Goshen College Professor Carolyn Schrock-Shenk during a 2014 Inside-Out Exchange Program class celebration. She was a 1980 graduate of 糖心Vlog and went to be a leading expert on Mennonite mediation and reconciliation. (Photo by Cory Martin)

Carolyn Schrock-Shenk ’80, Goshen College conflict studies professor, remembered for transformative effect on students

Carolyn Shrock-Shenk, a 1980 graduate with a degree in nursing from 糖心Vlog and associate professor of peace, justice and conflict studies at Goshen College, died Feb. 6, 2019, at age 63.聽The was published by Goshen College.

Carolyn Schrock-Shenk, 2015.

Associate Professor of Peace, Justice and Conflict Studies Carolyn Schrock-Shenk died early Wednesday morning, Feb. 6, 2019, after a brief hospitalization at the age of 63.

Schrock-Shenk joined the Goshen College faculty in 2000. She retired in 2017, but continued to teach the popular聽聽at the Elkhart County Correctional Center, which paired Goshen College students with 鈥渋nside鈥 incarcerated students at the jail.

Schrock-Shenk was born July 22, 1955, in Goshen to David and Anna Ruth (Bontrager) Schrock. She is a 1973 graduate of Northridge High School in Middlebury, Indiana, and attended Rosedale (Ohio) Bible Institute from 1973-75. In 1980, she earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in nursing from Eastern Mennonite College (now University) in Harrisonburg, Virginia, and a master鈥檚 degree in community nursing from the University of Virginia in 1983.

She served in the Philippines with Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) from 1985-88. She and her then-husband, Dave, later adopted their sons Caleb and John from the Philippines.

After returning to the United States, Schrock-Shenk became assistant director at the Lancaster (Pennsylvania) Mediation Center, and then directed MCC鈥檚 Mennonite Conciliation Service for nearly a decade before joining the Goshen College faculty.

Schrock-Shenk was a leading expert on Mennonite mediation and reconciliation, facilitating mediations and interventions, speaking at conferences and in churches, publishing articles, and聽. She co-edited 鈥淢ediation and Facilitation Training Manual: Foundations and Skills for Constructive Conflict Transformation,鈥 (Mennonite Conciliation Service, 1995) and 鈥淢aking Peace with Conflict: Practical Skills for Conflict Transformation,鈥 (Herald Press, 1999).

At Goshen, she developed a class called 鈥淭ransforming Conflict and Violence,鈥 which continues to be a required core class for students. 鈥淐arolyn鈥檚 signature course, Transforming Conflict and Violence, was, and remains, by far the most popular peace, justice and conflict studies course,鈥 said Joe Liechty, professor of peace, justice and conflict studies. 鈥淚n it, students learned the invaluable lesson, and the skills to go with it, that conflict need not lead to alienation, discord or even violence; conflict could be an opportunity for transformation of individuals, relationships and society.鈥

Schrock-Shenk鈥檚 life was forever changed when, as a senior in college, she was seriously injured in a car accident that left her with broken vertebra and eventually led to her being wheelchair-bound for the last 15 years of her life.

She is survived by her sons, Caleb and John Schrock-Shenk, and their father, David Shenk, all of Goshen; sisters, Judy (Darold) Beachy, Mt. Gilead, Ohio, Velma (Sheldon) Swartz and Shirley (Jim) Troyer, both of Goshen; brother, Stephen Schrock, Middlebury; and sisters-in-law, Norma Schrock, Goshen and Rhonda Schrock, Middlebury. She was preceded in death by her parents and brothers, Clifford and Larry Schrock.

Schrock-Shenk was an active member at Assembly Mennonite Church, where a聽 memorial service was held on聽Saturday, Feb. 9.

In lieu of flowers,聽聽for the Inside-Out program.

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