From Danielle--
Items worthy of note:
There are 28,000 primary schools in Ethiopia.
And 1,500 high schools.
(In case you read over that quickly, read it again).
Ethiopia’s education policy states that students should be
literate in their mother tongue by first grade. Largely, this actually doesn’t
happen until fourth grade.
From about fifth or eighth grade up (it varies school to
school), all subjects thereafter are taught in English. So, if the students
don’t know English well by fifth grade, they will struggle through the rest of
their school careers or drop out.
Generally, teachers here are not teachers by choice. This is
how you enter the “track to become a teacher”: If you pass your tenth grade
exam, you go on to further schooling/university, etc. But if you fail your
tenth grade exam, then you go to teacher trainer college or vocational school.
Did you catch that? The teachers are those who scored the
poorest on their exams.
This week, as Peace Corps and USAID and Ethiopia’s Ministry
of Education have unloaded these facts on us, we 71 volunteers are coming to
realize we’re in quite over our heads. My heart sinks at this continuous cycle
full of Catch-22s: if a teacher is struggling in his/her own English, and is
teaching a classroom full of students who go home from school none the smarter,
and the parents see no progress after one year, two years, etc., will the
parents keep the children in school? Not in a culture/community where you are
sacrificing a ton to send your child to school; instead, your child could be
working at the house or elsewhere, to bring in revenue for the family. The
children will be kept in school if the parents see results. But how will the
parents see results if there are none to report, because the system is full of
discrepancies?
It is tempting to trace this back to step one, to how the
teachers are chosen: by failing their exams. But the luxury that exists in
America for adults to choose to be underpaid teachers does not exist here. If
you have smarts and the opportunity, you go after that high-paying profession
for the sake of your family and your own well-being.
So the question is, what can we do to help? How can we enter
the cycle part-way through and do something of worth?
Hence the Peace Corps does not emphasize taking on a
classroom for 2 years, only to leave the spot open for another volunteer
afterwards. Instead we are here to train and to transfer skills. Teach a man to
fish: help a teacher better his/her English; help a teacher to teach effectively.
We are here to begin sustainable projects, programs, clubs, etc. that are
sustainable in the absence of Americans, and will last well beyond our 27
months. We are essentially here to work ourselves out of a job, so that Peace
Corps won’t be here 30 years from now, because Ethiopia won’t need us.
Thank God. This would all be silly otherwise. We are
thankful for the vision of the Peace Corps, and thus far, we are in full
agreement and support.
So let’s get the ball rolling!
Sunday, we finally get to leave this hotel, leave the
capital. (From this point forward, we hope we can get internet here and there,
perhaps every few weeks. We shall try to keep those of you back at home updated.
But otherwise, assume we are safe and joyful and content, because it is most
likely the case).
On Father’s Day we acquire more parents and move in with our
host family in a site near Assela in the Oromia region of Ethiopia. We will
have 9 weeks of language training (8 to 5) and technical training, where we
will be equipped with what we need to enter this education system and do
something worthwhile. For those nine weeks we will stay with the same Ethiopian
family.
It’s odd to think that this is almost the same amount of
time I lived with my beloved Serukenyas in Uganda; that was a lifetime of
learning and growth and sheer blessings, and yet when we leave these host
families, our Peace Corps service still wouldn’t have technically begun. We are
not sworn in until August 17th, and are still considered PCTs (Peace
Corps Trainees), rather than PCVs (Peace Corps Volunteers) until then.
But, man, are we excited.
Dehna hunu! We leave you with a little something from the
man who came up with this idea:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOQ85OEZhWg