Teach Middle East Magazine Sep-Dec 2019 Issue 1 Volume 7 | Page 37

Sharing Good Practice What really needs to be brought out here is that within a group which shares certain characteristics that make them a group (in the case of potatoes, brown, roundish, knobbly), each individual is nonetheless unique, having qualities which mean they can be identified in a crowd. It is important to remember this when we are thinking about communities of people with different belief systems and different cultural backgrounds from our own. In relation to the community of the class, we need to recognise that, while we have a class identity and are developing as a community, we are a collection of unique individuals, each distinct from the other. themselves into the future to when they are 85 4 , looking back on their long life. Encourage them to think about the qualities or values that have guided them through their life and to focus on the three most important of these. Bring them back to the present in the classroom and ask them to write each value on a piece of paper. A student then reads out one of her values and anyone who has the same value puts it with hers in a pile on the floor. Repeat this until all the values are in piles in the centre of the circle. These are then identified as the class’s values. 5 They can be displayed as they are or, if time allows, translated into statements based on, “What does it look like when there is honesty?” This forms a credo or set of maxims for the class to live by over the year together. They might like to make it into a poster, adding a photo to it and signing it to indicate their commitment to it. These activities are simple to do, require little preparation and minimal materials, but their impact is profound. They set the tone for a positive and fruitful school year and help lay the foundation for trust and openness in the class. We are beginning to learn how our, “pupils live and think” and starting to “understand them better and be able to work efficiently with them.” As a follow-up to this activity, I ask them to reflect on who they are in this new community; I might use the One Minute Mediation 1 to do this. Ask the group to sit in silence…. what are your strengths, your talents, your skills, your best subjects at school? Of which communities are you a member? I give each person a paper plate and ask them to decorate it to show their communities, their strengths, talents, skills and best subjects. 2 3 The plates are shared in a full circle- share, if the class is not too large. Alternatively, have the students sit in groups and share. It is important to stress that, while one student speaks about their plate, the others must give their full attention, listening with their ears, their eyes and their heart. Questions may only be asked once the student has stopped speaking. The plates are then displayed in a cluster to represent the class. If the students are working in teams, the plates can be combined into shields or crests with the team name on. What matters to us 1. Thich Nhat Hanh; the script for this in Values and Visions 2. The plates were created by students on the Takatuf Scholars summer residential programme, 2019 Knowing who we are, it is now important to focus on our values, both individually and as a class. When You’re 85 is one way to do this. Have the students sit in a circle, give each one three pieces of paper and a pencil to put under their chair then invite them to close their eyes and go into stillness. Talk them through projecting 3. The shield was created by students on the Takatuf Scholars summer residential programme, 2019 4. There is a script for this in Values and Visions 5. This credo was drawn up by students on the Takatuf Scholars summer residential programme, 2019 Sally Burns is one of the authors of Values and Visions. She is a teacher, a trainer, a writer, a researcher and a linguist. She has been working in education for thirty- eight years in the primary, secondary and tertiary sectors in both private and public establishments. To find out more about Values and Visions visit values-and-visions. com, go to our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #VandVLearning. Class Time Term 1 Sep - Dec 2019 37