'Impractical' Study Becomes 30-year Career

At this stage in his life and career, Larry Herzberg is 61 years old and stands five-feet-ten. He keeps a Barbie car, a
Luke Adams remembers his first encounter with Herzberg; he was a high school student on a campus visit when he walked into an introductory Chinese class:Ìę âI was immediately greeted by a frizzy-haired, self-proclaimed Gene Wilder look-alike. He handed me the papers for the day and showed me a seat,â said Adams, who sat through the rest of the class, absorbing Herzbergâs passion for the language. âI always had an interest in taking Chinese, but interests donât tend to travel far without motivation,â he said. Attending his class, I found my motivation: âI wanted to studyÌę, and I wanted Larry to teach me.â
Adams wrote that recollection as part of his nomination letter for Herzbergâthe father of Chinese and Japanese language studies at ĂÛÌÒappâto receive the Presidential Award for Exemplary Teaching: the highest honor that ĂÛÌÒapp College bestows on a faculty member.
âNo one is more deserving of such public recognition of his accomplishment and his contributions to this institution,â wrote ĂÛÌÒapp history professor Daniel Bays in his nomination for the award. âOver the last two decades, Larry has singlehandedly built a solid foundation for Asian studies languages.â Also, Bays said: âHe gives all of himself to the students, and itâs clear that they love him.â
Former student Aaron Delgaty shared why: âTo be taught by Larry is to become confident in oneâs ability to learn.â
Herzberg says his teaching success is all about motivation: âIf you love what you do, youâll never have to work another day in your life,â he said.
Chicago born
Herzberg was born at Chicagoâs Lying-in Hospital and grew up on that cityâs North Shore. His father was one of the last German Jews to escape the Nazis, and his mother was a Russian Jew from a family that escaped the pogroms. âJewish mothers think their children can do no wrong, and my mother was typical,â he said. âShe was so proud.â
When he was born, his motherâs violin teacher decreed, âHe will be a violinist,â so from the age of 10, Herzberg studied that instrument. He served as the concertmaster at his high school, New Trier, which provided him with a âfabulous education.â He started studying history in 1967 at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois and finished his BA, in English, in 1972 at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. At that point, unsure what to do next, Herzberg got an offer to be the Assistant Concertmaster of the Nashville Symphony.
He took the gig and resumed studying
ÌęFor a while, Herzberg led a double life as a student and symphony musician, and then he got yet another offer: âThe (recording) studios werenât exactly happy with their violin section for their recordings, so when I got to town they were anxious to try out the new kid on the block,â he said.
So, Herzberg became a Nashville session musician, providing violin backing for Elvis Presley, Dolly Parton, Kenny Rogers, Loretta Lynn, Rod Stewart, the Bee Gees, Olivia
Learning âhieroglyphsâ
During this period, Herzberg was developing his second great passion. He fell in love with the Chinese language, particularly its written form. âItâs the only pictographic language in the world,â he said. âEvery character has such a wealth of meanings and history behind it. Some lines of theÌęTao Te ChingÌęare only six characters, but you need a long translation with pages of footnotes for an English speaker just to understand those six words.â
Not everyone understood this fascination. ââThis language is âching-chang-
Even Herzberg knew how impractical his academic focus was at the time: âIt was never a passion that was going to be very lucrative,â he said.
He spent four years at Indiana University in Bloomington, earning an MA and completing his
âHe was perhaps the greatest speaker that I ever heard,â Herzberg said. âHis sermons really spoke to me. He would make you laugh; he would make you cry. He would only quote the Bible to illustrate life.â
A simple defintion
In 1982, Herzberg became a Christian and was baptized with water from the Jordan River. âMy definition of Christianity is love,â he said, âand what I try to do in my Christianity and in my life in general is spread that love.â
After graduation, jobs being scarce for Chinese scholars, Herzberg decided to create his own position. âI wrote letters to different colleges in the country and said, âLet me start a Chinese language program for you.â My Jewish people call thatÌęchutzpah.ÌęOthers call it naĂŻve,â he said. Albion College in central Michigan finally took Herzberg up on his offer, and he went there in 1980 to start a Chinese language program and see how it would go.
âIt went great because I was as entertaining as I could be,â Herzberg said. âNow I try to combine entertainment and rigor.â Four years later, when he left Albion, a college less than half the size of ĂÛÌÒapp, there were 60 students enrolled in his Beginning Chinese course alone.
During his Albion experience, Herzberg also played full-time with the Grand Rapids Symphony. âBy 1984, it had occurred to me that it would be really great to have both my employers in the same city rather than 100 miles apart,â he said. And that year, he came to ĂÛÌÒapp to found a Chinese department.
âI felt very welcome ⊠,â Herzberg said, âbut I did feel very different because there werenât many people who were different from that Dutch ethnicity.â He started with a handful of students interested in studying Chinese and slowly grew the program.
