Team Hope in Irish Classrooms: Where is the Learning Aspect?
On
the 17th
of September, 2017, Team Hope launched its annual Christmas
Shoebox Appeal, with TV3's Ireland
AM as the media
partner.
"Team
Hope and Ireland AM are asking people to double their own impact this
year by encouraging their friends, family members or colleagues to
get involved and ensure that even more children experience the joy of
receiving a gift.
Every
shoebox counts, because every child counts and for these children
(whose families typically live on less than €1 a day) this gift
from Ireland may be the only present they will receive this
Christmas." was how the appeal
was carried on the Tv3 website on Friday, 20 October 2017.
So,
basically, Team Hope (with the support of Ireland AM) thinks children
in their selected countries are desperately in need of presents at
Christmas and which it sets about to provide through the time and
efforts of Irish schoolchildren.
Over
the following two months, Team Hope have then gone into
classrooms all over the country to ask the children to make up the
shoe boxes and fill these with specified items to be sent to Team
Hope, together with €4 in cash. These boxes are then sent to the
selected named countries.
Source: Team Hope Stories-Pre-Schools |
However, uncomfortable questions need to be asked about the 'why' we decide to do something for someone and the 'how' we go about doing this, if
we are to achieve the outcome which people from the target
countries, especially those living in Ireland, would be happy with.
"I don't recognise the country Team Hope is describing",
was how a national from one of the recipient countries once remarked.
What
should take place in classrooms?
The
classroom is the place where learning (including, about other places
and peoples) is expected to take place. So, how does Team Hope's
Shoebox appeal contribute to learning about the world around us, and
in particular, about the selected countries in Africa?
Does
Team Hope's materials about the countries they work in offer and
present new information about African countries or merely confirm old
prejudices?
Here
is Team Hope's information about the DR Congo prepared for Pre-School
children:
So, Team Hope thinks the first thing four and five year-old Irish children should be taught about the DR Congo (if they can get their little minds around where DR Congo is in the first place) is that "people live in huts made of mud".
Looking at the materials and the narrative Team Hope uses to make the case and to gain the support of schools, one would have to question what its presence in schools is intended to achieve and for whose benefit.
Looking at the materials and the narrative Team Hope uses to make the case and to gain the support of schools, one would have to question what its presence in schools is intended to achieve and for whose benefit.
Schools
have to follow a defined curriculum detailing and specifying what pupils need to
learn, and with teachers given the responsibility of delivering the
contents of this curriculum.
Snowfall in Lesotho |
Until
quite recently, most Irish people's contacts with Africans have also been
from a distance.
These
days, Irish people live next door to Africans, work with them, while
their children also sit and share lessons with children of African
parentage in the same classrooms.
One
wonders how the children of African parentage, like Professor Plastow's
son, sitting in the same classrooms Team Hope goes into, are made to
feel about the kind of information they are given portraying their
parents' countries of origin.
St. Mark's Primary School, Mbabane. Founded in 1910 |
Demands on Teachers and the effects on some of the pupils in their care
Teachers
have enough to cope with, without having to take on things which
contribute nothing to the learning process or better understanding of
the world out there. Not to mention, how to ensure that some of the pupils in their care are not left to feel like Professor Plastow's son.
Note: Professor Jane Plastow was in Galway in October, 2009 where she co-presented a paper: Africans Don't Use Mobile Phones with her colleague Richard Borowski at a conference organised by the Development Education and Research Network (DERN) at NUI, Galway.