Ok so we haven't been blogging for a while! But things have really been happening at ELF ...keeping us too busy to keep you updated.
No excuse - we know...but after many requests, we agreed to get blogging again.
We will upload some posts from the project (which were written a while back but just not uploaded) ...and to make up for the long silence, we have some amazing videos which we will be uploading soon!
So watch this space!!
Friday, 15 May 2015
Wednesday, 9 October 2013
Ladder to Literacy Session 2
15 August
Another warm winter’s day in Cape Town. Today I have Shelley in the
car with me, she is a very good ex colleague of mine, and we worked together at
a Montessori pre-school some three years ago. I had always remembered she was
interested in outreach and here she is kindly volunteering her time to help with
the Ladder to Literacy project.
I fill Shelley in about last week’s session as we are making our way
to the Townships. I tell her about the disturbing discovery that only two out
of the fifteen teachers read to the children in their care and they do not have
any books. I also tell her that upon sharing this information with my
colleagues at our ELF offices their response was “Not having books is no excuse
not to read to children.” You could make up stories, use magazines, newspaper,
and even draw. As I think about it, they are right; we live in a world where
there is literacy all around us. The teachers need the right encouragement and
understanding of the importance of this literacy in the child’s world.
I tell Shelley about the material making session, how the ladies
struggled to rule straight lines, cut straight and paste straight. Shelley
knows the importance of presenting beautiful attractive materials to the children.
She offers to help in this area, much to my relief and gratitude. Patience is a
virtue. We arrive; we unload the car and set up the materials. The ladies
arrive and we start our session with a recap of last week. Here the ladies role
play and practice the activities covered last week.
This week’s session focused on activities to prepare the child for
handwriting, from working with sandpaper letters, how to hold a pencil, to
making patterns using a pencil to name just a few. All of the activities are
practical and most can be easily made. The teachers happily agree on this. Some
of them share that they have black boards and paper and scissors but it never
occurred to them to demonstrate to children how to cut lines or make patterns
with a pencil or chalk board. They very easily understood the importance of
helping the child develop good hand muscle and hand eye coordination. They were very quick to link the activities
to the practical life activities covered last year. It is heart warming to see
such progress from the teachers.
As the demonstrations and practice continue, Shelley is busy in the
background, cutting card with the guillotine and laminating the materials
already done by the teachers. This was a huge time saver and the teachers
looked forward to finishing off their materials to take to the children. I know
our Ladder to Literacy project has just began, the teachers are slowly piecing
all the information together and I’m thrilled but at the same time I am concerned
about introducing Xhosa literacy. There are such limited resources for
Xhosa.....guess it’s time to put on our creative hats!
Thursday, 25 July 2013
Ladder to Literacy Project Begins!
Ladder to Literacy Blog
So many amazing moments has occurred since the day Niki walked through the
ELF door in 2012. Niki is from an organisation called Ubomi and she approached us
in her quest to find materials for the schools she provides aid to. These schools
exist in townships on the fringe of Cape Town in two areas called Samora Machel
and Kosovo. We partnered on the “Nurturing the Spirit of Learning in Kosovo”
project last year. Our partnership has brought much inspiration, friendship,
challenges, opportunities and development of human potential.
This year we embarked on the Ladder to Literacy project. Our focus is to provide the teachers in "Nurturing the spirit of Learning in Kosovo" project with teaching skills in how to teach literacy to young children in their schools. The Literacy
workshops will run over five sessions meeting once a week in Samora Machel.
Session One:
A warm sunny winter’s day in the townships. I approach the Tsonga
environmental centre in Samora Machel, as I take the corner I see some school children making
their way to school. I meet Mandisa, my co facilitator. We empty the boot of my
car with all the equipment we’ll need and we head inside to set up. I was
amazed at the beautiful architectural structure of the building and surprised I
haven’t noticed it before as I’ve driven past it so many times on my way to
Kosovo.
Once all the teachers had arrived
we started our introduction to Literacy, what literacy is and why it is important.
We spoke about the natural universal way children learn their native language,
the teachers could relate to this, sharing experiences of their own children.
We moved onto ways to help children develop literacy, with Mandisa translating
as we went along. After our tea break we demonstrated pre literacy vocabulary enrichment
activities which the teachers got to practice.
The activities were done in Xhosa
and we had a hiccup when it came to the ‘I spy’ game, as I’ve discovered that most of the Xhosa
words begin with an ‘i’…..ihagu, ikama, ikati
and so forth.
After the practice session the
teachers head off to the tables to make literacy materials for the children in
their schools. This was a huge challenge for the teachers as their lines were skew;
they struggled to cut strait and even paste straight. Many had to redo and
needed close guidance to perfect their material making skills. Patience is virtue.
