Why, why, why?
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.