Railway Girls School

Playing with Bubbles

TMS’s new workshop at the Sultan Bazaar school is different from our other classes because we are working with students and teachers on projects that will relate directly to regular class subjects. This model will serve TMS’s goals of better integrating the multimedia tools we teach into the government curriculum and providing skills that can be used even when the fellows are not present to facilitate. Even as I teach the value of multimedia lesson planning, I too am learning its usefulness. For instance, showing the Sultan Bazaar participants the short video (see last post) that I made with their photos and videos was an effective way to review the skills and tips they’d learned in the previous session.

And with our Railway and APRS classes, I’ve seen students equally engaged in sessions where they’re using existing media as thinking tool as when they are doing hands-on work. On Thursday, when we wanted to draw out more of the Railway girls’ thoughts about women, Ilana proposed that we start by showing a series of 10 photos of women and asking the girls to write three words that came to mind when they looked at the images. The activity blossomed from a run-of-the-mill brainstorm to a discussion about the ways that photographers influence their viewers. Having these sorts of conversations with our students is squeezing a drop of soap into their minds: as everyone shares ideas and encouragement, I get to watch that drop balloon outward in a bubble that expands and expands until…pop! The students’ usual hesitations and decorum is thrown to the wind as a new idea or question bursts out and they can’t contain their excitement to speak up. Seeing these mini mind-explosions occurring all over a sea of thirty students is one of the things I enjoy most about being in the classroom. After all, who doesn’t love playing with bubbles?


Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes

Long ago, before the Railway school had their first batch of quarterly exams Ilana and I created a three-day lesson plan revolving around a short story we wrote and titled “Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes.” Our students’ photos have been up on Flickr for a while, but now I’m going to share the details of the lessons, which are ideal for a short-term storytelling workshop. Since we did this activity in early September, the girls had really only begun to deal with the idea of stories. Looking back at it now I can see how far they’ve come, with the exercises below serving as a fun and fundamental start.

Step 1–Creating a Story Sequence

Divide the students into small groups. Give each group a copy of the story, cut into 8 pieces. The students’ task: put the story in order.

How it worked out: In contrast to some verbal exercises Ilana and I had tried, the girls understood the expectations of this exercise immediately and worked together with great focus. It was from this activity that we learned how useful it is for us to type out instructions or definitions for our students–they can read at their own pace, without getting caught up/befuddled by our American English speech!

Step 2–Understanding Story Elements

Each group writes the story on poster paper in the order they chose. Hang around the room and ask groups to share why they chose the order they did. Use these examples as a catalyst for discussing story development and introducing story vocabulary (e.g. setting, characters, plot, beginning, conflict, resolution, theme, moral).

How it worked out: Each group’s story varied greatly. Because of time constraints, we were only able to have two groups share theirs with the class. Our students are used to classes where there is one correct answer only, so our compare/contrast technique with the two stories confused them at first. Fortunately, Neha and Asma, our TFTP (Technology for the People) teaching assistants cleared up the confusion by communicating with the girls in Hindi. Ilana used the metaphor of different floors in an apartment building to explain the way that certain pieces of information must lay the groundwork to understand the rest of the story. We drew on our communication lesson from the previous day by giving each girl a printed copy of the story vocabulary and definitions to paste into their notebooks.

Step 3–Telling a Story in Multiple Ways

Split students into 8 groups. Each group receives one section of the story. They must choreograph a 30-60 second dance that illustrates what happens in their part of the story. Perform these dances for the class.

Next, the groups choose one freeze frame from their dance that best represents what happens during the dance. A student photographer takes a photo of the freeze frames. (Upload now or in next session). Now we have three ways of understanding this story: in its written form, through dance, and in photos!

How it worked out: Even though we’d been doing drama exercises all week to make the girls comfortable being expressive in class, they took a bit to get comfortable planning their dances. The results were a delight, but we ran short on time for the photography portion, so we chose a photographer before each story segment was performed. At some point during each performance, I yelled, “Freeze!” The photographer snapped a shot and then the dancers continued. The girls were excited about dancing, but even moreso about taking pictures and Ilana and I promised more photo storytelling activities would come after our break for exams.

Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes

On Kavita's 12th birthday, she found a pair of old red dancing shoes under the mango tree in the maidan.

Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes

Kavita loved to dance. As soon as she finished her studies she always turned on the radio and practiced the latest Bollywood moves with her friends.

Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes

As soon as Kavita put on the old red dancing shoes, she realized that she could do any dance move she'd ever seen. Her family and friends were amazed. She realized they must be magical.

Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes

Kavita danced so well that she was invited to audition for a performance at a big festival in Hyderabad.

Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes

When Kavita arrived at the dance hall, she realized that she had left her red dancing shoes at home. She began to cry, and thought, "how will I ever be chosen without the magic shoes?"

Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes

When it was Kavita's turn to audition, one of the smaller girls told her that she was a beautiful dancer and that she couldn't wait to see Kavita dance. Kavita went onstage.

Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes

Kavita danced better than she had ever danced before. All of the judges applauded and told her that she would perform in the festival.

Kavita and the Magic Dance Shoes

Kavita was elated and proud, and she realized that she didn't need the magic dancing shoes to be a wonderful dancer.

 


Elephants & Ants!

With the Railway school’s TMS classes on hold as the girls sit their quarterly exams, Ilana and I have a chance to catch everyone up on what’s been happening in our classrooms lately. At Railway we teach separate classes with 16 girls each. We plan our lessons together, which allows us to give each other feedback on which elements worked and which didn’t.

In our first few weeks we focused on introducing digital photography. After our basic lessons using diagrams (on/off button, lens, shutter, display, etc.) and group camera practice we introduced the idea of framing–“what you include or exclude from the picture.” We gave each girl a paper frame and took them on a walk around the courtyard. As they held up their frame to imagine what they shots they would take they started to understand that they have the power to decide what’s inside the frame.

IMG_0610

Lalitha, Jayashree, Krishna Veni (8th year students in Kara's class)

Explaining “composition” and “perspective” the next day proved to be a bit more difficult. We’ve learned from more recent lessons that the girls understand definitions and also homework instructions much better if we print them out. Railway is an English-medium school, but our American accents are difficult to keep up with!

Additionally, the girls had some difficulty imagining that the elements they were including in their pictures could be arranged in different ways. We didn’t want to leave them confused but also wanted to keep class proceeding to new activities and concepts, so Ilana and I came up with an exaggerated example for the girls to practice and wrap-up composition and perspective in the next class.

We divided each of our girls into small groups, each of which had a camera and a task: take photos of things around the schoolyard…as an elephant or an ant. Half the girls had to look through the lens as if they were tiny crawlers and half as if they were galumphing beasts. Some of the results are below, and you can check out more photos in the Elephants & Ants set on our Flickr page!

Ant's Perspective

A new vANTage point

Ant's Perspective

Another ant shot

Elephant's Perspective

Elephant!

Elephant's Perspective

Hello, elephant

The girls are also making great progress with storytelling and expression (more on that in the coming days), but they are always eager for more time using the cameras!