The rooster crows even if the power is out usually at 3:30 am. People don't eat their chickens, it seems. I wish they would make an exception for this one. |
September’s full moon was very early in the month so I expect
there to be another one before the end of the month. They call that a blue
moon, I think. A few days ago the moon was a slim slit in the early evening sky
like a Cheshire cat with it’s head tilted slightly to the south. Now the
crescent is filling up with moon like a large cup in the sky; in a week or so
it will be full again. Electrical power fails almost every night for a couple
hours. Two days ago a thunderstorm took it out until sometime after school
started the next day. We have power in
the school but we don’t usually use it so it doesn’t affect us much if it goes
out.
I love it when power fails on a clear moonless night. The stars
are phenomenal. The milky way is clear
and I think I could see Gemini, Taurus and Draco all lined up. I wish I had the star mapper that I used to
have on my old laptop so I could be sure.
The African sky is amazing, but it's been 50 years since i took the class. Of cou
cannot see the north star. If it’s not
under the horizon, the light from Bekwai obscures the north.
Bicycles
It works fine now. |
Last week I bought a bicycle.
One of the teachers took me to Kumasi this morning (Saturday) and we picked
out a nice looking used trail bike. I
bought it without riding it. I would
never have done that at home. But it
looked solid. When I got it home I rode
and the shifters didn’t seem to work. I should have stopped and checked them,
but I didn’t need to shift so I rode along.
It felt so good to be riding again.
We’ll I didn’t go far and the pedal slipped like it wasn’t
connected. So I stopped and found that
one of the idler wheels in the rear shifter had fallen out and though I could
find the axle bolt, I could not find the wheel. So I walked it home, the proud
owner of a disabled used bicycle. That very nigh, I had not quite finished this
writing about this to a friend and my neighbor, James came to my door with a
man who fixes bicycles! He looked at it
and said he would come by in the morning and fix it. Being an Adventist he prefers to work on
Sunday. When I got back from church my bike was together, working and
oiled. I rode it every day except one rainy morning and it feels great! Today i even rode to Bekwai, 5km and 3 hills away.
Teaching and Learning
I taught Beatrice, my neighbor's sister, to ride. The first time, she stayed up with almost no help. |
I had and interesting science class last week. The school held an early morning assembly and
showed the students a video on malaria. My class was partly superseded by the
assembly, but when we went to the Form 1 room, it was locked–both doors. No one had a key that would work. I tried to have the student do the study out
doors, but they were not doing it very well and there are only about half
enough books to go around. So I gathered
some of them at one end of the building and said if they would teach me a Twi
song, I would teach them and American song.
So we did that and some of them seemed to enjoy it.
Finally I suggested to the head master that I could unscrew
the hasp with my swiss army knife. He said do it. two screws came out fine, but two were
stripped and wouldn’t back out. The head master whacked them out with one of
the student’s cutlasses (machete) and we got in for the last 10 minutes of my
period. The HM suggested that we use the
sports period for science, but my pupils had already observed that the social
studies teacher Madam Frema wasn’t there so we used her period and my kids got
their sports period after all.
Madam Frema is teaching Social Studies to my Form 1 students. |
Teaching here is interesting.
I’m never sure they understand my American English and a few of them
don’t read at all. They copy the words
from my chalkboard, but words like observation, and experimentation, and
factorization are not in their active vocabularies. Few know their multiplication tables and long
division seems to be a new topic to everyone.
I teach two extra early morning periods where I try to drill the basics in
mathematic. But it’s hard to see improvement yet. Still it is only the third week and it is
their first year in Junior High School.
Kwame |
I enjoy my neighbors, Esther and James, and visiting Kwame, a
friend about my age, who is teaching me Twi slowly enough so that I can
understand what he says. He’s been
around. He worked as an clerk in the
docks at Tema and learned to speak good English from the sailors and merchants
he worked with there. I get with him
almost every evening for practice and some new words. Friday is Founder’s Day in Ghana, so I taught
Beatrice, my neighbor’s young sister how to ride the bicycle and then practiced
with Kwame. Now it’s time to finish my
lesson plans for next week. Tests in both Math and Science. We'll see how we're doing.
Jim, I am finally catching up on your blog!! Having a second child threw me for a loop and I was recently called as Relief Society president AND Richard just started a new job. But the upheaval is finally starting to abate and we are getting down to the serious work of living...as are you. I admire you so much for the work you are doing there. YOu seem to embrace each new challenge and thrive in it. I can't wait to hear more. I bet your students will become dreadfully attached to you by the time you are finished there...or maybe you to them. :)
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