Before going to India in December, I’m trying to become familiar with Dr. Polineni (the surgeon who invited me to train his teachers in India), with Dr. John Henschke (my training partner whom I’ve known for at least 20 years), and with India (where I’ve never been). One of the things I’m doing is googling the subjects; another is checking them out on YouTube. I’ve learned a lot about the two men, less about India.
I’ve known John for a long time and was honored to have him as my dissertation chair and even more honored to have him hood me at my doctoral graduation. My professional knowledge of him is general, but sufficient to yield no surprise when I heard him introduced on a YouTube video as a “world-renowned adult educator” and as a “renowned educational expert.” This is what I knew:
–He studied under and was a personal friend of Malcolm Knowles, the “father of adult education.”
–He has trained adult educators in 20 countries.
–He was a delegate at the UNESCO Institute of Education at the 1997 World Conference in Hamburg, Germany.
–He was an observer-delegate at the 5th World Conference in Adult Education.
–He serves as a juror (reviewer) of professional articles in the Adult Learning publication.
Given all that, I was still amazed at the breadth and depth of his work. His vita shows the following:
–1.5 single-spaced pages of awards received, including national and international awards.
–Over 12 pages of “selected” articles he’s published.
–5 pages of dissertation committees he’s chaired (including mine) and 3 more pages of dissertation committees on which he’s been a member, but not the chairperson.
–3 pages of academic research he’s done in adult education.
–2 pages of courses he’s developed at six universities.
–22 pages of papers he’s presented at conferences.
–He has four websites focused on adult education information.
And this is the man who didn’t hesitate for even a second before saying “yes” when I asked him to be my partner for the India trainings. I’m working with the best and will be a much better trainer for the experience. I don’t see myself following in his giant footsteps, but maybe this experience will lead me on a “Little John” course of future work in adult education.