Hello TTS21

Hello TTS21
Goodbye Houston

Monday, April 29, 2013

On Food Day from Caroline

Finca Magdalena
Each semester the Traveling School class dedicates one day to an interdisciplinary study of a major issue shaping the part of the world in which we are traveling. In other words, we look at an important regional/global topic from a variety of angles. On TTS21, the girls examined the issue of Food in Central America. Finca Magdalena (http://www.fincamagdalena.com/) on Isla Ometepe, a volcanic island in the middle of Lake Nicaragua, provided the perfect setting to celebrate Food Day. The finca is a community run coffee cooperative that sells their beans to fair trade buyers in the United States and Canada. After Somoza was ousted by the Sandinista Revolution in the late 1970s, the Marxist leaders of the new government of Nicaragua nationalized lands previously held by Somoza and other wealthy land owners and redistributed them to campesinos (regular folk living in rural areas). Finca Magdalena was a result of this land reform effort.  Ferdinando, who we met on the Finca, has been working among the coffee plants since he was 10 years old and had fought in the revolution and seen the finca change from a privately owned plantation to a community owned and operated finca. He spoke to us about the issues facing the finca today and the difficulty the cooperative is facing in making enough money to support its members. Most farmers in the cooperative have outside sources of income to supplement what they make from the coffee they grow on the finca. The roots of issues such as the ones facing the members of Finca Magdalena are what we try to dig up during Food Day.

The day began with Ruth's presentation on the United Fruit Company (now Chiquita Banana).  She did a phenomenal job exploring the effects that mega corporation has had on the history and politics of Guatemala, including inciting civil war. Additionally, Ruth led us through the conditions banana workers face in packing houses and in the fields today, and how these problems are being addressed through banana workers' unions. The Advanced Spanish students (Annalise, Anna, Kat, and Mimi) presented current event articles from publications written in Spanish about issues around food in Central America. Emelia told us about small farmers in Florida who are having trouble competing with produce grown in Mexico and sold cheaply in the US. Anna explored a fungus attacking coffee plants throughout Central America. Later in the day, Felix, the finca boss, told us how the farmers at Finca Magdalena combat that fungus without pesticides using garlic and onions. The science class got into a heated debate about the necessity and safety of genetically modified foods. Ruth, Maggie, and Mikaela argued against Genetically Modified (GM) foods while Ava, Abby and Eliza led a spirited attack in favor of them. At one point, Jen, our moderator, had to silence both the debaters and the audience as we all competed to make a point or ask a question. We came to the conclusion Abby should be a lobbyist. Kat translated for our guest speaker Felix, the jefe (head/chief) of Finca Magdalena. She did an admirable job translating difficult economic and agricultural ideas to the group. Felix, quiet and unassuming, patiently explained the history of the finca and some challenges facing coffee farmers today, as well as answering innumerable questions from the science girls eager to gather information for their research papers.

After lunch, we staged a round-table discussion in which the girls discussed the pros and cons of NAFTA/CAFTA (North American/Central America Free Trade Agreement). Each student was given a role representing a person in the US, Mexico or Central America affected differently by NAFTA/CAFTA. Eliza was a wealthy Mexican farmer in favor of NAFTA; Abby was a lobbyist on behalf of major corporations benefitting from NAFTA/CAFTA policies; Ava was a worker at a jeans factory in the US who felt her job was compromised by US manufacturing moving to Mexico and Central America where labor is cheaper and regulations fewer; Miki was a worker in a garment factory in a free trade zone in Nicaragua. In their roles, the girls debated and discussed the pros and cons of Neo-Liberal economic policies like NAFTA/CAFTA and explored how these policies were issues of class and race in addition to issues of economic theory and policy. Finally, we looked at NAFTA/CAFTA's effects on immigration and discussed questions of nationhood, citizenry, and national identity.  Although the girls' (and their teachers’) heads were virtually exploding as the day came to a close, we were proud of the different ideas and opinions we had shared with each other and of the new understanding we had come to about FOOD.

