Saturday, December 17, 2011

The King Cobra's Summer - Pratham Books Storytelling at AIKYA

Eight kids at AIKYA were eager to listen to the adventures of Kaala, the King Cobra. Storyteller Anitha told the story. As the kids were very young, a recollection of facts was helpful.

So, the kids repeated after the storyteller:

  • The King Cobra is 15 feet long
  • King Cobra does not have ears and eyelids.
  • King Cobra uses smell and its tongue to catch food.
  • The King Cobra does not eat food daily.
  • The King Cobra hatches from eggs.
And so on.... The kids had a look at the colorful picture book. They also created a forest  using crayons and sketch pens. The kids drew a tree, river, a King Cobra, and birds. Finally, they mimicked a snake dance pose. It would have been nice to have a real snake charmer around. Alas, you don't find one in streets these days.


Kids drawing a forest with King Cobra

Having a look at the picture book

Trying a King Cobra pose

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

துரு துரு - சிறுகதை


சுட்டி சுரேஷ் தன் பாடப்  புத்தகங்களை வைக்க ஒரு நீல வண்ணம் பூசிய இரும்பு மேசை வாங்கினான். வாங்கிய மேசையை வீட்டினுள் வைக்காமல், தோட்டத்தில் போட்டுவிட்டு சுற்றுலா சென்றுவிட்டான். திடீரென்று காற்றும் மழையும் அடித்தது. இரண்டு நாள் கழித்து சுட்டி சுரேஷ் வீடு திரும்பினான். என்ன ஆச்சர்யம். அவன் வாங்கிய மேசை சிவப்பும் மஞ்சள் நிறமாக மாறியிருந்தது. கிட்ட வந்த பார்த்த போது தன் மேசை துரு பிடித்ததை தெரிந்து கொண்டான்.


வண்ணம் பலவிதம் - சிறுகதை

கர்ம யோகி கண்ணன் வீடு கட்டி முடித்தான். புதிய வீட்டில் எந்த அறைக்கு எந்த வண்ணம் பூசலாம் என்று தன் குடும்பத்தில் இருப்பவர்களிடம்  கேட்டான். "சமையல் அறைக்கு பிஸ்தா பச்சை வண்ணம் பூசலாம்," என்றாள் மனைவி மங்களம்.  "படுக்கை அறைக்கு பன்னீர் ரோஜா வண்ணம் பூசலாம்," என்றான் மகன் மாரி.  "பூஜை அறைக்கு சாமந்தி  பூ மஞ்சள் வண்ணம் பூச வேண்டும்," என்றாள் மகள் மஞ்சுளா.

"ஆனால் வரவேற்ப்பு அறையில் எல்லா வண்ணமும்  பூச  போகிறோம்," என்றான் கர்ம யோகி கண்ணன். அப்பா நகைச்சுவையாக பேசுகிறார் என்று எல்லோரும் சிரித்தார்கள். " சிரிக்காதீர்கள். எல்லா வண்ணமும் சேர்த்தால் வெள்ளை நிறம் கிடைக்கும்வரவேற்ப்பு அறையில் பனி வெள்ளை நிறம் அடிக்க போகிறோம்புரிந்ததா?" என்றான் கண்ணன்.


Baby's Day Out - Short Story

Arun’s mother was pregnant. Arun wanted a younger brother and his mom wanted a daughter. On the day of delivery, Arun’s mom gave birth to twins – a boy and a girl! And the twins were looking similar. The doctor told them that they were monozygotic twins. Both Arun and his mom were happy now.  

What Meat You Had? - Short Story

A teacher was asking the students in her class to tell the different types of non-vegetarian food they have eaten.
One boy said, “Chicken.”
Another girl said, “Mutton.”
Another boy said, “Dog meat, when I went to China for a picnic with my father.”
Everyone in the class was amused and started asking the boy about dog meat!
Chicken









                        Mutton

Dog Curry


Which Vegetable is Green? - Short Story

Vivek, Kani, and James were playing a game about vegetables.
Vivek told, “Tell the name of a vegetable that is Green in color.”
Kani said, “Drum Stick.”
James said, “Ladies Finger.”
Vivek said, “Mango.”
Kani objected saying, “Mango is an orange color fruit and not a vegetable.”
Vivek laughed and said, “Ha ha, but I was talking about the Mango that is not ripe. It is green. “

Mango

Drumstick

Ladies Finger


Saturday, September 24, 2011

Pratham Books Story Telling on 24th at Chennai

Pratham Books Banner
The storytelling session went on well at the AIKYA centre in Chennai. The audience of 20 people included special children, parents, and special educators. All the stories were narrated in Tamil and Tanglish! Pratham Books' Champion Anitha started the session with a brief about Girl Child Day. Next she told the story "Subbu, the Signal." At the end of the story, the children recollected the traffic lights of green, orange, and red and what each color meant.

