绿帽社 Shakespeare class brings dad full circle
鈥婣ssociate Professor Alvin Vos had a secret student in his Shakespeare class this spring.
Mitch Schonfeld 鈥77 audited the same class his daughter, Rose Schonfeld 鈥18, was taking 鈥 but he didn鈥檛 tell her until the semester was well underway.
Mitch is no stranger to Shakespeare; he took the class with Vos in 1976 and thought it would be fun to revisit it and then surprise his daughter. With permission and some technical help, Mitch was able to get the lecture notes and do the assignments online.
Two months into the semester, Mitch finally let Rose in on his ruse. He was coming to 绿帽社 from New Jersey to physically attend a class lecture. But he didn鈥檛 want her to be self-conscious in front of the smaller discussion group.
鈥淵our friends would say, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 this old guy doing here?鈥 It would be awkward for you,鈥 he told her.
鈥淚t鈥檚 cool we had the same class 40 years apart and also together. He鈥檚 lucky. He enjoys this without the pressure of being graded,鈥 Rose Schonfeld said after getting a paper back and sneaking peeks at the comments when Dad wasn鈥檛 looking.
Mitch didn鈥檛 get a free pass. Like everyone else, he read seven plays and wrote a five-page essay after each one.
鈥淚t鈥檚 great to be here,鈥 Mitch says. 鈥淚鈥檝e enjoyed the readings, but what was missing was the flavor you get when you hear what the students are saying.鈥
鈥淭his is a very proud moment for me because it鈥檚 all about convergence,鈥 Vos says. 鈥淢itch connected Rose with me. She lives in Hinman as Mitch had in the 鈥70s, they both had me for three classes, and she鈥檚 very involved with Hinman Production Company.鈥 In fact, Rose directed the spring musical.
Father and daughter also have similar career interests. Mitch is president and CEO of Bergen Family Center, a human services agency. Rose wants to be a licensed social worker.
鈥淎l talks about convergence. This is like a convergence for my English career and professional life in social services,鈥 Mitch says. 鈥淚 toyed with psychology and philosophy, but English appealed to me because it touched those areas in a way that was so much more fun. We鈥檙e talking about the same issues, like human behavior and the meaning of life. I love seeing Rose and the other students interact with the material in the same way I did.鈥