Throughout the day, the girls kept track of the ideas and issues we explored and thought critically about how those ideas connected to each other by creating a web. We drew the word “food” in a box in the middle of a giant piece of paper taped to the wall. The girls then drew lines coming off the word in order facilitate their understanding of the different factors affecting the production of and access to food in Central American and how the issues connect to each other. By the end of the day, the web was a mess of bubbles and a tangle of lines. The next morning we took a moment to reflect on the previous day. We used the phrases, words, and ideas expressed on our web to write “found poems” - the web became the inspiration for poetry. After sharing our poetry with each other, each girl contributed her favorite line from her own poem to compile a group poem. The girls' poem is called “11 Borderless Girls” - in it they declare they are no longer a “mono-culture of minds”. 

Here is the found poem the girls wrote as a class:

Eleven Borderless Girls
Everything has a place where it started, in the ground, near the roots Capitalism makes food a commodity, but why can't people just eat?
Ethics and morals versus human starvation Goods move freely, unfettered, between borders Free Trade is a carnivore, a dog on the leash of politics Giant capitalist companies swarm developing nations, flies to a rotting piece of meat Conniving arms stretch and grow, connecting our globe There is a fungus among us and our small farmer says just spray it with lime.
Trickle down lies, realities
It's a race to the bottom out there.
Our heavy word soak into the dirt, nutrients for what we grow.
We are not a monoculture of minds anymore. Global citizens, 11 Borderless girls.
--Ruth, Mikaela, Ava, Annalise, Anna, Simone, Eliza, Maggie, Emelia, Kathryn, and Abby


Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Reaction, Reflection, Response -- on leaving Guatemala


February 2nd, 2013: The plane smells like old people and manufactured air. I'm sitting next to two other TTS girls – I forget their names – Eliza and Simone, maybe? Everything is going by too fast. I'm still tired from yesterday, and it seems unreal that I'm on this trip. I'm flying to a new country. I'm about to embark on a crazy adventure. The plane tilts for a moment, and my gaze falls out the window. My heart flutters and I suck my breath in: Guatemala. The city is crowded – cars, people, buses. The mountains are expansive – lush, inviting, and peaceful. The plane touches the runway. I'm here.
April 13th, 2013: I take a deep breath, and I let the cold (yes, cold!) air conditioning wash over my body. I feel lighter, without Shannie Pants (group gear bag), my big pack, AND my day pack somehow attached to my body. I'm sitting by myself (I couldn't deal with smelling Eliza´s sweat), but I keep peaking my head over the seats to see what everyone is doing. It doesn't feel right being separated from them (even as much as 2 seats). I hear Carol laughing, Kat farting … yes; everyone is going what they normally do. I can´t contemplate the fact that we´re leaving Guatemala, the country where I have dug my roots in deep and can´t stop myself from growing in. The tip of the plane lifts up, and we´re flying. I see faces hidden in the mountains below, smiles of all the people I've met, and a history I now know better than my own. We´re gone; we´re up. On to the next place, as usual.

I worried for a while I wouldn't change. I wouldn't grow from this trip. I realize every step I have taken has been ingrained in my head, in my memory, has solidified the woman I AM. Yes, I can´t wait to go back to a pantry full of food, parents to take care of me, but now I have learned of places and history I will never forget. Everything that has been added to my big blue pack isn't just souvenirs – it´s guerrillas, it´s guns, it´s tortillas, it´s dirt soccer fields, it´s trajes, it´s everything. I honestly can´t believe 2 ½ months have passed us by, and the last 30 days are in the stretch. Thirty days? I contemplate what life will be like when I return home – normal, yes, but so different. I am different. I have learned of injustices known to not even my own parents, learned the cruel ways of my own country, and have learned of the happiness that exists despite all of it. Another plane ride soon approaches – even 30 days will give me time to learn more.
I said I will be different when I go home – it´s true. I asked Carol tonight how old you have to be to start a non-profit. She said it didn't matter. At the same time, a chorus of other hostel-stayers behind me added their knowledge – yes, age doesn't matter. Just get a sponsor-- I have a friend who did that – Answers which give me hope for when I touch back down in Boston. No, I don´t have to start a non-profit, but I am PASSIONATE enough to do so. It is this passion which I have gained on the trip – a desire to be a global citizen. My plane rides do not stop here – change doesn't stop here. And it doesn't have to me who changes – it will be me who brings the change.
--Maggie April 14th, 2013







