°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp

°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp Magazine Making °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp a Home for Students

higaWhen Jane Hideko Higa arrived on campus in 1989 as a new dean, she set out to meet as many professors as possible. Once a °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp student herself, she understood the key role faculty play in shaping studentsā€™ lives. Now, as vice president and dean of students, she sought their assistance in building effective student life programs. The partnerships she forged between faculty and student life staff have defined her career. Her legacy lives on in the students she has mentored, the staff members she has inspired and the professors who have embraced her vision of faculty and staff working together to educate students.

Jane retires Aug. 31 as the longest-serving vice president at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp only to face a great challenge: a diagnosis of ALS or Lou Gehrigā€™s disease. She has already demonstrated her mettle in dealing with adversity.

ā€œOne of the most profound ways Jane fulfilled her role as an educator was by modeling how to face lifeā€™s challenges,ā€ says Tim Wilson, her longtime associate dean. ā€œRealizing that life is difficult and claiming Godā€™s promises provided through his word and his people, Jane taught the entire communityā€”faculty, staff and studentsā€”through her transparency in dealing with cancer surgery and the sudden death of her husband, Paul. Those experiences deepened her empathy as she supported others devastated by family issues, illnesses and death in their own families.ā€ Tim will serve as interim dean of students during a year-long, national search for Janeā€™s replacement.

ā€œJane has touched so many lives and inspired countless students,ā€ says President Gayle D. Beebe. ā€œWith her strong yet graceful leadership and wisdom, she has developed a remarkable student life program that enhances both the collegeā€™s academic and co-curricular activities. Iā€™ve especially admired the way Jane works with her staff and with students.ā€

Acknowledging Janeā€™s Japanese heritage, President Beebe likens her leadership style to judo, which takes energy and redirects it. ā€œJane has a great capacity to take negative experiences and energy and turn them to positive and constructive ends, particularly for students,ā€ he says. ā€œHer innovative approach and readiness to work things through with people at all levelsā€”faculty, staff, students and colleagues at other collegesā€”have contributed to her remarkable legacy.ā€

At Commencement, President Beebe announced the creation of the Jane Higa Academic and Co-Curricular Partnership Award for those who continue the productive relationship between faculty and student life staff she has cultivated over the years.

After graduating from °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp in 1973 with a degree in social science, Jane earned a Master of Science in education with a major in college student personnel services from the University of Southern California. She served for seven years as dean for student affairs and two years as dean of women at Biola University, where she first met °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp Provost Mark Sargent. He describes her as a deeply respected dean throughout Christian higher education, who builds bridges between the academic and student life programs.

ā€œShe has a unique capacity to draw people into conversation about the essential things, and you leave every conversation with Jane knowing she cares about you and your hopes and ideas,ā€ Mark says. ā€œAt a time when student life and academic life were drifting into separate professional spheres in Christian higher education, Jane was a persistent voice for the possibilities of partnership. Her vision was not simply programmatic: her collaboration was always rooted in a love of ideas, of people and of possibilities.ā€

Heather Speirs, a former English professor at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp, asked Jane what student life planned to teach one year. ā€œJane loved that question, because she saw all of us in student life as educators,ā€ Tim says. ā€œJane embodies a key phrase in our student life mission statement: ā€˜The student life division exists as a partner with faculty.ā€™ā€

ā€œJane inspires me with her passion for the mission of the Christian liberal arts and °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp, something she articulates beautifully and personally,ā€ says Spanish professor Mary Docter. ā€œIt lives in every fiber of her being. Iā€™m inspired by her desire to appreciate all the good we do, yet to always strive to do better, to be better.ā€

Janeā€™s profound influence on peopleā€™s lives and college programs extends far beyond °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp. At the national conferences of Association of Christians and Student Development (ACSD), attendees always surrounded her. ā€œNo one was more sought after for coffee breaks and meals than Jane,ā€ Tim says.

higaHer student life work earned national acclaim, and she received ACSDā€™s prestigious Don L. Boender Award in 1998. Jane has served on the ACSD executive committee as both vice president and president-elect, spoken at numerous conferences, chaired the planning team for the annual conference and recently served as the chair of the diversity task force. In 2011, ACSD honored her with its first Jane Hideko Higa Multicultural Advancement Award, which recognizes individuals doing excellent work in advancing multicultural competency.

