for the entire station—about 900 users. I coach soccer. I drive a bus—which I thought I’d never do—in Africa. (laughs) I teach Sunday School. I fix my truck. A lot. I have a Land Rover. Joyellen: I think because I was a dorm kid, that’s a bonus. I can say, “I really liked this about a particular dorm parent. I did not like that. Let’s make sure we’re doing this and not doing that.” I think that helps. It takes consistency, creativity, fun, laughter. A sense of humor helps. A situation happened last night where something had happened to one of they boys and Jeff identified with him. The boy was very thankful for that. Just coming alongside and venting with them. Jeff: When we were young and new, we had the dorm parent handbook which explained all of the little rules, and we were black and white. “Page 3, Rule B says this and you broke it. You are done.” Over the years we learned that it is not about the rules; there is a lot of heart behind it. It’s about just figuring out where the kids are.
We might have two kids who do the exact same things, but their motives are completely different. The rules say A + B = C, but then you get to the heart of the issue. One kid is looking for trouble, but you’ve got another kid, and his parent’s village just got pillaged and burned down and they were chased out of their home. He got the e-mail last night and he came home and punched a hole in his door. He is not a malicious kid, he just doesn’t know how to handle those kinds of situations. He is a thousand miles away from his parents, and he just got bad news, and he doesn’t know how to handle it. So does that kid need to be hammered? No, he needs a hug.
And nothing is done without prayer. This place has been running for over a hundred years. I think that just the fact that it has been going for so long and so many kids have been coming out of here with positive experiences says a lot.
Jeff: It’s fun to get e-mails about where they are and what they are doing and what their passions are. Guys that were just struggling to get by are now telling you that they are working here or doing this ministry. Stuff that was a challenge for them here, they have overcome. That’s exciting; not to take credit, but just because you were part of it. Joyellen: “Take every thought captive, make it obedient to Christ.” That is one of my favorite ones, because it’s easy to feel discouraged because dorm parenting is such a daunting task. Take those thoughts captive. And also, “With everything you do, love the Lord your God with your heart, soul, and mind.”
Jeff: Every year, I talk to the guys about Romans 12. I love the way The Message puts it: “Take your everyday, ordinary life—your sleeping, eating, going to work, and walking around life—and place it before God as an offering.” Make your everyday life a spiritual act of worship and constantly remind yourself, “This is what God has called me to do.” Just hanging out with the boys is part of worship and part of praising God. This is the responsibility that He has given us. |
Africa Inland Mission, P.O. Box 178, Pearl River, NY, 10965 | p:1-800-254-0010 | Contact






Out of all the missions ministries in all of the world, how did you end up as dorm parents at Rift Valley Academy?
Joyellen: I wanted to make sure I wasn’t doing just what was comfortable. I had to make sure all my motivations were correct and that I was coming because that was really where God wanted me. So I had to wrestle with that for a while.
How does dorm parenting affect your own family life?