Saturday, April 13, 2013

Mountain School Update

Our week at La Escuela de la Montaña (The Mountain School) was a transformative language and cultural immersion experience for the girls. Some girls worried that their brains might explode with four hours of intensive language instruction each day, but they thrived with the one-on-one individualized attention and learned more than seemed possible in one week. Ruth and Simone were ecstatic to finally learn the past tense. Abby loved her teacher Tito’s fast-paced instruction and covered an impressive amount of new grammar. Maggie practiced her conversational skills in long discussions with her teacher, Lorena, about Guatemalan history and politics.
Throughout the week, the girls ate all their meals with local families, allowing them a personal experience in the daily life of a typical Guatemalan family. Annalise connected with her host brother during several pick-up soccer games. Emelia and Kat were often the last to return from dinner, having been absorbed in discussions about Guatemalan people and culture with their host mother, Adelaida. The other girls had the chance to also meet Adelaida later in the week when she came to give us an empanada cooking lesson.
In between classes and meals, the Mountain School arranged to have locals come to speak to the girls about their personal experiences in the Guatemalan Civil War and the history and founding of Fatima, the town nearest the school. The themes and issues that the girls have been reading about in their classes all semester were brought alive by these intense first-hand accounts. Ruben spoke about the forming of the local community of Fatima by a group of families that left a nearby coffee finca after being exploited as workers for many years. Pedro gave a heart-wrenching account of his kidnapping and torture by the Guatemalan military. The girls were especially affected by Gloria’s story of serving as a guerrilla for eight years during the war. Mikaela in particular found this account to be one of the most powerful experiences from the week and drew connections to the reading the girls have done from Bridge of Courage as part of history class. On Saturday, the group visited Santa Anita, a nearby cooperative town that Gloria and some of her fellow guerillas formed after the peace accords were signed.
Midway through the week, the girls helped host “Noche Cultural,” an evening of crafts and games that was very well attended by local youth. Eliza worked with a local little boy to use recycled bottles and paper to make a little pig they named Señor Flamenco. Other girls played cards and chatted in Spanish. Anna enjoyed the opportunity to talk with Guatemalans close to her own age and spent most of the night deep in conversation with local girls.
At the end of the school week, the girls helped prepare and serve lunch to the host families that had feed us all week. They showcased their Spanish skills with a performance of the song “Rayando el Sol”  and thanked their Mountain School teachers with an adaption of a TTS awards ceremony, for which they hand-made personalized awards for each teacher. At the end of the week, we were sad to leave the host families and teachers, but excitedly anticipating the beach. ¡Vamos a la playa!
-- Heather 

Surfing in Guatemala

 This week the TTS21 girls traveled to the small town of El Paredon on the western coast of Guatemala. There they stayed in small thatch roof huts right on the volcanic sand beach. During the week at El Paredon, the girls took a week's worth of surfing lessons from the staff, which included several top Guatemalan surfers. They started out learning how to stand up and balance on  a surf board and, by the end of the week, they were paddling and catching waves making it look easy. The girls also spent plenty of time swimming in the ocean waves and basking in the sun. During the week they were able to witness the surfing of Henry who is ranked the fourth best  surfer in all of Guatemala. All the young surfers at El Paredon have started a program called the Guatemalan Surf Project, which is a project that allows local children of El Paredon to rent a surf board for Q1 (the equivalent of 13 cents). The surfers at El Paredon teach the kids how to surf so they have an activity to do when they get out of school during the day. 

