Saturday, October 30, 2010


Gaming the Lesson Plan

Last week, we had a volunteer with 20 years experience in working with Special Needs Children do a workshop with us in Classroom Management. At the end of the workshop, she gave us a BRAND NEW Monopoly set and told us that ANYTHING can be taught using boardgames. "Just replace the Comm Chest and Chance cards w/ your own."

Since she gave us Singapore Monopoly, we used a passage on Singapore from the Kids Encyclopedia Britannica to introduce new vocab and concepts like Economy, Terrain, Undulating, Monsoon, Thriving, Metropolis etc. The volunteers did a great job engaging the kids, age 9-11, to draw them into discussion - including bringing out a huge atlas and have kids find the equator, peninsulas, explaining monsoons, making sure the quieter ones (girls) got a chance to talk.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

R-E-S-P-E-C-T

A friend donated a P6 curriculum from a really cool US program called Pathways to Character. The program intertwines academic content, like math and English, with concepts like respect, sharing, family, tolerance. Couple of weeks ago, we used one of their lessons on "respect".

The lesson plan had us find a passage from literature where there was conflict. I took a scene from the first chapter of  Lord of the Flies. I read out the conversation between Piggy and Ralph where Ralph is crushingly patronising and rude to Piggy.

The kids made a hand puppet from a paper bag, and I put a jar of marbles on the table. Every time any of the characters said a disrepectful word the kids dropped a marble into the bag. After a couple of  minutes the bags had about 8 or 9 marbles. Noisy bag.

Then, we explained that when you're disrespectful or use disrespectful words, people hear only the disrespectful stuff  - the noise - and disregard the rest.

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

Everyday Heroes

So, the kids had a really really cool children's party organised for them by a team at PSA. The games were engaging, the kids were constantly moving, doing stuff, running and laughing - 80% of the kids were terrific, polite, well-behaved.

Three of the kids were being a real pain - esp. on the way back, on the bus. They were rude, one of them had allegedly hit another kid with an empty plastic water bottle, and another one was mouthing off loudly - most of that seemed to be aimed at me as I was sitting right in front of him trying to get him to sit the heck down in the moving bus.

I honestly thought we'd made more progress than that. So, dejected and distressed, I texted the social worker I work with on the program, questioning the effectiveness and purpose of what we were doing. And she emailed me a note I'll refer to every time I'm losing the faith. (Names of kids have been changed)

"I know they still have a long way to go, but they’re slowly moving in the right direction yeah. And honestly, sometimes the work that we do, it’s like if we can save 1 out of every 20, that’s already a success. But that’s the jaded social worker speaking