The panoramic view from the headteacher's office
Should I update
you on my Andaman
Islands trip or
share the improvements I've made to my classes?
Work first I reckon. What do they
say about assumptions? Well this applies
even more so to India . When
you arrive customs should stamp your passport with a reminder. I assumed my classes would alternate between
boys & girls; that the same students would return each week. How wrong was I - the knock on of this is
that I've have students who've have had five lessons mixed with ones who hadn't
had any. So when I asked the class "Does
everyone understand?" half the class would say yes, the others would just looked
confused – a bit like me. The same thing
was also happening in the teacher's training sessions; certain staff members
wanted to skip sections as they clearly already held degrees in computer
studies and knew everything!
I was getting
cross-eyed; you could say I was losing control of my pupils. A meeting with Urmila (GV Education Manager) was quickly arranged and we spent all of Saturday ironing out the problems; one great big
staff meeting. I felt a bit guilty as
Urmila set about chastising the teachers in Oriya - the key words I could
understand as they were in English. It
sounded like I was being very critical – I’d only raised a couple of points. By the end of the day we'd agreed that all
year nine students would attend my classes, the teachers would be split into
two groups and that I'd also start teaching all the year five kids too (a
crafty move that I completely missed). To
be fair it meant that I'd head to school straight after lunch for three, hour
long lessons. I never really managed to
get anything started in this hour at this office. I'd also get a translator for
the times when my Peter Sellers impressions didn't work.
Oriya script in a PowerPoint presentation, not as easy as it looks - which it doesn't
Another
improvement would be the supply of a projector for lessons. I would connect it to a PC and project my
course notes - goodbye whiteboard and wonky writing. I was also getting through
a serious number of marker pens; my full stops were probably way too big. I made a few visits into Berhampur to find
the correct model - we settled on a Sharp XR50S (it has a DLP ( digital light processing) so has got to
be good). The other plus would be that I
could start using animations to make my lessons really "jazzy". I wanted to
try my hardest to spark an interest in computers with the children. I accept that listening to boring old me waffle on can’t be
that inspiring. I then found BrainPOP.com
- an amazing website jam packed with educational animations - perfect for the
students.
BrainPOP animations - all about software
During February I've
also helped out with science workshops at Kankia, created by Geeta from our Bio-diesel department. Again the new projector helped us, this time by allowing Oriya script to be used in PowerPoint.
If the students and teachers could type in Oriya then this would
be an amazing step forward - lesson notes could also be bilingual. After much
grief I managed to muster-up a virtual screen keyboard and the necessary fonts
together (Oriya script is rather neglected in Microsoft's world - a bit like
Orissa in reality). At lunchtime we've even managed to start playing Oriyan music videos - not my cup of chai as there's way to much whirling about in fields - but it does guarantee a full house.
Science workshops - batteries, bulbs, switches and wire
Cycling to and
from the school is still great fun - the temperatures are slowing rising (we're
hitting 40 degrees this weekend). Heading
off at 2pm does
mean I'm in the hottest part of the day - plenty of water drunk and factor 25 applied. The wildlife has been improving too (or I'm
becoming more observant). During the
last few weeks I've seen my first proper big snake (4-5 feet), a mongoose (probably
after said snake), three beautiful golden jackals, and a peacock (with the
noise it was making a certain supper for the jackals). Scorpions have also been on the increase, accidentally I cycled over one on the way to the mess (very messy).
I think I’ll also take the plunge and buy a bicycle – one I can then donate
to GV in July. With gears I’ll easily be able to
beat 14 minutes 52 seconds…
Scorpion season - UV light really helps
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