 All of the TTS21 crew was sad to leave the beach and say fairwell to their surfing friends but also very excited to embark on the next portion of the journey to Nicaragua
 
Annalise, Senior, WY

Favorite Things We've Done Since the Parent's Campus Visit


  • Emelia: "I bought a traje at the women's weaving co-op in San Juan!"
  • Simone: "I was so excited when I stood up on my board and caught my own wave."
  • Ruth: "I decided that I'm moving to the surf camp in El Paredon so I can surf for the rest of my life."
  • Mikaela: I liked being taught to surf by the 2nd best surfer in Nicaragua."
  • Eliza: "We went to a candle lighting ceremony at the Mountain School that gave us good luck in our travels."
  • Ava: "My favorite thing since the parent trip has been kayaking around Lake Atitlan."
  • Anna: "I loved making Alfombras."
  • Annalise: "The homestays at the Mountain School were my favorite since I got to practice my Spanish and play with lots of kids!"
  • Maggie: "My favorite part of the surf camp was reading in a hammock looking over the Pacific Ocean."
  • Kathryn: "I got sand stuck to my toenails on the beach."
  • Abby: "I was overjoyed when Jen´s husband brought me a new camera!"
--Kathryn, Senior, VA

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Updates and Phone Calls Coming Your Way

TTS21 Parents,

I know it's been a bit of a lull since you've had phone calls from your girls. They have been out of reliable contact since they went to the Mountain School -- no news to you. Well, after a week at the beach, the girls will have lots of surfing stories to share with you -- hopefully tomorrow. They're also promising a few updates about their Spanish immersion classes, and what they've been up to since then. And, the TJ girls are promising some surfing photos too!


So, when the group arrives in Antigua tomorrow, if all goes as planned, they will have some time to try to connect with you at home. The teachers hope to get the girls to the Internet around 2pm MST, but if you don't hear from your daughter tomorrow, she will have access in the coming days when the group arrives in Nicaragua.

Keeping my fingers crossed,
Jennifer

Sunday, April 7, 2013

More Class Updates from Caroline

Literature and Composition:
In addition to reading short stories by local authors, the girls have just completed the arduous task of writing "This I Believe" essays. This essay asks students to write about a personal belief and to explain and defend their belief with anecdotes and examples from their lives. The students took on the challenge whole heartedly and wrote about, to name a few, their belief in the beauty of language, in playing games as a way to connect with others, and in the appreciation of small natural wonders. The girls did an admirable job understanding and discussing Rosario Castellenos's short story "The Cooking Lesson", a dense but rich story about a young woman's dissatisfaction with her role as a wife. Through a feminist lens, the story takes on various themes including the difficulty women have in maintaining a personal identity while fulfilling society's expectations of "wife" and "mother". As we prepare to leave Guatemala and head into Nicaragua in the coming weeks, we will begin reading Tortilla Curtain, a beautifully written work of fiction exploring Mexican immigration in the United States, and begin writing a persuasive essay. 

History:
During their time at the Mountain School, the girls read and responded to Bridge of Courage, Jennifer Harbury's collection of testimonies from guerrillas fighting injustice in Guatemala's 36 year civil war. To prepare them for this reading, we explored the history leading up to the civil war including a close examination of the role of the United Fruit Company and the role of the US Government in Guatemala. Additionally, we read several excerpts from Rigaberta Menchu's memoir, I, Rigaberta Menchu. An activist for indigenous rights, Rigaberta grew up extremely poor in rural Guatemala and won the Nobel Prize for her book. Next week, our last in Guatemala, will involve discussing Bridge of Courage as well as ending our unit on Guatemalan history by looking closely at current events and politics. Anna gave the history class a thorough oral presentation introducing Jennifer Harbury. Mikaela will talk to the class this coming week about the controversy surrounding Menchu's book and her Nobel prize. As we enter Nicaragua, our studies will shift to the modern history and politics of that country, namely the Iran-Contra affair.