Barry Loy, vice president for student life at Gordon College, has worked with Higa for about 30 years through ACSD and the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU). He says she often provides wisdom and advice on a multitude of student life topics for her colleagues from other schools. ā€œHer faith is authentic and contagious,ā€ he says. ā€œShe is a tireless worker for Godā€™s Kingdom, her family, student development and °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp. She continues to be an inspiration to me. Iā€™ve especially been strengthened in my own faith and work by watching Jane deal with the ups and downs of life. She is a kind and gracious person always willing to listen and put others before herself. Janeā€™s retirement from the profession is a great loss, but she has and will continue to inspire many others to follow in her footsteps.ā€ Jane also worked with CCCU as former chair of the Commission of Chief Student Development Officers and as a member of the Racial Harmony Commission.

ā€œJane occasionally says that she found her voice at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp,ā€ says Chris Call, vice president for administration and planning. ā€œBut itā€™s also true that Jane has helped °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp find its voice, particularly in helping °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp become a more diverse, multicultural community.ā€

Beginning with °µĶų±¬ĮĻappā€™s 1995 long-range plan, Jane has led the collegeā€™s discussion on diversity. She served for years on the Diversity Committee and gently guided Intercultural Programs, reaching out to students of color and international, missionary and third-culture students. Committed to the ā€œthoughtful and intentional study of and interaction with multiple cultures,ā€ she has encouraged the °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp community to celebrate diversity as an aspect of Godā€™s creation. In the past 11 years, student diversity has increased from 15 to 29 percent, and Janeā€™s desire to make °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp a safe place and home and for all students has played a key role in that success.

While she set broad policies for student life at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp, Jane has also worked with students one-on-one, making time to mentor those who sought her out. ā€œSometimes Jane would eat five meals to meet with all the students who wanted to see her,ā€ Tim Wilson says.

ā€œThe best part of my education at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp has been the mentorship by my professors in the communication studies department and the building of wonderful relationships through WCSA with people like Jane Higa,ā€ says Kristin Lo, president of the °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp Student Association (WCSA) and former WCSA multicultural representative.

Toya Cooper, college counsel, arrived as a student at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp the year Jane became dean. ā€œJane just touches things, and growth starts,ā€ she says. ā€œJane watched me struggle as a student and grow. She watched me struggle as a law student and grow from a distance, and sheā€™s watched me grow here at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp as a professional. Sheā€™s the best gardener. She tends well, she prays over things, she waters them, she makes sure that they get light and air, and she knows when to step back so they can stretch out in places that they need toā€”and she knows that maybe they need to rotate and see something new. Sheā€™s just been all those things to me as a mentor, a friend, a boss at one time, and a colleague.ā€


ā€œShe has a unique capacity to draw people into conversation about the essential things, and you leave every conversation with Jane knowing she cares about you and your hopes and ideas.ā€


Jane especially encountered students in the disciplinary process. ā€œShe approached student violations of college policies as redemptive opportunities to help young people grow and mature,ā€ Chris Call says.

ā€œShe reminded us that student conduct meetings made an impact on each studentā€™s trajectory at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp and, more importantly, for life,ā€ Tim Wilson says. ā€œShe would often say to the student, ā€˜We are trying to help you become the person that God intends.ā€™ā€

Many vividly recall their first meeting with Jane. ā€œI was initially struck by Janeā€™s warmth and hospitality, as she welcomed me into her office and into our community with a wide, gracious smile that still seems to accompany her wherever she goes,ā€ Mary Docter says.

ā€œWhen I first met Jane, I thought, ā€˜This is a woman who makes people safe and allows them to be themselves,ā€™ā€ says Resident Director Shannon Balram.

