Teach Middle East Magazine Sep-Dec 2019 Issue 1 Volume 7 | Page 36

Sharing Good Practice BUILD RELATIONSHIPS AND A SENSE OF COMMUNITY IN YOUR CLASSROOM BY: SALLY BURNS divide according to other criteria e.g. girls/boys, “Those who… BUILD RELATIONSHIPS AND A SENSE OF COMMUNITY IN YOUR CLASSROOM “ T eachers who know how the parents and grandparents of their pupils live and think will understand them better and be able to work efficiently with them.” These are the words of Hopi educator Polyingaysi Qὅyawaym, also known as Elizabeth Q. White (Carlson, 1964). They are especially relevant to today’s classrooms and should be the starting point for the new school year. The first time we meet our students is key to how the year goes with them and to building community in our classroom. This article will outline a number of strategies that I have used successfully to do this. Knowing each other We (and it is important to include yourself, the teacher, in the community) need to get to know each other, to find out who we are, where we are from, how we came to be here, our languages, our interests, our skills, our strengths; in short, the more we know about each other the more likely we are to understand each other and feel we are a community. We also need to know and recognise the values that guide us and will take us through the next year. 36 Term 1 Sep - Dec 2019 5 5 come from the host country 5 5 belong to a religious community 5 5 speak more than one/two/three language/s 5 5 enjoy a particular type of food/sport 5 5 play a musical instrument 5 5 are good at drawing and painting 5 5 have relatives overseas. Ask the students to take the lead: what else they would like to know about each other? A great starter activity is Mobile Maps. You need an open space for this. In a school where most of the students are from the country you are in, you need to display a map of the country with key towns marked and markers on the ground showing the names of these in the correct locations. With a more diverse student body, you might want to display a map of the world and simply indicate the cardinal points: north, south, east and west. You give the following instructions: I am in XXX… This is north (pointing), south, east and west. (Point out a few towns/countries.) Place yourselves around the area to show where you live now… Now move to where you were born… your mother was born… your father was born… one of your grandparents was born… Remind students to watch their classmates to learn more about them. Having learned something about our geographical background, let us learn more about each other. Which Community? is a great way to do this. Ask the students to move physically into sets. For example, students of this school, then students of this class. Of course, they will all then be in one set or community. Now ask them to Class Time It is important to observe the similarities and differences within their new community. Individuals in community The next activity I bring in here is Potatoes. You need as many potatoes as there are students in the class and a largish container to hold them. Sitting in a circle, give each person in the class a potato. Ask them how they know it is a potato. How do they know it is not a carrot, a banana? Now ask them to look carefully at their potato and really get to know it well. When they are ready, collect all the potatoes in a bag, give it a shake then empty the potatoes out on to the floor or a table. Ask the group to pick out their own potato from the pile. Everyone invariably manages to find their own potato. Here are some questions you might want to discuss: 5 5 How easy/difficult was it to find your potato? 5 5 What made it easy/difficult? 5 5 What does this tell you about potatoes? 5 5 What can we learn from this about groups of people?