Travel Journalism:
The photojournalists of Travel Journalism continue to capture our journey through their camera lenses. They took a photographic series of our experience building alfombres during Semana Santa and are currently working on a portrait assignment at the Mountain School. For most pictures they take, the students are asked to practice specific photography techniques and to write photographer's statements explaining their work. The girls recently completed their second article, a 500-word opinion piece on a current issue in Guatemala. They will begin their third article in the coming week and will continue to hone their picture taking skills as they plan their final photography portfolios. 

PE & iLife:
Since our last update, the girls have hiked over 30 miles with significant elevation gain and loss through the Guatemalan countryside. They too have paddled into significant headwinds along the shores of Lake Atitlan in addition to their regular PE classes in town plazas doing circuit workouts and yoga. They are excited to test their skills in the ocean in the coming week, where they will have surfing lessons. In iLife workshops, students and parents participated in a Finding Your Passion workshop and will move on to discussions of the college application process including applications, acceptance and rejection, financial aid and more. Students will also begin to work with partners on developing their own leadership skills. In PE, they'll be creating lesson plans and then teaching Student-led workouts. They will also begin to participate in leadership activities as they become chieflets working alongside the teacher who is Chief for the day-- planning daily schedules and seeking out activities to share with their classmates.  

Friday, April 5, 2013

Class Updates from the Teachers

Hello from the Mountain School,

There has been so much excitement in the last few weeks for the TTS21 family.  We left San Cristobal de las Casas during the second week of March following an epic week full of guest speakers and midterm exams.  The students were all wide eyed and sitting on the edge of their seats as we visited with supporters of the Zapatista Movement of Chiapas, Mexico.  The girls were all motivated by the camaraderie and strength they witnessed amongst indigenous people of Mexico.  The group grew stronger as they returned to Guatemala to embark on a 3 day backpacking trip through the steep volcanic mountains surrounding Quetzeltenango.  Each day welcomed the girls to a grueling 12-mile hike up intense slopes with overfull daypacks on their backs. Upon completing each couple hour summit, the girls all high fived each other and laughed at their dirt covered faces.  The mirador overlooking Lake Atitlan was the perfect end to the hike, or at least it was a moment to remember before greeting the parents two days later. The 2013 TTS Campus visit was an incredible success.  Parents each shared their strategy to keeping interests a part of their life during an iLife class, and there was not a dry eye in the room at the First Annual Campus Visit Poetry Slam.  The TTS21 journey continued via kayak, as the girls waved goodbye to their parents and paddled toward San Juan la Laguna and Semana Santa.  Full class days were back in full swing, with several breaks taking place to admire the many colorful and spiritual processionals that passed our hotel.  The girls became quick friends with the women at the cooperative in San Juan, returning to create an alfombra on Good Friday.  The girls were incredibly humbled and proud to be the only woman assisting a well-developed team of husbands and sons in the street full of alfombras from one end to the other.  It was truly an Easter experience the group will never forget.  Easter arrived and the TTS21 family headed to the hills outside of Xela to attend The Mountain School.  The girls have had 4 hours of intense one on one Spanish instruction each day this week, leading to an impressive development of Spanish speaking skills amongst the entire group.  The week was also full of guest speakers, including a former finca campesino (farm worker) who described life on a coffee plantation as well as a surviving Guatemala’s Civil War.  This week has been full of learning, and the girls are both exhausted and motivated as they continually start more conversations with the villagers using their newly polished Spanish skills.  The week will continue with more classes and meals at local homes, where the girls again use their Spanish to join families and enjoy three home cooked meals every day.  Classes will continue as our group heads to the coast for surfing lessons and to celebrate our final few days in Guatemala. 
Our best,
Jen

For a closer look at what each class has been working on throughout the past couple of weeks, each class has a brief summary of their activities below:

