Teach Middle East Magazine Nov-Dec 2018 Issue 2 Volume 6 | Page 33

Sharing Good Practice a whole range of trades from building to plumbing. Others, who will need a license for future employment can undertake driver education. Instead of students leaving school needing to start all over again having acquired a collection of academic qualifications not necessarily relevant to the world of work, they are employable, skilled and focused. The need for a bold step to move outdoors is not confined to the Middle East. About six years ago I visited Palau Weh, an island quite close to Banda Aceh in Indonesia. When I was invited to visit the local school I readily accepted. With a jungle background, a beachfront teeming with reef life and local culture strongly represented in design, arts and music, the opportunities for exciting outdoor education were innumerable. Yet what did I find? Children in classrooms with uninspiring texts and teachers complaining they did not have the resources found in the west. No, the school was not well-endowed in this respect, I had to admit, but I turned and pointed outside. ‘Were I to have had this when I was teaching science, geography, English, mathematics, art or a number of other subjects, I would have had the best, most creative resources anywhere in the world. Let me show you why.’ The next few hours were spent with children and their teachers exploring the adaptations of plants to low light jungle conditions, counting and classifying plants, studying the impact of wave direction and frequency on the beach and sketching the cross-section of flowers in the bouquet they had presented when I arrived. No books could have produced the learning that occurred that day. When I departed the island a week later, some teachers told me they were trying to change but they faced opposition from traditionalists. What a shame. Here in the Middle East, we are similarly rich in outdoor resources and I am not referring to organised centres, malls, theme parks or museums, though these can, with skill, provide opportunities for applying the curriculum. Too few schools here have gardens with sections devoted to experimenting with different growing mediums, or discovering which plants have greater or lesser tolerance of desiccation. Many plots of land are covered with rapidly spreading creosote plants. What opportunities do they present for studying adaptation and the effect of competition? Then there is the increasing wealth of ancient history being uncovered across the UAE dating back as far as 7,000 years. It says a great deal when a fenced off area alongside the main wadi in Al Ain attracts virtually no attention in the last three years from the schools right next to it, despite signs in English and Arabic stating it is an area of archaeological significance. This presents untold wealth of opportunity: for learning, fostering curiosity and an appreciation, the very important part the UAE has in the preservation of world history. Perhaps a week in a remote traditional camp, speaking only Arabic and engaging in life as it was not too long ago in these parts would improve language skills, if nothing else. I can certainly vouch for the success of this having taken a group of students to an isolated corner of France some years ago. Faced with no teacher, several weeks or months of substitution and a dry textbook, it was decided that a week of total immersion would spark an interest in the language that might just help carry the group through. Fifteen students and two teachers set off in the school minibus and duly arrived in a small village where, if any English was spoken, it was deeply hidden. Students were put in groups, given a small but sufficient supply of francs and taken to the local market to purchase the items needed to make the meal they would be contributing to that night’s dinner. By the end of the week they were speaking the language like natives and, on the return journey, seeking every opportunity to practice their linguistic skills. They never looked back. Our children need to get outdoors for many reasons. This will be a generation characterised by its dependence on technology and increasing isolationism. It is a generation devoted to the rapid provision of everything from food to gratification. An appreciation of the quality of silence, of the beauty of a sunset or the bend of a huge dune against an azure blue sky is inferior to beating Super Mario or pitching yourself against a virtual foe in The Call of Duty. In 2017, close to 60% of the online population were gamers and an increasing number of these were children. Weaning them off their dependence on games will not be easy. It takes courage, yes. However, there is virtually no component in any curriculum that does not lend itself to practical application outdoors. We must make children aware of the environment beyond the classroom; make textbook learning real. If we do not, we risk producing young people who see nothing but the interface on a screen. Judith is a highly experienced educator, consultant and advisor with extensive experience as a school leader in both government and private school settings. Having trained and taught in New Zealand, Judith moved to the United Kingdom where she held a variety of leadership roles. She has extensive experience of education in three Middle Eastern countries: Saudi Arabia, Oman and the United Arab Emirates, where she has lived and worked for the last nine years. Class Time | | Nov - Dec 2018 | 31