But just over one week ago, I returned to my lovely 2-bedroom, 1-choo house in the rural suburbs of
The week started with me, all alone in my house, but within one day, it escalated to thirty-one confused and terrified teenaged girls, ordered to school during their mid-term break for reasons they weren’t quite sure of, plus three mostly-prepared American Peace Corps Volunteers and their more-or-less informed Tanzanian counterparts. For months, my two closest PCV neighbors, Ben and Nicole, and I had been planning a Girls’ Empowerment Conference, aimed at teaching thirty Tanzanian students from three different secondary schools about life skills – decision making, relationships, self-confidence, self-defense, etc. – and giving them basic information about how to help fight the HIV/AIDS crisis in their country.
Ten girls from my school assembled before 3pm to arrange the dormitory and wait for the guests. The guests (twenty-one students and four teachers) arrived, fatigued, after 3 hour and 3-1/2 hour walks from Ben's school and Nicole's school, respectively. We had a bland dinner of rice and beans, and then we played a lovely, hilarious game of Two Truths and a Lie. Because some of the guests were already lolling in their hard-backed wooden chairs, drifting into a non-listening abyss of semi-consciousness, we called it a night.
The next morning, Ben and I woke up early to rearrange the desks into a multifarious formation appropriate for activities such as lectures (the inner rows of desks), discussions (the outer circle of desks), theater performances (the large area in the front of the classroom), etc. We also equipped each desk with a notebook, a note-taking pen, and a special colored gel pen from America. Observe:
The students got settled in quickly, and the brave girls who volunteered to prepare a skit for Monday morning set the stage with the first theater performance of the week.
The skits were based on the themes of an organization called "Theater of the Oppressed," and each day's skit was performed two times: once first thing in the morning and once in the afternoon after lessons had finished. In the morning, each skit was performed without interruption. It demonstrated an aspect of problematic behavior (i.e. choosing a bad role model, putting yourself at risk for HIV/AIDS), which the non-acting students were required to try to fix during the afternoon performance. Anyone from the audience was permitted to stand up, shout "Acha!" ("Stop!"), and change the skit for the better.
Throughout the week, lessons covered a variety of topics and used an assortment of different teaching strategies. Below are some examples:
Building a Bridge: Steps to a Healthy LifeI'd just guided the students to build a bridge from knowledge to a healthy life (the colored strips of paper on the board) by effectuating the skills we plan to discuss during the week, and then Ben transitioned to the first important topic: decision-making.
And later, during a break, the students wrote their thoughts about the "Jambo la Siku," or "Topic of the Day," a controversial statement which coincided with the day's lessons. On Monday, for example, the Jambo la Siku was: "Having an education is the only way for a woman to become independent."
Even in other, less interactive lessons, we kept them riveted:
And now, back to the bush!