The next story was "Ting Tong." The boy in the story tries to sleep but is disturbed by various noises. At the end of the story, the children were asked about the various noises that disturbed their sleep. One boy was quick to mention "generator noise"...rrrrrrrrrrr..... Another boy barked like a dog. Ting Tong story was a favorite of parents too. Parents felt that the story was simple and children could easily understand it.

Story Teller Anitha with the audience
 The next story was "En Udal Pesuvathai Kelungal"( Hear my body speak). At the end of the story, one of the boys told a lot of noises like coughing, sneezing, snoring, and clicking fingers etc that was not part of the original version :)

A boy answering questions after 'Subbu the Signal' story


After the warm up with the three short stories, everyone was geared up to hear the "Ulta Pulta Girl" story. Everyone laughed when they heard that the Ulta Pulta girl could not bear the stink of dog poo.

The children were glued to their seats and listened to the stories keenly. Parents were eager to know where they could purchase Pratham books in Chennai. On the whole, it was a successful event. Three cheers to Pratham Books and all the participants.


Video: Excerpts from the Storytelling session:

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

External Evaluation of Eureka SuperKidz initiative in Villages

Eureka SuperKidz employs innovative teaching methods to improve the learning skills of school kids in village  schools from standard 1-8. A three hour class is conducted after school to improve the Math, English, and Tamil skills. The program started in 2008 and has now expanded to over 500 villages in Tamilnadu. The target is to reach kids in 1000 villages.

The external evaluation team conducted the research with students who attend Eureka Superkidz program and students from similar social background who attend only government schools. The latter group was named the Control Group. It was found that the "Accelerated Learning" offered by Eureka centres far exceeded the "Natural Progress" in government schools.  The students who attend Eureka Superkidz program learnt skills at the right age and class. But the kids in the Control Group lagged behind by 3 to 4 years in learning a new skill from the time it was introduced in a particular standard at school.

Read the complete report here.






Monday, July 25, 2011

Art Therapy Certificate Course - Aug to Sep 2011

Learning Outcome: Participants will be able to

·      Identify the continuum of trauma events and experiences

·      Utilize art in the trauma narrative process

·      Describe the unique qualities of art in the treatment of   trauma

·      Identify the application of trauma art therapy in various setting


Dates: It is mandatory to attend all classes 3rd Aug, 2011 to 1st Sept 2011

3,4 (Wed, Thurs) - Using various art techniques

10,11(Wed, Thurs) - Introduction to art therapy

17,18 (Wed, Thurs) - Art therapy in Trauma

24,25 (Wed, Thurs) - Art therapy in Trauma  

31 Aug, 1st Sept (Wed, Thurs) - (Art therapy in Trauma )

Participants are free to submit their project in their own time. Students will complete 60 hours class work and 20 hours of practical work including preparation and writing up the project, in all the students will complete a minimum of 80 hours during this month.

Course fee and for who: Rs 15,000/ only. This course is open to all mental health and healthcare professionals and students; no previous experience with art therapy is required.

For Registration contact telephone – 42080810/ 9884100135/ 9884700164
--
www.centerforcounselling.blogspot.com/2008/02/our-work.html

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Eureka SuperKidz - Bridging the Gap Between City and Village Kids

Kids in villages/ poor families lag way behind their city counterparts. The reasons for this knowledge and skills gap are many. Lack of good schools, good teachers, after-school training at home are few of the prominent reasons. And poor homes do not have toys, games, and books that encourage play-way method of learning.


So, Eureka conducts after-school program for the village kids for 2 or 3 hours. The program is named Eureka SuperKidz. Eureka is developing content for these classes. The content is simple and has lot of examples, experiments, worksheets, illustrations and is written in a conversational tone.

Eureka is looking for volunteers to write content for Maths, Science, English, Tamil or any other subject of your choice. You can write the content in English. Translators will convert the content into Tamil or Hindi based on regional needs.


