Categories
Mombasa

Obligatory Photos of Adorable Children

“Children” here is used loosely—many of the students are not that young!

Sunday was not technically a day off for me, as I joined 129 or 131 or so students (it was my job to count them on the bus) and a few teachers and staff on a field trip to Mtwapa.  It was “Disability Day 2009” or some such event, and our Deaf students were the first to arrive, followed by, in no particular order, the children with cerebral palsy, other children in crutches/wheelchairs, the albinos, and others whose disabilities I couldn’t superficially observe.

The day consisted of playing on the swings until the other schools all arrived, then watching cultural dances and songs (not necessarily the most engaging thing for the deaf, but there was a KSL interpreter there, which helped a little).  After that, lunch was served, then everyone got back on their busses and left.

Numerous children at my school have disabilities beyond their deafness as well, for example the boy on the left, below, is autistic:

P1020740

And the girl on the left, below, is wheelchair-bound:

P1020742

These children are just little and cute, so well worth a picture:

P1020757

And here are some kids on the swings:

P1020769 

The event overall was a hit: the kids get to go somewhere different and the lunch was curry (it was an Indian-sponsored event), and that’s pretty different from the usual cafeteria meals.

I read a lot, sitting behind the big crowd in a cooler spot, since I’m not much for the song-and-dance, and I finished The Professor and the Madman, which I enjoyed very much.  It made me want to be an Oxford elite and to dedicate my life to some obscure but important cause.

In other news, I’m sleeping a lot.  I don’t think I have mono but I’m definitely very tired, as I seem to sleepwalk through my teaching responsibilities, nap, eat, and then sleep again.  There are so many variables, what with the malaria medication, that I really have no idea what’s going on, but it’s frustrating.  I feel like 50% is my new 100%.

One of the library computers died, which makes me sad.  It was the fastest one—a 233MHz machine, and the only one with USB, and for some reason it’s moving at molasses speed now, taking ten minutes to get through the BIOS.  This means I’ll be using the 100MHz machine in its place, which has far less potential.  I’ll get more technical in a later post.

The 2008 KCPE results are also in, and they’re basically just a reshuffle of the 2007 results, with a similar average.  My school is very happy because we moved up in the rankings, and despite my feeling on the matter I didn’t interrupt to rain on the parade, but really, the change can be chalked up to statistical luck.

Well, I’ve been up for almost six whole hours, so its off to bed again for me!

Categories
Mombasa

King of the Dorks

So I’m going with WiMax for now.  WiMax is a technology that, like its name kind of implies, is like WiFi, but for much longer ranges.  There are actually a few companies in Mombasa that do this.  I went with Zuku mostly because of the price (same as the super-slow Zain unlimited Internet package) and the better business-hours Internet speed (their biggest competitor limits daytime speed to 32down/32up, which is downright offensive).  Well, today I was a bit annoyed because the installation team came with no warning and I had to skip a class to watch them do the install, which includes running cable through my home.  Anyhow, this is no small deal—it’s kind of like a DirecTV installation, where they need to get on the roof and set stuff up and run cables all over the place.  It took four people three hours to do it!  Of course, their arrival was hardly discreet—they drove right through the campus instead of parking in the lot—and the children and school staff immensely enjoyed watching the process.  My neighbor also convinced one of the installation men to fix her patio light, although I’m not sure how, because she’s deaf and he couldn’t sign.  I think her “Kenyan Momma”-ness is simply not bound by language.  So here’s the installation wagon and the kids starting to trickle in:

P1020733

And here’s my spiffy new WiMax antennae, apparently with a nice line-of-sign to the broadcast antennae at the local university.  The cable runs down into my bedroom window.

P1020734

You might have noticed only one cable for both power and data.  It uses “Power Over Ethernet” to send power from my home back up through the Ethernet cable.  Kind of cool.  I ran a speed test and I’m getting what I paid for: 256kbps download (pretty much on the nose) and miserable unadvertised upload: 20kbps.  For what I’m paying, these speeds would be unacceptable in the US, but I’m happy with it here.

Of course, the moment that I started the speed test, the power went out, and stayed out for hours, so I had to wait until just recently for it to come back on to test this whole thing.  The recommended I buy a UPS, but maybe I finally found a use for my solar panel. 🙂

In other news, I’ve been pretty busy in the library the last few days, as the line (actually mob) of children waiting to use the computers has no end.  It’s been a great opportunity to take a lot of notes about what works and what doesn’t.  It’s also completely exhausting.  I’ve been staying until around 9PM, which is when the kids go to bed.

