Saturday, September 24, 2011

Education?



I have been volunteering with a group called Equal Education here in Cape Town.  They are advocating for improvements in the education system in South Africa.  During the Apartheid era, education of Blacks was called Bantu education and was specifically designed as a separate and unequal system (interesting that this system was implemented just as the similar system in the US was being deconstructed). I think Bantu Education is pretty well summed up with this quote from Hendrik Verwoerd (The Minister of Native Affairs in 1953 when the policy too affect):
"There is no place for [the Bantu] in the European community above the level of certain forms of labour ... What is the use of teaching the Bantu child mathematics when it cannot use it in practice? That is quite absurd. Education must train people in accordance with their opportunities in life, according to the sphere in which they live."

Obviously, this system is hard to undue.  After 4 decades of inferior education, the damage cannot be undone overnight.  Still most of the current teachers in Black schools, (although they are not officially segregated anymore, they are largely segregated by where people live), were educated in the Bantu education system and are not really qualified to teach the new education curriculum.  The schools are overcrowded, many lack proper sanitation facilities, and 92% of South African public schools do NOT have libraries!  Equal Education is an advocacy group that "advocates for quality and equality in the South African education system and engages in evidence-based activism for improving the nation's schools." You can read more about them here: http://www.equaleducation.org.za/what_is_EE


One of their many projects is to work with schools to create libraries.  Most of the schools have a space called a library, but they don't have books, librarians, computers, etc.  So Equal Education collects books and donations and has already opened about 14 libraries.  I have volunteered with them a few Saturdays in the past few weeks to sort, cover (the books are mostly paperback so they are covered in clear contact paper to increase their lifetime), and catalog books.  Today was the opening of a library in Khayelitsha (the largest Township in Cape Town - 1 Million people!)  It is at Matthew Goniwe Memorial High School.  The opening was quite moving.  The program started with a learner performing a poem about the principal and her work to improve the school.



Then the principal spoke about how the school had gone from being in the news for the wrong reasons (two separate stabbings of students in 2005 and 2006) and now was classified as the best high school in Khayleitsha!  She spoke about her efforts to create a book club of teachers and students (with the help of Equal Education and a local bookstore).  She was told to select 15 students, but had 25 who were interested and qualified after visiting only 5 classes in the school and had managed to get all of them included.  And how she and all the learners were so excited about the library.

Next 4 learners performed a scene from a book they had read and a small group sang some beautiful songs (not the best quality video recordings, sorry).

And then the ribbon was cut and the library officially opened.  The learners quickly filled the room and went right to the books.  They began taking them off the shelves, reading them, and sharing lines with each other.  It was clear that the library will be well used and a much needed resource in the school.
Row of outhouses
After leaving, I drove around the township a little bit.  Rows of shacks, poorly maintained roads, lines of outhouses, crisscrossing electricity wires (as there are many illegal electricity connections), and trash abound. I can only begin to imagine all of the struggles that students from this environment face everyday!  But I hope that having a library, and the ability to take books home, will at least make a small improvement in their lives.

A slideshow with some other photos from the day:

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Trainings, Wine Tasting, Visitors, oh MY!

Sunset over Table Mountain
It has been a busy few weeks!  The first weekend in September there was a festival called Franschhoek Uncorked in the winelands (Franschhoek is the name of one of the wine routes near Cape Town).  Marina, a previous South to South epidemiologist who now works for a PEPFAR funded project in Pretoria, invited me to join her and two of her friends for the festival.  We hired a driver (so no one had to drive home after a whole day of wine tasting) and toured 5 different wine estates.  Each estate had a different theme for the weekend, with music, food, and of course wine tasting.  We had a lot of fun.
Here we are with the Champagne (well they can't actually call it that, since it's not made in France) that Obama had at his inauguration!
With the "mariachi band" at one of the wineries which was having a Spanish themed day. (Of course none of these men were actually latin and my rusty Spanish was better than theirs but it they sang and played well.....) 
The first week in September I helped conduct two trainings.  The first part of the week I was at a training at Tygerberg Hospital.  South to South conducts these trainings once a month.  Doctors (and a few nurses) come from all over South Africa to spend 5 days learning about pediatric HIV.  They purposely keep the training groups small (no more than 12) to encourage participation from all group members.  Many of the trainings are taught by South to South staff and then other specialists are brought in from Tygerberg Hospital to contribute as well.  In addition, the participants get to shadow in the children's HIV clinic at Tygerberg and spend time on the pediatric ward at Brooklyn Chest Hospital (where children with complicated tuberculosis infections are admitted).  Since it was my first training, I spent a lot of the time observing and taught one lecture on the HIV medications. It was nice to have such a participatory group, makes teaching so much more interesting!  On Thursday and Friday, South to South was also conducting another training for one of our collaborating agencies so I went to help with that.  We had 35 doctors, nurses, pharmacists, and pharmacy assistants at the two day basic pediatric HIV training.  We were able to split them in two groups, and I got to work with the nurses.  We had many lively discussions and though it was brief, I think they were able to get comfortable with the basics.
Along Chapman's Peak Drive
Most excitingly my first visitors in my new apartment arrived!  My first visitor in Cape Town was actually my college roommate, Kerry.  She was traveling around South Africa and visited Cape Town shortly after I arrived.  We spent two days talking and catching up, as we had not seen each other in a few years.  Unbelievably, we did not take any pictures together!  Crazy, but I think we were so busy talking that it never occurred to us.  Last week my brother, Aaron, and his girlfriend, Jen, came to visit and Aaron made sure that there was plenty of photo documentation!  He took more than 1,000 pictures in 5 days!!!  It was great to see them and to get to show them Cape Town.  We went to Cape of Good Hope (the most Southwesterly tip of Africa), drove Chapman's Peak (beautiful costal views), took the Cable Car up Table Mountain, and ate lots of good food.  They got to go wine tasting and see Robben Island while I was at work.  We also discovered some new things, most importantly a Saturday market at The Old Biscuit Mill in Woodstock (a neighborhood in Cape Town) which sells amazing prepared foods, cheeses, homemade wines, paella, etc, etc.  I even went back this weekend and think I will make it a Saturday morning tradition of sorts ;)

Me and Jen on the beach at Camps Bay for sunset!
Here is a slideshow of some of the best photos taken by Aaron (and a few by me and Jen) - hard to pic out of a 1000, but don't worry there are less than 60....