Skip to main content

Art Curiculum Training for Haiti Children

Art Curiculum Training for Haiti Children. (November 13-20, 2010)
I recently attended an Art Curriculum workshop for the teachers in Haiti which was developed and conducted by Ms. Judy Rector and sponsored by Mona Foundation and Hope is Life Foundation. Ms. Judy is a retired teacher from Washington, USA.
To rebuild and create a vibrant community where children can enjoy academic and moral education, where the community can enjoy material and spiritual prosperity, it is important that the local community be empowered to participate and sustain the development process. This was exactly what happened during this training program.
Whether to start a socioeconomic development project or to start a community school, Hope is Life Foundation’s goal is for the local community be endowed with an understanding of concepts, learning the skills, and acquiring the knowledge of the project. The entire staff of Anis Zunuzi School in Port Au Prince, Haiti attended this art curriculum workshop. This pilot program was developed at the request of the Administrative Committee of the school, who recognized the need for visual arts program.
The goal is to develop a Visual Arts Program with the hope of providing Haitian children and the community a spiritual and safe environment to emotionally grow. This program can provide teachers insight, understanding, and skills to provide engaging and effective art and arts integrated lessons across all areas of curriculum. Expressing themselves through art can allow students another avenue to share their ideas and feelings.
The first step was the introduction of “The Private Eye,” an integrated science/art/writing exploratory program. Let me tell a bit about the Prive Eye project. I was really amazed how this project captured the attention of the participating teachers. It is a hands-on learning process that rivets the eye and rockets the mind. With everyday objects, The Private Eye’s easy questioning strategy, and an almost magical magnification tool, a jeweler’s loupe - and every one’s attention was on their work and the teacher.
The Private Eye Project was one of the most enjoyable and exciting I have ever witnessed. The Private Eye got all the Haitian teachers wonder and think like a scientist, to problem solve like a scientist. The idea of using the Private Eye Project for this training program was excellent as this would also give the students the best tools for success. It fits directly into the personal mission of encouraging nature time for children and it creates an environmental sensitivity, especially in a country like Haiti. Ms. Judy incorporated the Private Eye Project to the program to demonstrate integration of curricular subjects. The project includes student jeweler’s loupes (small magnifying glasses), lanyards, a guide book and “The World in a Box,” which has sample items to explore like a seahorse, an urchin, insects, a butterfly, etc. From exploration, the teachers were guided to writing about what they saw and experienced, and then to drawing and painting enlarged versions of the items as well.
After the “Private Eye” experiences, Ms. Judy introduced the pilot visual arts program. The basics of teaching art and an introduction to the K-3 curriculum were then presented to all of the teachers. This was to insure understanding of what was being introduced at the primary level and what would be coming to the upper grades should the primary teachers approve the program.
The scope and sequence of lessons then proceed to ‘Art Tells a Story’, ‘Art Around the World’, ‘An Artist’s Vision’, ‘Perspective in Art’, and ‘Haitian Art’ by grade level. Basic art elements were introduced such as color, line, texture, shape, form and balance and reviewed at each level with more complex activities. Ms. Judy used Haitian artists as examples wherever possible to emphasize their rich artistic heritage. Teachers each created art tools and samples to help them teach in their own classes.
I want to thank Private Eye Project for their support. Ms. Judy did a great job. This is what Ms.Judy had to say, “ We had great experiences in Haiti, sharing a new way to look at the world. All of the teachers and students we shared with at the Anis Zunuzi School in Lilavois, Haiti, had never used a magnifying glass of any kind before. They found working with a tool that enlarged things fascinating! One little boy came into the room as I was setting up for a teacher's training. I gave him a loupe and showed him how to focus on his hand. He jumped back and shook his hand and said, "GWO!" which in Creole means "BIG"! Then he wanted to see other things close up.”
"Regard man as a mine rich in gems of inestimable value. Education can, alone, cause it to reveal its treasures, and enable mankind to benefit therefrom."- Baha’i Faith

Haiti - Today Slideshow: Nat’s trip from Bangkok, Thailand to 2 cities Haiti (near Port-au-Prince, Haiti) and was created by TripAdvisor. See another Haiti slideshow. Create your own stunning slideshow with our free photo slideshow maker.








Comments

Larry Wirth said…
Hi Nat - Just ran across your blog and "The Private Eye". I'll be checking it out with my daughter!!
Larry Wirth (former EK colleague, current science teacher)

Popular posts from this blog

VISIT TO ABDUL BAHA VILLAGE IN MYANMAR (BURMA)

In 1989, the military government in Burma, officially changed the English translations of many names dating back to Burma's colonial period, including that of the country itself: "Burma" became “Myanmar.” The name Burma has been in use in English since the 18th century. Burmese are very friendly. Highlight of our visit to Burma included a visit to the Shwedagon Pagoda and Abdul Baha village. Shwedagon Pagoda is the most sacred Buddhist pagoda in Myanmar. It is sacred to Buddhists from all over Asia and it is believed to contain relics of the four previous Buddhas of the present kalpa. Myanmar's military yielded to a civilian government in 2010 and has dramatically reshaped its economy, opening up various sectors, including energy and infrastructure development, to direct foreign investment. Many foreign investors, especially from ASEAN countries rushed to set up factories and raze old neighborhoods to build luxury housing estates. New hotels and large condominiums

Visit to Safe Haven orphanage in Mae Sot, Thailand

January 1, 2010: During the Christmas 2009 break, Debbie and I visited an orphanage along the Thai-Burmese border in the northern part of Thailand. Our Foundation has recently built water towers to collect and store water for the children throughout the year for this orphanage. Our trip to this area was to visit several orphans who are currently sponsored by the Foundation. These children are from Karen tribes who are refugees from Burma. It all began about 15 years ago, when Mrs. Tasanee Keereepraneed received a frantic message from a local villager in Tha Song Yang, which is about 3 hours north of Mae Sot province on the Thai-Burmese border, that a little girl had lost her mother during birth. In Karen culture this is interpreted as a bad omen, and the child is often killed. Having lost her own father at a young age and her children also having lost their father when Tasanee ’s husband was murdered, Tasanee decided that she, if anyone should be the person responsible for caring

BUILDING A COMMUNITY IN A VILLAGE IN BIHAR, INDIA

Bihar is a State in India, where Lord Buddha, the founder of the Buddhist Religion is said to have attained enlightenment under the Banyan tree. Millions of Buddhists around the globe go on pilgrimage to this place. But, in a small village in the Bihar sharif cluster, about 80 km from Patna, the capital city of the State of Bihar, the villagers are striving hard to build a community that will contribute to the spiritual and material transformation of society. I had the distinct opportunity of visiting the Bihar sharif cluster and meeting with the villagers and the chief of the village. To create such a society, it is essential that every one in the village be empowered to participate in the constructive process that will give rise to it. It is just happening in this small village of population 2,000. The village is called Hargawan. I visited this village during my recent trip to India and my trip was coordinated by Mr. Rajnish Singh, an Auxiliary Board Member (ABM), an appointed mem