P1020732

I also started teaching English and Math this week, 8-9:10AM every day with the woodshop students.  Friday afternoons I’m also supposed to test them in Math, which is what I missed today due to Zuku.  Teaching the older students has been interesting, but I’ll probably wait to comment until I have more time to reflect.  Probably this weekend, because I can use the Internet all I want now!  Haha!

Categories
Mombasa

Defining the problem

I’ve written previously about my many questions about what can be done here to improve the education.  One of the first questions I asked was, “When is it too late?”  More specifically, when does a child effectively lose the possibility for improvement relative to his peers?  When is he locked forever into being either the “struggling kid” or the “bright kid?”

Third grade.

Curiously enough, I’m teaching art in grades two and three, so it will be interesting to see how my computer-lab time with those students goes after school, and if my experience here lines up with the research.

Another statistic I stumbled upon had nothing to do with Kenya.  It was this: the average 17-18-year old deaf student in America reads at which grade level?

Fourth grade.

And the definition of forth grade is this: middle-of-the-pack performance expected from a third grader entering fourth grade.  Wow.  I was surprised by this.  And disappointed.  Is this the ceiling?  If America, with all it money and teachers and computers, can only pull off a forth grade average for Deaf high school seniors, what can I possibly do here with limited resources?

Well, first of all, if I’m looking for a breakthrough, I shouldn’t simply apply American methods here, because even in a best-case scenario, that has a known result that’s still lacking, apparently.

Here is an opinion on why grades 3/4 seem to be where kids’ reading levels get stuck: it’s the “learn to read/read to learn” distinction that we push on the students, even if they’re not ready.

So what does America plan on doing about its own problem?  I see two related issues and movements.

Think about this: there are 44 phonemes in the English language, which more-or-less have a predictable relationship with the 26 letters of the English alphabet.  If you know how to talk, learning to read is simply a mapping between the phonemes and the letters.  Learn that mapping, learn the patterns, and you’ve basically taken two languages (speaking and writing) and turned them into one language (English).  It’s easy to take for granted that when you see a new word, you can usually figure out how to pronounce it, and vice versa: if you hear a word, you can reasonably guess its spelling.  A Deaf individual who reads a new word can’t extrapolate that into sign language, and vice versa: they remain two different languages, regardless of whether you use ASL, KSL, or Signed English.  They all have this problem.

The recent study done in the US had pushed phonics to the educational forefront for all students, and much thought has been put into how to teach the concepts to the deaf, even if it remains conceptual, because even if a student still can’t transfer a written word into a sign, at least he can use phonics to better understand word variations (phone, phonics, phonetic, etc), and can therefore do more independent learning.  This can be done in a totally abstract way, or it can be done in conjunction with lip reading, or even with microphones that show waveforms to demonstrate which sounds make which kinds of visuals on the screen.  Anyone who has done computer recording can vouch for the fact that plosives like “b” and “p” look different from other sounds on the screen.

A more dramatic, and it seems, proven technique, is to use Cued Speech in schools.  Cued Speech is the name for a kind of alternate sign language.  It works in conjunction with lip reading, and the goal is to clarify ambiguous phonemes.  “P” and “b” look the same on the lips, but if you make a small hand gesture near your mouth, you can convey to the “listener” which you intended.  Research seems pretty conclusive: children who learn this technique can better understand phonics, and end up being better readers and writers.  I haven’t yet seen these results debated.  It’s still not widespread, possibly because ASL is finally winning the battle against “Signed English,” which was designed to improve grammar but didn’t really work, and the people who fought for ASL are probably not happy to see yet another contender.  At least Cued Speech is sufficiently different (technically it’s not a sign language at all) so it would there is less room for confusion.

So those are some options on the table.  This is a computer program that shows real examples of a lot of these ideas (but not the waveforms) but it has possibly the worst user interface I’ve seen in a long time.

So I definitely need to implement a phonics solution of some kind.  Introducing Cued Speech would probably be too political, but there are still the other options.  My gut still tells me that chat programs may be an unexplored frontier worth trying.  Imagine class communication handled entirely via text chat.  The point of the class is to teach the students be better readers and writers.  There is no interaction via sign… just writing, and vocab is introduced slowly via pictures and videos to enable the students to chat with each other and the teacher.  Phonics or no phonics, I would imagine this doing a lot of good.  This is an idea I’m still mulling.

Well, congrats, you made it though another rambling post.  Here’s your reward: a photo of a student who visited the library yesterday.. one of the first using my new DOS Educational Boot Disk!

P1020731