I made it to Uganda! After 28 hours of travel time I arrived in Kampala last night and into my room by midnight. This morning I was fortunate to visit the Peace Nursery and Primary School in the Makarere neighborhood--you may have heard of Makarere University which we drove through this afternoon--established in 1922 with over 60,000 students today.
It is a primary school with 14 teachers from preschool through grade 4 and is funded partly by tuition and donations. the classrooms had few supplies--- pencils had to be sharpened by the teacher with a razor blade and each child had their name on a pencil. All the posters were hand made by the teachers. I saw no paint, paper, art materials, building blocks, dramatic play.
However, the children were delightful to be with--- they talked with me during their recess and I learned they mostly had at least two siblings, love to play soccer, volleyball and baseball in their free time and have aspirations to be doctors, lawyers, pilots and a rock star!
One teacher I observed reminded me of how important it is to establish meaningful relationships and offer challenging experiences. The kids clearly knew she enjoyed being with them and put passion into her teaching of them. She helped them believe learning is important. She was talking with them about road transport. Her questions included: Name at least four methods of road transport. Which ones are common in our community? What causes road accidents? How can you help prevent road accidents? She went beyond the knowledge and comprehension questions to levels of analysis, synthesis and evaluation! I was impressed!
Obviously, I am struck by the contrast in classroom materials from ours in the US to here in Uganda. How much of what we have do we truly need AND how can teachers teach through relationships and experiences when they have no tools?
I'm not successful trying to load my photos from today. I'll have to add them through Facebook!
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