Mango Grove: As Delicious as it Sounds

One of our goals on the trip was to explore other schools for A to Z Literacy Movement to help. One school we visited was Mango Grove Community School. It is a group of three small buildings plus a church erected by sticks and mud to form grades K through 8. Including the headmaster (principal/teacher), there are 8 teachers who walk 30 to 45 minutes each day to educate the youth of this compound. As we toured the school, we saw several things you would expect to see in any great classroom including: teachers grading on their plan periods, anchor charts for phonics sounds, science facts, and math concepts, students playing after being let of school, and rows of children eager to learn. This well organized yet struggling school is hoping for support in any way available. If we truly want the reading epidemic to continue to spread we must also be willing to spread out and reach more schools, staffs, and students. Mango Grove is the next area waiting to be infected with literacy love from the A to Z Literacy Movement.

Walking Around the Village

Walking Around Shine

Walking Around the Classroom

Revive the Reading Culture

Expect Great Things

To Be Continued…

Importance: Us vs. Them

So as I cut pastel-colored paper into long strips this morning, Kalan taught a lesson about making connections using a book she created with her own students from Bernotas Middle School. We had the students write connections to the story on the strips of paper and the strips were then turned into a paper chain, the perfect symbol for connecting to text. As the chain hung in the back of the room, I stood there and wondered if the other teachers thought it was wasteful. Here we had perfectly good sheets of paper and I cut them to make a silly chain. The question “what’s important to us?” popped into my head. Kalan and I have been utilizing all of the teaching supplies we so carefully packed and feel the big paper for modeling has been useful, the sentence strips helpful, and the markers fun for the kids to use. But what’s important to us isn’t always what’s important to the teachers here at Shine. We love to showcase student work on the walls, but sticky tack and tape costs money, money teachers at Shine don’t have to spend. Yet, we all have the same common goal and that is to create successful and writers in these children.

Stella – A New Star At Shine

As teachers in the U.S., we are all about keeping the kids engaged and motivated. The same holds true for many teachers here in Zambia. Stella, a new teacher at Shine, understands the concept of multisensory teaching. Take for example, phonics instruction, she explains and models a new sound, the kids write it down, and then Stella plays a game with them. She gets them standing up, using their other senses to ensure the information just learned stays with the student. She bounces balls, she sings songs, she puts them into teams to find the right sound on the chalkboard. But there’s more to Stella style, she knows the power of using both Nyanja and English to help the students understand. Many of her students are new to school and speak mostly in Nyanja. Stella strikes a balance between language #1 and language #2. We have had the opportunity to observe Stella in action and have heard the laughter coming out of her classroom. The kids are lucky to have her and will continue in their reading progression thanks to her dedicated style of teaching.

More Than a School

It’s Child Health Care Week in here in Zambia. All over the country, mothers are bringing their babies to central locations in communities and compounds to receive the necessary immunizations. These women patiently stand in line for hours with babies nestled on their backs in chitenges waiting for their turn with a nurse or doctor. Shine has graciously hosted the Ministry of Health the last two days, converting their multipurpose space into a make-shift clinic for the women and children. This is just one example of Shine Reading Academy not only helping the children of the compound but helping many more. Another example of this devotion to the community is adult literacy education classes. Every day when the children knock off at 3:30, teachers shift gears a bit as adults enter three of the classrooms as they are trying to improve their English reading and speaking skills. A to Z is so very proud to partner with Shine Zambia. It is definitely more than just a school, it’s becoming a beacon of light in the community.