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AID: Our last hurrah

Posted by Daniel Agarwal on 2008-08-05

Our farewells continued today as we wrapped up our work with Association for India’s Development. As I ate dinner with two Googlers and Professor Vidya, I realized how lucky our group has been over the trip to meet amazing people from around Hyderabad. Our trips to universities, temples, and cultural events have been excellent, but often spark more questions than answers. The people we have met have been great at answering our questions and giving us a view of Hyderabad that we otherwise would have never known.

The professors, guides, and professionals that we meet all have amazing stories to tell us. Some of the first people we met were three local college students. Just meeting them, talking about the city and what it offers, really opened our eyes to the size and scope of Hyderabad. Last Friday, our gender talk with a professor at Hyderabad Central University gave us the opportunity to learn more about how women have struggled for equal rights in India, but how they have also risen to the highest offices in the land. We spent time exploring the palaces of the Qitub Shah Tombs and the Nizam Palaces with Mr. Abbas, learning about the history of a city with over 1000 years of forts, love stories, and pitched battles.

Tonight, we had a send off dinner at the AID office with Professor Vidya and two Googlers. Throughout the entire program, Professor Vidya has been great. She worked with us to introduce science to the classroom while also helping to expand the outreach of AID through vital posters. I also had the great chance to talk to two Googlers who were a part of AID, helping to tutor children a couple hours of week with fellow coworkers. It is people like them that we hope will continue our work when we leave Hyderabad later this week. It was sad to leave the AID office for the last time on our trip, but we know that we cannot change the educational system in India by ourselves. It will take a concerted effort from the entire community to help force the seismic shift necessary to change education in India.

Hyderabad has truly grown on us as a city. The people are friendly, if not curious, from the youngest child to the oldest resident. Many of them are brilliant and can offer a beautiful and detailed account of Charminar, Golconda fort, or just how to make a great masala chai. I am truly sad that I will soon have to say goodbye, at least for now.

Why, why, why?

Posted by Daniel Agarwal on 2008-07-29

Today in class, Bethany, Jiajia, and I continued to perfect our teaching techniques at Safrani. Over the last couple of weeks, we have developed a system to harness the strengths of our Urdu and Telugu children while helping to address their weaknesses. For the first 20 minutes, Jiajia would go with the lowest testing students and work with them in small groups to improve their English. Bethany and I focused on writing activities for the rest of the students, including work with adjectives and vocabulary such as colors, shapes, and basic objects. After this, I work with advanced students on reading comprehension and vocabulary. Through our system, we have been able to address the needs of both the advanced, intermediate, and beginner students in one class period.


A few observations that I have made during our work with the students from Adigmet:


Many of these kids don’t even have pencils. Why is a mystery, because the majority of students seem to be well fed and have appropriate clothing. Pencils in India sell for a pittance even for the poor, which makes their lack of pencils even more frustrating.


The children continue to be eager, but must be kept busy. What many of us learned was that if you keep a group of fourth graders in a closed space with nothing to do, chaos soon ensues. We learned this on the first day, but it took us some time to develop a curriculum that was appropriate for the kids.


Without a stick, we must engage students by encouraging learning, not by punishing noncompliance. We saw soon into the program that the textbook had its drawbacks. Despite some good writing exercises, the book had some exercises that weren’t appropriate for the class level. To respond to this, we tried different projects such as Bingo and small group reading to get students involved in active, not passive learning.


The vocabulary is often a barrier to the students. Our efforts to introduce Bingo games and active learning have been effective in improving the vocabulary of the students. However, this is a long term commitment that we are trying to address with our AID posters.


Although our work has been very specific, I have often wrestled with the issues in India today. When we go to nice hotels or restaurants, I cannot help but thinking of the endless millions who do not have even running water, food, or sanitation. In a country without proper sanitation or water, millions enter the middle class every year. We laugh sometimes at the seven children crowded into a rickshaw meant for four, but each time it means a greater chance that one of them won’t make it home because of a lack of seatbelts. The lack of proper roads, water, safety, and sanitation makes it impossible for the country to grow. Only with a proper investment in India’s infrastructure and education will India be able to make the next step towards fulfilling the potential we see in our students every day.

