Visibility of eTwinning Projects Groups July 2019 Newsletter Newsletter 9 | Page 108

Visibility of eTwinning Projects Group July 2019 Newsletter ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ In Cyprus, a Civil engineer, Mr Kyriakos Tsioupanis, was hosted at school. Mr Tsioupanis has an artificial leg because of an accident while serving in the army. He was invited to school to talk about the inner strength that enabled him to study abroad and overcome every difficulty he had to face. Following the event (that took place on the 3th of December), in the coming few days, the students were taught issues related to diversity and had produced different kinds of creative assignments and activities. In particular the first-class children wrote acrostic poems using the word RESPECT. They wanted to give the message that people with disabilities need respect not pity. In Poland, sensory workshops for children from grades 1-3 were prepared. During the classes, students experienced how to get to know and perceive the world of a person with motor, visual and auditory disabilities. Children with blindfolds recognized the flavours and smells of products demonstrated by teachers and arranged wooden jigsaw puzzles. These struggles brought students closer to the specificity of the functioning of the blind. The next tasks the children had were exercises, consisting in recognizing sounds and writing dictations, of course, with stoppers in their ears. In this way, students learned about the difficulties that deaf people face. The last exercises that pupils from grades 1-3 were given, were slalom between the bollards without the use of legs, drawing geometric figures with the help of feet, and stacking the tower from blocks, with kitchen gloves on their hands. Participation in these activities made the children aware of the problems encountered by people with mobility disabilities in their lives. At the end of the meeting, students participated in a sign language lesson. The youngest got to know the dactylography, that is, the finger alphabet and the gestures defining the polite phrases. In Portugal, this day was celebrated by the Physical Education Department; the teacher Raquel Serrano organized a tournament of BOCCIA among students (from the 5th grade to 9th grade). Students got the opportunity to learn how to play this sport, which, in the Portuguese school, is played by the students with disabilities. It was truly an inclusive activity, all students, in groups played along with the team of students with Special Needs. “It's normal to be different” is the motto of the Italian school. Every year teachers work with children on a peculiar issue, which has to do with people, their identity and human relationships. This year the theme was Ikigai. Ikigai is a Japanese word that cannot be translated with a single word in English. Ikigai is a treasure in our soul, whihc we have to discover and cultivate day by day to live happily, in peace with ourselves and with other people. We could say it is our reason to live. What is my passion? What am I good at? What's the reason I wake up every morning? What can I do for other people? What does the world need? Around these questions, we can build a big thinking on what we are and how we can live our life fully, taking care of us and of other people. If we focus on it we will discover that in the little details of everyday life we can find seeds to make our souls blossom. Every team proposed this theme in their class in many different ways: reading books, interviewing children, writing stories or poems, finding the words to describe pupils' talents and the way they can help other people through them. After these activities, each class created an artwork, which was exhibited in the hall of the school on 3rd December. In Romania, in order to change attitudes, as well as to create and develop an empathic behaviour towards the disabled, the students from 3rd, 4th and 8th grades were asked to search for some information about the disabled which they turned into drawings, posters, messages. Furthermore, the school psychologist explained to the students the concepts of disability and infirmity. There was also an interactive meeting between the students and a disabled person. This person told the children about the incident which led to his disability and has put him into a wheelchair, his feelings, how his life is today. M.B.M. has shared a few of the difficulties he had to face: the inability to walk, the depression, the ignorant people, the lack of the access ramp at the entrance of the buildings. With the help of his family and psychologists, he managed to overcome all these obstacles and today he is very proud that he is an active person that can move easily in his wheelchair, he can drive and he also attends different charities for other disabled people. The students have been challenged to play the part of a disabled person, to use the wheelchair and they have realised that it is not easy to live like this. They have discovered that the disabled people are not different from us, they only do things which we think are normal, a little bit different. Many disabled can fit perfectly in our society, they can learn, they can work, but they need the necessary conditions to do that and it depends on us to provide them. At the end the students have handed in cards and messages to support and encourage him. 108