This morning we drive to
Karatu to visit the Njiapanda Primary School.
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School Building |
Agnes, the head
teacher, greets us and invites us to sit in the desks of an empty classroom
while she shares information about the school. Agnes is an impressive woman who
represents the school with confidence and perceptive understanding.
The school buildings
have corrugated metal roofs and stuccoed walls; glass paned windows are opened
to the outdoors. Wooden desks and benches with black metal legs sit in rows on
a painted concrete floor. The green chalkboard is decorated in colored chalk
designs.
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Agnes |
|
A Lesson For Us All |
|
School Grounds |
We sign the ruled pages
in the cardboard covered visitor’s book.
Njiapanda was
established in 1986 and has 562 students attending today. It’s a public school
and anyone is free to enroll. Students begin in kindergarten at age 5 or 6;
first graders are 7 years old. There are two male teachers and 14 women. Seven
teachers live on site.
Girls and boys attend
school together. They come on foot, walking one to five kilometers. They arrive
between 7:15 and 8AM. School’s out at 4:30PM.
School’s in session
from January to June. They take one week off in March, with no school in
June. Another session runs from the end of June to December. They take one week
off in September, with no school in December.
Classes in math,
science, history, civics, home crafts, English, sports and geography
are taught in Swahili. K-2
teachers teach all subjects. From third grade up teachers specialize and move
from room to room.
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The Library |
|
Books Are in English |
Students are tested in
the fourth grade. They must pass to go on to the fifth grade; if they fail they
stay in the fourth grade, (60% pass).
In the 7th
grade students take the national exam. They must pass in order to continue on.
A smart child may pass the exam but if his parents can’t afford to pay he or she can’t continue.
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Seeing Themselves On Camera Screen |
Four years in secondary
school comes next, then another exam leading the way to two years in high
school. If you get an A grade you go to University; with a B grade you go to
college with a C grade you go to vocational school.
They rent out the
dining hall on weekends to villagers for parties and gatherings and raise a
garden and sell the produce to support the school. The solar green house, if working
properly, recirculates water and protects the garden from Billy goats.
OAT’s Grand Circle
foundation has identified several projects for school improvement:
Solar greenhouse
Water containment
Textbooks
Solar lights for dining
room
Laptop
Cooking pots and
facilities for cooking without smoke
The school supplies we brought
will be used as rewards for students who are doing well.
Agnes sees many people
come through her school but for us she is the singular and symbolic
representative for her school and a formidable public
face for the school community.
|
Second Grade Classroom of 54 Students |
Grade 6 classroom has
hard packed dirt floor and about 49 students
They sing “If You’re Happy And You Know It” for us and of course, we join in.
We are asked to introduce ourselves and convey where we’re from and what we do, (not so simple to explain when you're a "financial planner"), and how far we traveled to get here.
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Lunch Preparations |
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Cafeteria |
|
School Cook |
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Not To Be Forgotten |
"Africa doesn't export much, but if they could somehow export appreciation for education, they would fill a need in most of the schools in the developed world." From Safari Jema written by Teresa O'Kane
Paulu greets us at the
nearby brick factory where 50 families work in a quarry making bricks to help
finance their children’s education. He’s from the Iraqw Tribe. Pronounce the
last syllable “keh” like you’re going to vomit, he tells us.
|
Meeting Paulu |
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The Quarry |
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The Mold |
The bricks are made by
hand, no machines involved. In the red clay quarry the earth is dug and mixed
with water to form the rectangular blocks. Once formed, the bricks are carried
out of the pit along a narrow path on the head of a worker. We watched a woman
pile four or five bricks on her head, lift one in each hand and trudge time and
again up the path.
|
These Bricks Are HEAVY |
Thanks to a conversation with Sandra, an OAT representative living in Africa, I will be able to send my new friend some leather tipped breathable gloves that just might make her work a little easier. (I’m including some hand cream!)
The bricks are fired in a kiln for three days
with the vents open. Then the vents are sealed and the bricks are fired for
seven more days. When they come out of the kiln any excess clay is chipped away
to make them smooth. Seven bricks = one US dollar.
|
The Kiln |
It’s a ten-minute walk
to Paulu’s two-room, thatched roofed, red brick house. We’re invited to visit
and meet his family. One room is a large sitting area; the second room is the
kitchen.
|
Richard and Friend |
Paulu is first a mason,
then a village guide. He is also the assistant chief in his tribe.
His family has two
houses, a modern house and a traditional one. They live in the brick home in
the hot season.
They have babies “chop
chop” one after another before the men lose their “power”.
Good leaders have many
children, 6-15. A man isn’t considered for leadership if he has merely one or
two children.
Women do all the
cooking; men do the heavy labor. If a man goes into the kitchen he is
considered lazy. The women have prepared mucuna, a dish of beans and corn to
share with us.
|
Marilyn and Richard |
We are entertained with
music and dancing. Paulu uses a gourd fiddle with a handmade bow of bent wood.
His children chime in with drums and chanting. We’re all enfolded in brightly
colored headdresses and wraps and invited to join in.
|
Nancy and Becky |
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Pauline and Pauline |