On the days when I am not in school I am always busy with
other aspects of my work. One of the
things I really enjoy, is making new resources which I can then show to
teachers in order to give them some ideas of resources they might like to
make. As volunteers we share a lot of
ideas and these often help me to think of ways I could adapt them to make
something slightly different. I have
turned into a bit of a Mr Trebus and have a room with lots of “stuff” in it
that could be used to make resources.
This means that I can show teachers resources which are made out of
locally available materials and therefore, the making of materials is
sustainable and not based on bringing equipment and material which cannot be
quickly, easily and cheaply got hold of here.
The one thing we use most as education volunteers, is the
rice sack. You can do all sorts of
things with a rice sack. First you have
to cut it to the required size. This
firstly involves cutting it to open it up.
Usually I chop the full rice sack in two and use it as two large
pieces. This is certainly good for
making posters and word walls in classrooms.
However, smaller pieces can be used for making dominoes, flashcards,
labels etc. A whole (uncut) rice sack
can also be fashioned into an item of dress up clothing – an outfit for a
farmer, nurse, police officer for example.
Or even a skeleton (which you can later encourage students to add labels
of bones to). We try to make sure that
the materials are not just didactic and that they can be used as interactively
as possible with the students. I have
since made a rice sack map of Rwanda and with it I have a whole heap of
flashcards each with a small piece of sticky tape on the back which can be
fixed in the correct geographical location – to mark directions, towns, tourism
hot spots, landforms etc. Following a
lesson planning session with a teacher who wanted to teach prepositions, I also
have a rice sack poster with a plan of a village on it. There is a small person (whom I like to call
Eric) made out of cardboard with sticky tape on his back. Eric can be moved around the village and the
students can be asked to say where he is using the correct prepositions. They can also do written exercises based on
this by stating where certain places are in relation to others.


Bottle tops can also be collected and then strung together
to make counting strings for younger students.
Keeping them on a string saves having to scrabble around on the floor
picking them up from the darkest corners of a classroom when you are finished (you
learn from experience). But, they can
also be covered or painted and then have monetary values written on them so that
they can be used as money in role play games or in mathematics when children
learn about money.

Some foodstuff here arrives in lovely old fashioned tin
cans. I have porridge for breakfast and this always comes in a tin – as does
the milk powder. These are excellent
kept just for storage, but there are other things they can be used for. Jen has demonstrated to me how they can have
a piece of string threaded through their base and then stretched out and strung
through a second can. If the length of
string is stretched taut (it needs to be about 5m) and you speak into one can,
it is possible for a partner to put their ear against the other end and hear
what you say. A very old fashioned
telephone device. But it does
demonstrate how sound waves can travel.
I rarely have them, but I have bought milk in Kigali a
couple of times and kept the plastic 2l bottles the milk comes in. This can be made in to a car of sorts. The lids of Blueband margarine can be put on
a skewer which is pushed through the bottle.
A piece of sting can be put through the cap of the milk bottle to make a
pulling device. This “car” needs a
little refinement – I need to make sure the wheels don’t come off their skewer,
but it works fairly well.
There are very few children’s story books in Rwanda. There are currently plans to introduce more
reading material, but, in the meantime I have employed my trusty rice
sacks. I have cut them into smaller
pieces (and sealed the edges in a candle to melt them and stop them from
fraying) and then I have created some versions of popular children’s books. These are very popular in the schools I have
used them and students have already begun to memorise some of the repeated
lines. It’s also been good fun to make
the books, but the artwork can take some time (especially if you decide you
must do a version of Elmer!).

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