A Booklet about Newton's Law of Motion

A conversation in the lesson

An experiment in the lesson


People who are interested in writing content can contact any of the following AID India staff:

Ms. Radha - radhaa@gmail.com

Ms. Mangayarkarasi Angamuthu - mangai.angamuthu@gmail.com

Mr. Selvanganapathy - aid.selva@gmail.com, +91-9790951652

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Story Telling Workshop by Jeeva Raghunath

Jeeva Raghunath enthralled students/audience with her six-hour power packed Story Telling training session. Jeeva, who has 13 years of experience in Story Telling, emphasized that all the five senses should be brought into play while telling a story. And emotions are an integral part of any story. When Jeeva told a story, she sang, did mimicry and little acrobatics.

While narrating the story "Priya's Day", Jeeva transformed a sheet of newspaper into the different characters of the story.  The newspaper morphed into a moon, a wall, a tree and more as Jeeva tore the paper and made characters/shapes that were a part of the story.

Very popular in schools, Story Telling is catching up in the corporate sector too. Life skills and good habits are made a part of a story that can entertain and inform a child as well as an adult. For more info visit Jeeva's website.

Jeeva Raghunath in action


Thursday, March 24, 2011

Schools do not Sell Blueberry Icecreams


BLUEBERRY STORY
A Businessman Learns a Lesson
by Jamie Robert Vollmer
"If I ran my business the way you people operate your schools, I wouldn't be in business very long!" I stood before an auditorium filled with outraged teachers who were becoming angrier by the minute.
My speech had entirely consumed their precious 90 minutes of in-service. Their initial icy glares had turned to restless agitation.
You could cut the hostility with a knife.
I represented a group of business people dedicated to improving public schools. I was an executive at an ice cream company that became famous in the middle 1980s when People Magazine chose our blueberry as the "Best Ice Cream in America." I was convinced of two things.
First, public schools needed to change; they were archaic selecting and sorting mechanisms designed for the industrial age and out of step with the needs of our emerging "knowledge society."
Second, educators were a major part of the problem: they resisted change, hunkered down in their feathered nests, protected by tenure and shielded by a bureaucratic monopoly.
They needed to look to business. We knew how to produce quality. Zero defects! TQM! Continuous improvement! In retrospect, the speech was perfectly balanced equal parts ignorance and arrogance.
When I finished, a woman's hand shot up. She appeared polite, pleasant - she was, in fact, a razor-edged, veteran, high school English teacher who had been waiting to unload. She began quietly, "We are told, sir, that you manage a company that makes good ice cream."
I smugly replied, "Best ice cream in America, Ma'am."
"How nice," she said. "Is it rich and smooth?"
Sixteen percent butterfat," I crowed.
"Premium ingredients?" she inquired.
"Super-premium! Nothing but triple A." I was on a roll.
I never saw the next line coming. "Mr. Vollmer," she said, leaning forward with a wicked eyebrow raised to the sky, "when you are standing on your receiving dock and you see an inferior shipment of blueberries arrive, what do you do?"

In the silence of that room, I could hear the trap snap. I was dead meat, but I wasn't going to lie. "I send them back."

"That's right!" she barked, "and we can never send back our blueberries. We take them big, small, rich, poor, gifted, exceptional, abused, frightened confident, homeless, rude, and brilliant. We take them all: GT, ADHD, ADD, SLD, EI, MMR, OHI, TBI, DD, Autistic, junior rheumatoid arthritis, English as their second language, etc. We take them all! Everyone! And that, Mr. Vollmer, is why it's not a business.
It's school!"
In an explosion, all 290 teachers, principals, bus drivers, aides, custodians and secretaries jumped to their feet and yelled, "Yeah!
Blueberries! Blueberries!"
And so began my long transformation.
Since then, I have visited hundreds of schools. I have learned that a school is not a business.
Schools are unable to control the quality of their raw material, they are dependent upon the vagaries of politics for a reliable revenue stream, and they are constantly mauled by a howling horde of disparate, competing customer groups that would send the best CEO screaming into the night.
None of this negates the need for change. We must change what, when and how we teach to give all children maximum opportunity to thrive in a post-industrial society.
But educators cannot do this alone; these changes can occur only with the understanding, trust, permission and active support of the surrounding community.
For the most important thing I have learned is that schools reflect the attitudes, beliefs and health of the communities they serve, and therefore, education means more than changing our schools, it means changing America.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Funny Exercises for Practice

I came across a funny flowchart in Facebook. I was laughing at the funny  logic. Hoewever, i was wondering if the flowchart will be a good exercise for sudents learning Shapes and Smart Art in MS-Word. Instead, of giving a monotonous example for practice, i think students will be engaged and interested in completing a funny exercise. Or will it distract them? Have to try...er..DO!!!