The Drawing Continues

Posted by Daniel Agarwal on 2008-07-23

On Tuesday, we continued to work with both the Safrani and Adigmet schools on their respective projects. As always, our first stop was at Adigmet to work with students on English language training. We focused more on isolating the students who needed work on the alphabet and helped them through most of the letters. The use of groups in the schools, especially for the Urdu classes, helps to bridge the language barrier while making us seem more welcoming to the students. The groups have been very successful in keeping students engaged and motivated throughout the class period.

At Safrani, we conducted our last day of drawing before we start painting the plywood boards for the art project. The students were very eager to continue drawing. To encourage them to draw new animals, we rearranged the pictures that they choose from to draw so that they were more likely to pick less drawn animals. Interestingly, this varied between grades, with some classes really excited about drawing rabbits while others were eager to draw fish. Our work at Safrani will continue on Thursday with the adding of colors that correspond to grass and clouds onto the plywood boards.
 

Cakeundi-Color and Flavor in Hyderabad

Posted by Daniel Agarwal on 2008-07-15

Today was another interesting day at both the government school and Safrani. At the government school, we continued to evolve our teaching techniques to better engage the children we are working with. Focusing on small groups has really helped to keep the students dedicated and focused on the task of learning English. The twist we have added in some of the sections is spending extra time with the lowest level students. With them, we are trying to focus on the mastery of the alphabet so that they can better comprehend more difficult words and phrases. For many of these students, the fact of life forces them to leave school at an early age to take care of their families. Even if we cannot teach them English to a level of fluency, having them even partially literate in English lets them function more easily in Indian life, where nearly all government signs and many ads are in English only.

At Safrani, we worked on the art project that we started a few weeks ago. Today, the children colored the pictures they had drawn in the previous week. Their drawings were very good and the coloring went well, with the students often finishing with time to spare. Their creativity was evident in the diverse array of colors they used for animals: pink zebras, green giraffes, and orange pandas were just some of the interesting color pairings. Most did use the normal colors for the animals they had drawn, but it was also nice to see them drawing with other colors as well.

Today was also Anita's 21st birthday. Following on our Bastille day celebrations, we added a 1kg cake with Happy Birthday Anita written on the cake, with Anita in Telugu. However, her cousin also brought a 1kg cake. Our current cake inventory is about 3.5 kg, owing to what we have eaten over the last two days. Regardless, the cakes were excellent and will be consumed quickly, hopefully by this weekend. Nothing like three cakes to celebrate an exciting beginning of the week.

Paper + Pen + Pupil = Imagination

Posted by Daniel Agarwal on 2008-07-08

Today was another exciting day on the streets of Hyderabad. Our language lesson went well as we learned new phrases to effectively communicate with our classes and ensure that they were fully able to understand our directions during class. Learning Telugu and Hindi at the same time has been difficult, with a mix of u endings and nasal r's at every turn.However, the languages are starting to sink in and we are beginning to use them more than ever in our classes.

At the government school, we often have to contend with low lighting, no seats, and students that are so poor that they don't have pencils for themselves. Even if they are missing their books, the one thing that the students never lack is enthusiasm. Our biggest challenge in class is controlling their exuberance so that we can teach them the lesson plans. But after talking to teachers and our coordinators, we may make changes to have the classes become more interactiveand hands on.

Later, we rejoined the Safrani kids to begin the art project. We explained how the project will get them to draw different animals that would be normally found in a jungle, such as tigers, trees, and flamingos. When we gave kids paper and some words, their sheets began to fill with plants and animals. Many of these children had never done much art in school, due to the strict curriculum. Seeing such a strong response from a white sheet of paper was amazing. I can't wait until we give them a mural.
 

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