ā€œShe made me feel incredibly welcome and comfortable,ā€ Chris Call says. ā€œIn my first meeting with her I had this overwhelming sense that she would be a delight to work with.ā€

Janeā€™s warm smile immediately puts people at ease; Tim Wilson describes it as ā€œbeautiful.ā€ Cliff Lundberg, vice president for external relations, says, ā€œShe is a person who canā€™t talk without smiling.ā€ Danny Clapp, a former resident director, appreciates her love for laughter. ā€œJane and I have connected over some silly things,ā€ he says. ā€œIā€™ve had such a fun time with her.ā€

Jane showed her love for people in many ways, both on campus and in her home. She often tempted her guests with a variety of homemade desserts and connected with people who shared her love for food and hospitality.

Jane expresses her strong, enduring faith in every aspect of her work and life. Resident Director Lyndsay Grimm remembers her interview with Jane when she was applying for her job. ā€œThe second or third question she asked me was, ā€˜How many moments in your faith have been crises for you?ā€™ And I remember thinking, ā€˜That is such an important question to be asking an RD, because you are coming alongside students.ā€™ I think it highlighted Janeā€™s desirethat people who come to °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp to care for students had wrestled a lot with their faith, thought a lot about their faith, and wanted to be able to encourage and grow students in their faith. I appreciated this deep and awesome question that immediately drew my heart to hers.ā€

ā€œShe is a woman of vision and passion, of wisdom and humility, a woman of deep and abiding faith,ā€ Mary Docter says. ā€œShe embodies love, joy and peace. She is kindness, goodness, faithfulness and gentleness. She is a blessing to all who know her.ā€

ā€œThe reason so many of us have loved learning from Jane is because she lives her life so all of us can learn from it, share in the suffering and joy, and enjoy a good relationship with her,ā€ Shannon Balram says. ā€œI know students have been impactedā€”and faculty and staff as wellā€”by the way she has lived her life.ā€

janeā€œI love the pace Jane has with people, because she is so very patient with them,ā€ says Ben Patterson, campus pastor. ā€œThey really are the most important thing to her. Thereā€™s work to be done, there are programs and tasks, but I never felt at any point that she lost the reason we have the programs and tasks: the people. Jane has always been about the people.ā€

Jason Cha, who directs Intercultural Programs, sought a position at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp to work with Jane. ā€œI met her several years ago at a national conference, and I was drawn to her spirit and her energyā€”and her being rooted in the gospel,ā€ he says. ā€œThree years ago, I was unemployed and struggling. So I sent out a bunch of emails, including one to °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp. I got a phone call, and it was Jane; she called me just to encourage me, and it meant so much. Jane is a person and a leader who really cares about people and is attentive to their needs.ā€

Basketball Coach Kirsten Moore recalls seeing Jane speak at chapel one day. ā€œAs she walked up to the podium, she grabbed a box, set it down and stood on it so sheā€™d be tall enough to see the audience. I remember giggling to myself because, as a basketball coach, Iā€™m not around a lot of people who have to do that. As I think about the role sheā€™s played at the college and in my life, Iā€™m thankful Jane has been willing to stand tall in so many things. She deals with conflict on a daily basis, but she never shrinks away from being bold in the truth while making people feel extremely loved and cared for. Thatā€™s a special gift and something I think is extremely hard to do. Through her personal journey, for her to stand on Godā€™s promises the way that she has done has helped me do the same.ā€

Jane has also invested in her family, including her son, Josh ā€™03, her daughter, Emiko Corey ā€™06, and her son-in-law, Aaron. ā€œIā€™m proud of how theyā€™ve grown up and all they are and do,ā€ she says. Together they faced the sudden death of Janeā€™s husband, Paul, at 52. ā€œWe shared a wonderful marriage and priorities such as helping young adults reach their potential,ā€ she says. Paul served as chief of probation for Los Angeles County. This summer, Jane married Jim Mannoia, who taught philosophy at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp before serving as vice president for academic affairs at Houghton College and president of Greenville College. ā€œIā€™m grateful for a rich community of friends whoā€™ve been constant and faithful companions, sharing food and fun and being present through all the joys and sorrows of life,ā€ she says.