When asked who read every day, only
two of the fifteen teachers raised their hands, I assumed that the others only
read every now and then. When I asked why not, they replied that they did not
know the importance of reading to children and they did not have any books. We
ended our session with a word of encouragement to read to children every day.
Going home to my three children
this very afternoon, I pondered on how fortunate they have been to have such a
sure start in life to literacy. And I realized the ever more importance of this
Ladder to Literacy project for the children in Samora Machel and Kosovo.
Tuesday, 7 May 2013
Long Walk to the Playground
The day starts with toddlers being dropped
off by their parents for the day - fifteen little ones in one room. The teacher
is creative; with little resources she has them singing, dancing and moving. Then
comes story-time, nappy changing. Snack time follows. There is little else.
These fifteen children are confined to this 2 x 4 meter room for the day. The
teacher is afraid to let them out onto the playground for fear that they will
be trampled by the older children.
Today, however is a landmark day! The
children are visiting the playground for the first time this year. They will
have exclusive use of the playground, before the older children come outside!
On the other end, in the classroom with the
4-5 year olds, things are abuzz. After the morning group circle, children are
invited to choose “work”/activities from the shelves. The Practical Life activities
were prepared the week before by the Ubomi teachers.
The Ubomi teachers are encouraged to invite
the children and introduce them to the “new work!” The children look animated
and willingly engage with the adults. Their concentration and interest is apparent
from their facial expressions. They are
so eager to choose activities.
Soon however, chaos reigns! The activities on the shelves are incomplete
and/or returned to incorrect places. To add to the chaos the teachers over-mediate
and direct the children, sometimes to the extent of doing the activity
themselves without offering the children the option to try.
Overall, the morning work time is busy with a
flurry of activity and energy in the classroom. The debriefing session
encourages reflection on behaviours, attitudes, skills and feelings around the
morning events. Consensus was reached
around preparation of environment, the importance of modeling the grace and
courtesies and body management required from the children and adults alike in
the environment.
While the teachers were at tea, we quickly set
up the environment with the help of Tosh the class teacher. Tosh’s energy and
enthusiasm to share her resources with us enabled us to set up a Practical
Life, Language, Sensorial and Art area with sufficient activities for approximately
children!
Exhausted but satisfied we left Kosovo with
the firm conviction that tomorrow will be a new day full of concentrated activity
for the children of Kosovo!
Tuesday, 19 March 2013
Thursdays in Kosovo
Thursdays
in KOSOVO
7
March 2013
We arrived in Kosovo at 08h30. Even though we’d
been there before, the squalor, refuse and general uncleanliness, always shocks
you as you veer off Vanguard drive through Samora Machel, heading bumpily into
Kosovo. At this hour the neighbourhood dogs are already scrounging in the piles
of garbage on the roadside for their morning breakfasts, while residents are
creatively propping up their shacks in the hope that they will provide
protection for yet another day.
The practitioners greet us warmly as they file
into Zolekha’s crèche for our first session after the long summer holidays. The
session goes smoothly, with the teachers excitedly showing off their knowledge
and skills to the group as they recall all the Practical Life activities
learned in the workshops. The enthusiasm and energy in the room shade us from
the gloomy heat that is slowly being trapped into the zinc structure of Zolekha’s
school. Careful explanations of the skills children learn with the activities
are gently presented by the practitioners in slow English or Xhosa where need
be.
After tea, unperturbed by the trapped heat, we
all head back in for the second session. My colleague and I, puzzled by the
amazing knowledge captured by the group with little evidence of it being
transferred to the children, opened the session with a discussion around
implementation and sharing skills and knowledge with the children. The concerns
raised were space (shacks being too small), no materials to set up activities,
lack of funds to purchase materials etc.
At the end of the session, after designing
activities with the empty bottles of all sizes, Tuna cans, yogurt tubs etc, and
identifying skills children learn with these tools as play or work every practitioner
committed to setting up a minimum of five activities for their classrooms by
next week Thursday!
Follow the ELF team and share our obstacles and
wonder … as we journey to Kosovo on the 14th March.
Our first visit to Kosovo
On visiting a few of the schools of the
ladies who participated in the workshop, I was taken aback by the level of
poverty the two communities were in. Some shacks were very small, dark and had very
little evidence of a school or place for children to play and learn.
The children were all asleep and the
adults were watching over them. In one of the more established shacks the Ubomi
team had put in a concrete floor as well as proper windows and doors. This
school had a kitchen where all of the Ubomi schools would come and collect food
for the children. There were little children as young as three years old,
wondering about on their own with no adult supervision and who did not attend
any of the schools. These children would come every day to the kitchen to have a
plate of food. They sat at a child size plastic table and chairs and ate.
