Kenyans can find a solution to anything. If the government makes you chop down a stand of trees … you make desks and tables out of the best of the lumber and benches out of the rest. Today while checking on the use of large flash cards we have provided last year, they showed us the set of “student sized” alphabet cards they had been inspired to make themselves … from cardboard boxes. When the youngest students wanted dolls to play with, the teachers found a local tailor with remnants and they hand-sewed the dolls. The examples are endless.
Perhaps this willingness to make-it-yourself is why they greatly appreciate the handmade bags we give the teachers each year. Susan Baily from FUMC has never been to Kenya but seems to know exactly what to make. This year it was a beautiful array of brightly colored bags we filled with teaching supplies. There was one uniform response when we passed them out today … “It is PERFECT for church! It will hold my Bible. I will be asked by everyone where it came from!” Perhaps more of us should be carrying our Bibles because later in the day we gifted a bag to Delfina who oversees the porridge program … and yes, “It will be PERFECT for church!” THANK YOU, SUSAN!
Just as the government insisted on cutting down the trees as a “safety hazard”, the inspectors have given the school two weeks to close its traditional kitchen. Many of you know we built a kitchen for the school a few years ago with a fuel-efficient wood-burning stove. The old kitchen is still used to make the daily tea and more recently, lunches for the Eighth-Grade students preparing for their exams. There is room in the new kitchen for additional cookers. Let us know if you’d like to help.
A final word about hammers in Kenya. Here, you make use of what you have. This week we observed an urgent need for hooks for the teachers and students to hang their work-bags and coats. Off we went into the big-city of Meru and found a local hardware where we bought out their supply of hooks (68 of them). Each hook was neatly packed with 2 screws for installing the hook. Do I need to go any further? Did you know you could use a hammer on screws? YOU CAN! This proves the point, if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
Finding a way is not always what you expected, but at times you find it works.
Sunday, March 8, 2020
KENYA 2020: What do you remember about school?
Most of us have memories of primary school that still stick with us years later. We helped create a number of them today.
Class photos: We finished the class group photos for grades 5-8 today. It was fun to watch the boys tuck in their shirts, the girl’s bush off their skirts, and the positioning to be next to your best friend. This year we made the process more of a joint effort with lots of “test shots” followed by repositioning, and shouts of “stand up straighter” from classmates who were vested in the photo being as perfect as possible. The number of photos taken tripled but so did the fun.
The Cafeteria Cook: There is no cafeteria at Gichunge, but there is Mercy who gets to school at 6:00 AM to start the fire that will cook the porridge and heat the tea for the teachers. She also serves the porridge and then washes the cups, pots and pans … and NEVER stops smiling. Each visit we bring her new aprons. It is small thank you for a huge task.
Lunch Time: Today we shared the American sack lunches we had made. The bags of “crisps” (potato chips) were a big hit. We followed Margaret’s advice and got the weirdest flavors we could find: Tangy Tomato, Onion & Lime, Hot & Cheezie, Chili & Lemon, and Carmel flavored. In the Kenyan tradition, after the sacks were passed out, a student led the class in saving a prayer before the bags were torn open.
The Place You Hung Out: A couple of weeks ago the Education Department made the school cut down about 30 trees that sheltered the students as they ate their porridge. The lumber was milled onsite and used to make new desks. The end cuts did not go to waste but were made into long benches the students STILL use to eat their porridge or gather with friends. What was a good place is now seen as being even better.
THAT Teacher: All of had one. He or she seemed to create magic in the classroom. Margaret and Jeff ran into one in the pre-primary classroom where they were finishing up the height and weight measurements. This is the same classroom that has all the wonderful “talking walls.” Each student came forward to be measured and then quietly returned to their seat. They don’t come any sweeter.
Buddies: Printed photos are rare in Kenya, but everyone seems to know what a selfie is … and wants to be in one! Margaret and Kathy took at crack at multiple selfies today. In the process we made a lot of friends, but not sure our selfie skills improved.
Can’t wait to make more memories tomorrow.
Class photos: We finished the class group photos for grades 5-8 today. It was fun to watch the boys tuck in their shirts, the girl’s bush off their skirts, and the positioning to be next to your best friend. This year we made the process more of a joint effort with lots of “test shots” followed by repositioning, and shouts of “stand up straighter” from classmates who were vested in the photo being as perfect as possible. The number of photos taken tripled but so did the fun.
The Cafeteria Cook: There is no cafeteria at Gichunge, but there is Mercy who gets to school at 6:00 AM to start the fire that will cook the porridge and heat the tea for the teachers. She also serves the porridge and then washes the cups, pots and pans … and NEVER stops smiling. Each visit we bring her new aprons. It is small thank you for a huge task.
Lunch Time: Today we shared the American sack lunches we had made. The bags of “crisps” (potato chips) were a big hit. We followed Margaret’s advice and got the weirdest flavors we could find: Tangy Tomato, Onion & Lime, Hot & Cheezie, Chili & Lemon, and Carmel flavored. In the Kenyan tradition, after the sacks were passed out, a student led the class in saving a prayer before the bags were torn open.
The Place You Hung Out: A couple of weeks ago the Education Department made the school cut down about 30 trees that sheltered the students as they ate their porridge. The lumber was milled onsite and used to make new desks. The end cuts did not go to waste but were made into long benches the students STILL use to eat their porridge or gather with friends. What was a good place is now seen as being even better.
THAT Teacher: All of had one. He or she seemed to create magic in the classroom. Margaret and Jeff ran into one in the pre-primary classroom where they were finishing up the height and weight measurements. This is the same classroom that has all the wonderful “talking walls.” Each student came forward to be measured and then quietly returned to their seat. They don’t come any sweeter.