Funny Exercise

Monotonous Exercise

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Feet Work - Blended Learning Checklist

Once you finish learning theory in a Blended learning course, you are very eager to either apply your skills at work or observe. So, a finishing touch for a blended course can be a field study that the learner undertakes. When you say field study, the learner has to be on their feet, navigating their job areas, responsibilities, and workflow.

Suppose you have developed a course on Hotel Management. And you want to equip a service staff/learner  with more on-the-job skills. You can prepare a checklist and ask the learner to fill up their observations. The learner can do the study at their own work premises, and also study the same features in a competitor's store. At the end of the study, you can ask the learner to write a conclusion or come with a new or alternate service model. For example, refer the checklist given below. A sample parameter is filled to help the learner start off. There is no limit on the number and type of parameters you can design in the checklist for field study.


Sunday, January 23, 2011

Construction of Reusable Learning Objects - 5 Types of LO


Learning Objects (LO) are small reusable chunks of digital media. Each LO will pass on learning about a subject or a topic. LO are digital entities or digital files that you can deliver or share over the Internet.  The digital media can be a jpeg photo, an audio file, a video file, or a webpage that opens on the fly. 

Since the main purpose of LO is reusability, you need to put a lot of thought when you construct a learning object. When you say constructing, it means deciding if the LO will be used for instruction, testing, practice or reference. If the LO has to reusable, you need to have minimum context-specific testing inside the LO. Inter-operable LO can be used or shared across courses. Intra operable LO can be reused within a course.

You have to know the different types of LO before you construct or design a LO. The five types of LO are:

1.       Fundamental An individual digital resource uncombined with any other, the fundamental learning object is generally a visual (or other) aid that serves an exhibit or example function. 

2.       Combined-closed - A small number of digital resources combined at design time by the learning object's creator, whose constituent learning objects are not individually accessible for reuse (recoverable) from the combined-closed learning object itself. A video clip exemplifies this definition, as still images and an audio track are combined in a manner which renders these constituent pieces unrecoverable (or, at least difficult to recover). The Combined-closed learning object may contain limited logic (e.g., the ability to perform answer sheet-referenced item scoring) but should not contain complex internal logic (e.g., the capacity to intelligently grade a set of item forms or case types) since this valuable capability would not be reusable in other learning objects. Combined-closed learning objects are generally single purpose, that is, they provide either instruction or practice. 

3.      Combined-openA larger number of digital resources combined by a computer in real-time when a request for the object is made, whose constituent learning objects are directly accessible for reuse (recoverable) from the Combined-open object. A webpage exemplifies this definition, as its component images, video clips, text, and other media exist in reusable format and are combined into a learning object at request-time. Combined-open learning objects frequently combine related instructional and practice-providing Combined-closed and Fundamental objects in order to create a complete instructional unit.

4.      Generative-presentation Logic and structure for combining or generating and combining lower-level learning objects (Fundamental and Combined-closed types). Generative-presentation learning objects can either draw on network-accessible objects and combine them, or generate (e.g., draw) objects and combine them to create presentations for use in reference, instruction, practice, and testing. (Generative-presentation learning objects must be able to pass messages to other objects with assessment logic when used in practice or testing). While Generative-presentation learning objects have high intra-contextual reusability (they can be used over and over again in similar contexts), they have relatively low inter-contextual reusability (use in domains other than that for which they were designed).

 Generative-instructionalLogic and structure for combining learning objects (Fundamental, Combined-closed types, and Generative-presentation) and evaluating student interactions with those combinations, created to support the instantiation of abstract instructional strategies (such as "remember and perform a series of steps"). The transaction shells of Merrill's Instructional Transaction Theory (Merrill, 1999) would be classified as Generative-instructional learning objects. The Generative-instructional learning object is high in both intra-contextual and inter-contextual reusability.