We walked into the school, it was quiet
with the children sleeping. We were warmly greeted by Lungi, one of the ladies
who attended the workshop. In one of the rooms were shelves and on the shelves
were some Practical Life activities. It was heart warming to see the implementation.
We left with a clearer understanding of the Ubomi vision to uplift the
community and our own idea to nurture the spirit of learning in Kosovo.
Aisha Mohamed (ELF Montessori Facilitator)
October 2012
Friday, 15 March 2013
The start of our project in Kosovo
I was called upon to do a Montessori Practical Life Workshop
with a group of ladies coming from various ECD centres in Samora Machel and
Kosovo. I was thrilled to be part of this outreach programme and excited to
meet the ladies who would be attending. I was given a short briefing of the
basic services being provided for the children in their care and got to know a
little bit about the organisation supporting these centres. Niki from the Ubomi
Organisation is our link to our new project and a start to what is now
unfolding to be a wonderful relationship and journey of reaching children in
communities who are in great need of quality education.
The workshop ran for a period of four Saturdays covering
the Practical Life area of the Montessori Curriculum. We were expecting fifteen
ladies, each would be given module with lessons plans and expected to add notes
and drawings as we went through all the lessons.
During orientation as the ladies introduced themselves
I was overwhelmed by the dedication and pride they displayed when talking about
their schools. I also noticed the diversity in ages and all of them being
mothers and quite a few were grandmothers. Some ladies were able to speak
English fluently and others struggled, at this point I introduced the
translation procedures which meant ladies could freely express themselves in
their mother tongue and I would get the translation. It also meant that my
lessons would have to be translated too.
Our first lessons of Grace and Courtesy was phenomenal,
here in front of me was a room full of women of all ages. I had already experienced their warmth in the
way they were respectful and gracious towards each other and towards me, however
I noticed some women chatting while their peers were introducing themselves,
this laid the perfect platform for introducing ground rules. The first being
“when our friends are sharing in a group we all listen to them, we are
respectful”. The lesson for greeting a guest was quite interesting
as we discussed the different cultural greetings and I learnt the traditional
Xhosa handshake.
The exercise of opening and closing the door drew their
attention to the analysis of movement, seeing things from the child’s point of
view and modelling grace and courtesy.
Other exercises of grace and courtesy were introduced
focusing on respect for others, self, the environment and all materials within the
environment. Emphasis was on the child wanting to be shown how to carry out
actions correctly and gaining social etiquette.
Lessons were followed by practice sessions and it was
wonderful seeing the ladies practice in their groups with such graciousness,
using their mother tongue as they would speak to the children in their schools.
It also doubled as reinforcement of understanding for the ladies who were not
fluent in English.
I thoroughly enjoyed the first Saturday and learnt a new Xhosa word “intlonipho” meaning respect. The rest of the workshops went well. The ladies were punctual, came prepared and packed with enthusiasm. We worked through Body Management activities where the ladies were demonstrated how to show a child how to carry a chair, how to carry a bucket and how to walk on the line, to name just to name a few.
During presentations they were encouraged to make notes and sketches in the module files given to them. Their hand written notes were personalized in their own language for the benefit of their own understanding for future use. I was amazed at the detail in some of the sketches. As they practiced the activities amongst themselves, they moved about with caution and grace, taking into consideration the analysis of movement, breaking down the steps to help the child internalize each movement.
Preliminary activities were quite interesting and we
added a twist to practice time. After demonstrating and practicing all of the
pouring, spooning, transferring, squeezing, twisting and stringing activities,
the ladies were given a few boxes of various items that could be used in the Practical
Life area and they had to invent their own activities.One group decided to use
pegs instead of tongs for transferring.
This I thought was brilliant because finding resources for their schools
is a major challenge for township pre-schools. Others spooned colourful bottle
tops instead of beans. They were surprised to find glass items amongst the
materials to be used for children, however after taking them back to the
importance of body management and the child’s need for real work; they became
open to the concept of children handling glass.
The emphases of the activities were to allow the child to manipulate
materials that would assist in developing muscle control and hand eye co-ordination
in preparation for reading and writing as well as order and independence.
The workshop included Care of Self, Care of the Environment
and Food Preparation. Here we really explored the child’s independence and their
want to do things for themselves.
We ended our four week journey speaking about the
importance of Practical Life activities and its role in preparing the child for
their next educational stage, the grade school. Amongst the list were preparing
their physical and mental development for reading and writing. My personal view
is if there is one thing the child should take along to grade school; it is self-esteem
and a belief in self, “I can do it.” This
can only come from the adults respect and belief in the child.
Thus ended our wonderful 4 week journey, leaving the
ladies with enough to start implementing a Practical Life area in their schools
and a promise of an onsite visit from the ELF team.
Aisha Mohammed. ELF Facilitator
September 2012
September 2012
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