Buddies: Printed photos are rare in Kenya, but everyone seems to know what a selfie is … and wants to be in one! Margaret and Kathy took at crack at multiple selfies today. In the process we made a lot of friends, but not sure our selfie skills improved.
Can’t wait to make more memories tomorrow.
-- Kathy Macdonald
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A class photo; Mercy the cook; Lunch time, The best benches at school; The
magical classroom; Selfies! |
Thursday, March 5, 2020
KENYA 2020: How many students does it take to make a P&J sandwich?
Half
the team began the day at Gichunge Primary where our arrival was marked with
multiple verses of “If you’re happy and you know it …” sung by 200+ students at
their morning assembly. That will get your blood flowing!
Speaking
of blood, Jeff and Margaret Punch spent the day at BLISS Secondary performing
rabbit dissections for each of the Form 4 (12th grade) science
classes. Sounds grim but it is a critical part of their national
exam. Having two doctors explain each step gives these students an
amazing experience. Margaret was a bit disappointed that all three
rabbits were male (apparently this isn’t that easy to tell from the outside) …
there was no opportunity to show the female anatomy.
Meanwhile
back at the primary, we witnessed the morning serving of porridge. This
is a program First Methodist has supported for multiple years. Lots of
happy faces and only one cup spilled in a trip-and-fall. Tears were dried
and her cup refilled.
The
pressure on the Eighth Graders to do well has them beginning their studies at
7:00 AM just as the sun comes up. With no electricity, the rooms are
dark. Today. Greg demonstrated “desk top” solar lanterns for each of the
Eight Grade desks. A welcome addition.
Although
we provide porridge each day for the primary students, many of them don’t have
a lunch. Their families survive on money earned as day laborers.
When day labor is not found, the family goes without food. As a small
token, the team provides a typical American sack lunch to each Seventh and
Eighth Grader … and of course this includes not one, but TWO P & J
sandwiches. We managed to draft the U of M Engineering students into helping us
make the sandwiches and pack the sacks.
-- Kathy Macdonald
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Morning Assembly; A rabbit giving its life for science; Solar lanterns for the classroom; Porridge time!; Engineering students doing a good deed at the end of a long day. |
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
KENYA 2020: Can Your Walls Talk?
Report from Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Almost
late to Gichunge Primary this morning … got caught in the unusual traffic jam
shown below. Our work at the primary this year consists of ongoing
projects and fresh initiatives. One of the ongoing efforts is
to track the impact of the porridge program we have supported for years.
This time Margaret and Jeff Punch took the lead weighing each student and
recording their height. The Eighth Grade went like clockwork.
Things got a bit unruly with 33 Third Graders whose English skills are still
evolving. Not sure this was covered when they went through Med
School. They took at break after Third Grade and answered health related
questions from Eighth Graders. It is pretty rare for any of the students
to have access to a doctor, much less two.
Kathy
took on the task of taking class photos, another one of our ongoing
efforts. For most of the students, these are the ONLY photos they have of
themselves. She did not fare much better than the Punchs did with the
Third Graders when she began with the pre-primary group. This age group
is just being introduced to English and Swahili … and have NO experience with
facing the camera much less lining up. It was a wonderful test of wills
with everyone trying really hard to please. Below is the best of over 50
shots. The out-takes are wonderful with heads looking in the wrong
way, someone deciding it was all too much and laying down, the class sign held
directly in front of the face, and the poor teacher pulling one student or
another back into position. It was fabulous and worth it.
A
fresh initiative this year comes from a teacher request for help with “talking
walls.” In Kenya, Talking Walls are posters that can “talk to the
students” when the teacher is not there. Brilliant! Last fall we
experimented by leaving several yards of fabric used to line curtains. It
was heavy enough to install grommets on one side so they could easily be hung
or removed. The result has been an amazing set of teacher created
masterpieces that are replacing the torn and damaged posters they had.
Later this week, the teachers will begin phase 2 with the 50 yards we brought
this trip.
-- Kathy Macdonald
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A Kenyan Traffic Jam; The “Perfect” Photo; A New Talking Wall |
KENYA 2020: What's Blue & Gold and in Kenya?
Report from Monday March 2, 2020
The team made it safely to the Thiiri Center in Meru,
Kenya where we joined several other University of Michigan teams working in the
area. There is a team from the Dental School with 18 students. The
Pharmacy School team has 7 students and the Engineering School has 7. It
almost disloyal not to be decked out in Gold and Blue. Think of this as
sort of a mini-Ann Arbor doing good on the far side of the world.
Our team continues to focus on supporting education at
the BLISS Secondary School and the Gichunge Primary. Today we worked at
both locations. The morning was spent at the High School where Greg
Hulbert addressed the student body. He compared sharing the gift of knowledge
with a child’s rubber duckie. Both bring joy and uplift both the giver
and the receiver. He then presented Moses, the School Principal
with a rubber duckie. The 600+ students broke out in laughter bringing
home his point.
The afternoon was spent at Gichunge Primary.
There were lots of high-fives with the kids and hugs with the staff. Their Eighth-Grade class had the highest exam scores for any non-boarding
primary in the entire Meru County on their November end-of-year exams.
This is an amazing achievement for a school that still only has
electricity in one small administrative building, no consistent water supply
and kids from families that have even less. Can’t wait to share all the
stories that will come from our work with them this week.
- Kathy Macdonald
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Gichunge students counting/sorting bottle lids; Greg inside the new BLISS Hall; Moses, Greg & the rubber duckie |
Saturday, June 29, 2019
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