A celebration for Kevin and I is indeed
in order! September is an exciting month
for us, because it marks the beginning of our third year here in the Kingdom of
Cambodia. What’s more, it is also our 36th wedding anniversary.
Lunch with Wendelin |
In terms of 'jungles' in Mondolkiri Province, there are
still large areas of dense forests to carpeted lush rolling open grassland, preserved
parks, hidden waterfalls that have been
left untouched. Sadly however, other
parts of Mondolkiri have been cleared, replaced with rubber trees, palm oil trees and
more by developers from other Asian countries, deals that were made between them,
developers, and the Cambodian government. What’s more, unbeknown to the locals,
Cambodian’s luscious scenery is in the midst of being spoilt, damaged with
garbage, oil spills, plastic bags, water bottles, containers that are strewn
everywhere: on roads, floating around rivers and more …
Fishing in the Sen Monorom Lake |
As for education, the Minister of
Education announced that a new ‘5 -year strategic education plan’ had been put
in place to help improve the quality of teaching throughout Cambodia . He also announced that: 'more money will be spent on education; teachers’ salaries are expected
to increase over the period of 5 years; multilingual education will continue to
be implemented with a focus on ‘minority inclusion’ in the two main northern
eastern domains – Rattanakiri and Mondolkiri provinces.'
Other
highlights, earlier in the year, the education complex had ongoing football matches between districts and
communes. Both the girls and the boys' teams from the 5 districts in MDK had moments of their winning glory.
Further, last July, Cambodia had won 15 medals in multisports events at the 28th
SEA games Singapore 2015. In 2023,
Cambodia is gearing up to host the games here in their own country. More
enlightening, for the first time, health education will become mandatory and become part of the ‘3
Thursdays teaching and learning subject’ during the next school year.
What are the
challenges? Teachers and
students continue to be absent from school. As mentioned before, in the
villages where I work, teachers work on the farm, have family commitment and
spend time working at other jobs to make ends meet due to low teaching wages. As a result, teachers spend limited time preparing, delivering
a child-centered curriculum and more. Lack of good
teaching practice, limited professional development support, limited-teaching resources
continue to be apparent.
Recently, the week before school closed, a group of MoEYS educators from Phnom Penh came to the education complex to assess progress made in the schools here in MDK. They were also invited to visit some of the ‘better’ schools in the villages for the day. Except, as per usual, they omitted to visit those that are in desperate need of help in the area of providing better infrastructure, better resources and much more.
Recently, the week before school closed, a group of MoEYS educators from Phnom Penh came to the education complex to assess progress made in the schools here in MDK. They were also invited to visit some of the ‘better’ schools in the villages for the day. Except, as per usual, they omitted to visit those that are in desperate need of help in the area of providing better infrastructure, better resources and much more.
Rebuilding on education has been an enormous task |
As a long-term volunteer, my job is to work along side teachers and school directors to strengthen education. Though I was warned that my work with the people would be a major undertaking, in fact it has been a ‘titanic’ task. The prerequisite for this job is patience, determination, resilience, flexibility, and a sense of humour when faced with problems, obstacles and frustrating circumstances.
So what’s the
best thing about volunteering, we were asked, over and over again? Connecting through the hearts, the minds of the people; feeling part of the community in an age where
neighbours
in other
parts of the world
have little time for each other; watching smiling children, the builders of the future, explore endless possibilities through play and work - realizing that there is hope at the end of the tunnel; watching them clap with delight when a classmate give an answer; having fun and keeping our minds active at the same time - staying connected with the world around us; being endlessly entertained by new and unfamiliar situations - in short, there's never been a dull moment; learning from the locals. We're lucky to be here and yes, we look forward to experiencing yet another incredible year!
More later … :)
Happy 36th Anniversary Alice and Kevin!!
ReplyDeleteBest wishes from Jill and Raphi in Toronto.