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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Workshop with Mid-Term Peace Corps Volunteers

Today we spent the day with Peace Corps volunteers who teach in schools very similar to those where Young Writers clubs operate in the Koinadugu District and on the rural Freetown Peninsula, talking about teaching writing.

We discussed how closely our students resemble long-term English language learners in the U.S., and how it helps to look at strategies being used there to address the needs of LTELLs, to see if we can apply them here.

We are glad to see that the Ministry's 2011 JSS language arts syllabus supports the use of child-centered, inductive teaching methods and wants to see the children actively producing language in the classroom. This validates using process writing in our crowded classrooms, which we already know teaches writing skills, addresses ESL needs, and builds needed cultural self-esteem, at the same time that it eases class management. We practiced these strategies, some of which were taken from Natalie Hess' Teaching Large Multilevel Classes (Cambridge University Press, 2001). We had demonstrations on teaching several of these types of writing, by starting not from form or layout (as is so common even in the U.S.) but starting from content close to our students' hearts and experience, and then carrying the writing through the stages of the process.

A highlight for me was when we used Paolo Freire's problem posing method, which has come to be regarded as a useful ESL methodology. Report writing can be introduced effectively with this method in senior secondary school. Our problem-posing "code" for this workshop was a cane, which represented the flogging done in so many schools in Sierra Leone.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Our New Participant: Limicolaria flammea

The Goderich school where we are holding our Leading Young Writers workshop, Lady Patricia Kabba Memorial JSS, is doing gardening in preparation for the opening of school. With the hoe flying dangerously, this very determined being speedily took a supple beeline for our workshop. Here you see Limicolaria flammea about to climb our steps.

We spent the day talking about teaching writing not in our clubs, but in our classrooms. We discussed what the 2011 junior secondary language arts syllabus requires in terms of writing, and then divided into groups to plan how we would get a class writing the genre of our choice, and presenting it to the class. The participants found these practicals helpful, and we'll continue tomorrow. We also all enjoyed writing Tanka poems, and found them much more personal than the Haiku we had done earlier in the week. One of the teachers wrote a four-tanka poem about the death of his grandmother!

When I got home, I saw another snail outside my kitchen window. I've just been out there and took photos of more than two dozen Limicolaria flammea in my garden! What's going on? Although this snail is native to West Africa, has anybody done a study on its having become an invasive species on its home turf?

Monday, August 20, 2012

Leading Young Writers Workshop

In the photo you can see teachers from four rural junior secondary schools on the Freetown Peninsula, busy discussing how conferencing works in the writing process. I'm so pleased at their expertise and level of participation, and we are all learning from each other.

We took a break for the Id ul Fitr holiday, and are back at work today. Our 40-hour Leading Young Writers training is now half-way through. In our group we have teachers from Goderich, Hamilton, Sussex, Kent, and even the Koinadugu District in the northern province of Sierra Leone.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Getting Underway in Goderich

The SRWP is excited to start conducting a third Leading Young Writers training tomorrow, this time for new facilitators from junior secondary schools on the Freetown Peninsula. They will be joined by new facilitators from schools in the Koinadugu District; teachers replacing others who have moved on to employment elsewhere.

We appreciate so much the support of the Deputy Director of Education, Western Area Rural District, Ms. Frances N. Kamara, in introducing us to JSS schools on the Peninsula. We're also very grateful to the administrators of Lady Patricia Kabba Memorial JSS in Goderich, Mr. Mansaray and Mr. Cole, who agreed without hesitation to let us hold the workshop in their school, even though they are busy teaching summer school classes for incoming JSS I students.  We're all working for the same goals!

Thursday, August 9, 2012

See for yourself!

Are you thinking of supporting SELI's work? Or have you already donated? We've come across a wonderful video by Kewulay Kamara that will help you see what Sierra Leone is like, and the difference between urban and rural Sierra Leone. You will see children from our Young Writers club in Dankawalie Secondary School dancing in a community event on the school grounds. The title is Ta Boh M'bareh Dankawalie. See it for yourself! 

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Non-formal Education

Let's highlight again the point made about non-formal education in the last post.

Especially when we read articles such as Steve Bradshaw's "Sierra Leone's School-Time Blues," we realize what an important need there is for non-formal education and community schools in Sierra Leone. Children need to be taught in their own context, with parents (whether educated or not) playing an assertive role in keeping conditions safe and conducive to learning.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Teach Somebody (to Read and Write)!

September 8th is International Literacy Day. Here are some statistics from UNESCO's site at http://www.unesco.org/new/en/dakar/education/literacy/

·       "Learning to read and write is a fundamental right. Yet, 38 % of African adults (some 153 millions) are illiterate, two-thirds of these are women.

·       Africa is the only continent where more than half of parents are not able to help their children with homework due to illiteracy.

·       Adult literacy rates are below 50% in Benin, Burkina Faso, Chad, Ethiopia, Guinea, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Sierra Leone and The Gambia.

·       Only 1 % of national education budget of most African governments is earmarked to address the issue of literacy.

·       The situation is alarming as literacy is a crucial step to acquire the basic skills needed to cope with the many challenges children, youth and adults will face throughout their lives.

·       For many disadvantaged young people and adults, non-formal education is one of the main routes to learning. Non-formal education reaches people in their own context and ideally in their own local language."

SELI encourages mother-tongue literacy in Sierra Leone through its Heritage Writers program. We offer five writing lessons to formally-educated native speakers, and then try to move them toward authoring books in their own languages. Literacy isn't very useful if, once you achieve it, you can't find anything interesting to read. If you are not already teaching somebody to read and write, please support Heritage Writers by clicking on the DONATE button here!