Monday, May 12, 2014

5 School Days Later

Well the past five days have been full of new experiences and lots of learning. Every morning we have eaten breakfast with the students and hung out in the gym until school starts. The students love to play with our hair and take pictures with our cameras. I have found touch is very important to the Yup'ik children of Quinhagak. At first it was surprising, but the three of us quickly became accustomed to having the kids up in our faces every morning. As we would find out later in the week hands on, tactile, and kinesthetic activities were preferred by the elementary students. In a way the students were learning about us through touch; we were something new and they were curious. It is not everyday in Quinhagak that a 5'10" red head female with very fair skin walks into the school. I can't tell you how many times I was told I was tall. The children would look up at me in awe as I towered over them. My height was always a way to start a conversation among the kids and adults.

Basketball, mancala, and hanging out on the bleachers are the main activities after breakfast. Nick even played basketball while sipping his required morning coffee (he needed his coffee no matter what and basketball wouldn't even get in the way of that). Our mornings in the gym were a bonding time with students and aided in our time spent in the classroom.

The highlights of the week spent in the school were the times we spent teaching and observing. We helped teach a 1st grade math lesson and P.E. lesson. I even taught a small special ed class while the teacher stepped out for a bit. During this time the principal even came in. This short special ed experience was very rewarding and pushed me outside my comfort zone. I even played middle school vocabulary bingo and surprisingly won. I forfeited my winning so the game could continue until a student won. I didn't need a soda, which I found out was a favorite reward among the students, that and candy of course. We also observed lessons taught in Yup'ik in the kindergarten and 1st grade classrooms and in the upper elementary grades Yup'ik immersion lessons. I also observed middle and high school classrooms, which was just as rewarding and learned that I liked it just as much as the elementary grades.

My favorite teaching experience of the week was teaching the P.E. lesson to the 1st grade class, mostly because we got to use the giant parachute. Just before coming to Quinhagak we had just learned, from our UAF P.E. class, how to use the parachute to teach elementary students in P.E. We played shark attack, but looking back now it would have been a good idea to call it seal attack. Also played was a game called the washing machine and of course we did the one where you make a tent with the parachute. The three of us had just as much fun a the kids.


Also during the week the three of us had the pleasure of being invited to dinner at the two young and newest teachers' house during the week. We made and brought a salad, which was appreciated. It was nice to get to know the staff of the school better through a social gathering. Other social activities we took part in were walks around the village, being invited to another school staff member's house to get a none teacher housing perspective of what villages houses were like, visiting the local store, attending basketball games, and being part of a school wide assembly. One thing you learn through these experiences about a village school is that the school and community are closely linked. Our time in Quinhagak has been a special educational experience and not to mention extremely fun.




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