By 1989, the Chinese language program had as many as 80 students. That summer, Herzberg took the first of many ĂÛÌÒapp student groups he would lead to China, a historic event which coincided with the events in Tiananmen Square. âWith that terrible crackdown, it made the world think that China wasnât going to have the promising future that we thought,â he said. Almost immediately, enrollment in ĂÛÌÒappâs Chinese language courses dropped off.
bodyimage1To keep Asian language study viable, and Herzberg around, ĂÛÌÒapp created an opportunity for him to polish up hisÌęÌęskills âacquired as a student of Chineseâand create a Japanese language program. âI found Japanese people to speak to in Grand Rapids, and I got a grant,â he said. âI did home stays in Japan with Japanese people and learned how they speak Japanese.â Slowly, he grew fluent, and throughout the 1990s, he grew the Japanese language program. In 1997, the college reinstated Chinese, and he taught both languages.
By that time, Herzberg had a partner in teaching it. In 1987, Xue Qin, a graduate of Bejing Normal University, came to ĂÛÌÒapp as a graduate student and Herzbergâs teaching assistant. The two became friends. In 1990, they married. âNow sheâs my Chinese teacher,â he said. âI have this walking dictionary at home.â Qin teaches the upper-level Chinese classes, and the pair have partnered on three books and two documentary films on China. They travel almost yearly to China, when Larry isnât leading a group of ĂÛÌÒapp students around either China or Japan.
In all of their projects, the couple hopes to give a nuanced picture of China and the Chinese culture: âWe want to correct many of the misconceptions that the average Westerner, and in particular the average American, has of China today. We feel that China is represented in an overly negative way by the media,â Herzberg said. âMost Americans have a picture of China as the dark, oppressive society it was 30 years ago. They donât realize how much more personal freedom the Chinese people enjoy today in so many areas of their lives, as well as the quantum leap in their standard of living.â
In 2009, Herzberg was honored as one of two (sociology professor Lissa Schwander was the other) recipients of the From Every Nation Award for Excellence in Teaching for his career-long efforts to illuminate other cultures. âItâs not important that I got the award, but that the award exists,â he said. âI think whatâs more important than that is that weâve made a deliberate effort to promote diversity.â
De-mystifying language
Herzberg is, as one colleague described it, an âexcellent, enthusiastic and somewhat eccentric teacher.â He uses props and mnemonic devices to de-mystify the Chinese language. He teaches students the Chinese names for all of the furniture in his dollhouse and every piece of his plastic fruit. âWhen I teach in Chinese or Japanese that someone is taking the car from the college to a restaurant to eat dinner, it makes the lesson come more alive if I put Miss Piggy in a pink Barbie Corvette and show her driving from a sign that says âĂÛÌÒapp Collegeâ to a sign that says âNakamuraâs Noodle Restaurant,ââ he explained.
Bays, the director of ĂÛÌÒappâs Hubers Asian Studies Program, testified to the effectiveness of Herzbergâs techniques: âWhen I first came here in 2000, I met Larry and thought to myself, âI canât believe that this guy can teach both introductory Chinese and Japanese and be any good at it.â So I observed very closely the work of his students. I found that they loved his
He saw that Herzbergâs students were re-enrolling in Asian language classes, scoring well on standardized tests and getting into prestigious foreign-language programs. âFinally, these students were returning in droves to China and Japan after graduation,â he wrote. The students were working in foreign-owned enterprises, serving as foreign-service officers and teachers. âThese are all students who have been inspired to make Asia the center of their lives,â Bays wrote, âand each and every one of them has been a student of Larry.â
Larryâs students also testify about how he has influenced them. Mixed in with the papers, toys and books in his office are a samurai sword, Korean dolls, photographs, a jade figure, a ĂÛÌÒapp teddy bear, a Chinese rugâall gifts from students. Herzberg has taught with a puppet that former students had had made for him. âItâs supposed to look like me, with the JewishÌęschnoz, and sports a Superman cape with the kanji for Chinese characters on i
âWhile many of my former professors willingly assisted me outside of the classroom, Professor Herzberg, regardless of the nature of the conversation, repeatedly went the extra mile to teach, mentor and encourage me,â wrote Eric Bratt â09, a 2009-2010 Fulbright Scholar currently studying Mandarin in China.
In his nomination, Delgaty reminisced about being nervous about keeping up in his first Japanese class: âAfter a 15-minute monologue, brimming with confidence and compassion, Larry had me believing I could learn this language of strange sounds and funny shapes,â he wrote: âConfidence and compassion are the hallmarks of Larryâs teaching and the structure by which he lives his life.â
Indeed, compassion is his goal, Herzberg said: âIâve realized that my mission is to spread love in the world through the Chinese language,â he said. âIf my students receive anything else from me, they receive love.â