Science Update:
Following midterms, the science curriculum concluded the unit of study on tectonic plates.  Students interpreted and completed a comprehensive data analysis of the world's plates, discussing what type of plate movements created mountain ranges, islands, earthquakes and inland lakes.  Before heading out on the backpacking trip, the students studied astronomy and created their own constellations, incorporating regionally specific cultural components into their myths.  The students enjoyed admiring the Milky Way and watching satellites pass overhead during our super early morning hike to the mirador above Lake Atitlan by headlamp.  They waved goodbye to the stars, watched the sunrise, and then completed a field journal entry on the volcanic chain surrounding the lake.  Most recently, the students have begun the soil and agriculture unit.  Students collected soil samples alongside the waters of Santiago, and then used several identification methods to identify the soil components.  The unit will continue with a look at the regional agricultural practices, culminating with the semester's Food Day In Nicaragua. – Jen

Global Studies:
The Global Studies curriculum came to life in Chiapas, Mexico as students saw firsthand the human rights movement of the Zapatistas.  Several guest speakers shared their experiences living within the conflicted political reality of southern Mexico.  Students visited a cooperative, as well as an educational project where all of the students were vocational teachers and vice versa, and everyone from the local indigenous villages was welcome to study and help one another free of charge.  While observing the spiritual rituals practiced in Guatemala during Semana Santa (Holy Week), students discussed Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, dissecting their own pyramid of needs, and reflecting upon how their past choices may be influenced by various sections of the triangle.  Students spent time writing a reflection on the changes they see within themselves, and how they will incorporate those changes upon their return home next month.  Students discussed how making a change is difficult, compounded by any number of obstacles that can dissuade a person for sticking to their goals.  Central American gangs were analyzed, again with the lens of Maslow, which began a longer discussion about passing judgments on others.  Students will continue to work with the Hierarchy of Needs as they begin reading their novel, Enrique's Journey, next week. –Jen

Algebra 2:
The midterm exam concluded the class study of logarithmic and exponential functions.  Chapter 8 began with an analysis and application of direct and indirect variation equations.  Students applied the variation principles to problems in chemistry and other real life word problems centered on our travels in Central America.  The course continued with an intensive look at rational functions.  Students used factoring and least common denominators to eliminate and simplify complex functions, solving for a variable and then checking their answers using substitution.  Students analyzed function transformations and practiced graphing several parent and altered functions on the same graph.  While completing problems on inequalities and rational equations, students applied several strategies to determine any extraneous solutions.  Students are now completing chapter 9, involving the study and application of step and piecewise functions.  Students created tables for complex data sets then analyzed the data to determine any linear, exponential, or quadratic patterns.  Following a unit exam this week, students will begin their study of conic sections as we head into Nicaragua. – Jen

Math Concepts:
For the midterm project in math concepts, students summarized their learning for the first half of the course by creating a personal financial survival guide.  Students explained the important aspects of budgeting, managing ATM cards and bank accounts, credit cards, and how to maintain a strong credit history.  They also addressed loans, debt, identity theft, and lease and rental agreements.  Each student identified personal financial goals and strategies to use to achieve her goals.  Following midterms, the math concepts class began their unit of study on careers and employment.  Students discussed and analyzed the various job markets of personal interest, then chose a specific job they would each realistically like to apply to in the near future.   Students each created a resume and cover letter for their chosen job opportunity, implementing confident writing styles into their letters.  Students discussed and analyzed strategies to prepare for an interview, how to best represent themselves in an interview, and how to follow up with a potential employer.  In preparation for upcoming mock interviews, students interviewed each other and provided feedback, specifically focusing on body language and other nonverbal behaviors that could impact and interview.  Following the unit on employment, students will begin reading and critiquing different types of investment opportunities.  – Jen

Pre-calculus:
Emelia and Ruth are enjoying finally being able to work together in Pre-calculus now that they have completed the independent study section of the class. After midterms, they spent two weeks working with trigonometric identities and equations. Verifying trigonometric identities can often be tricky because there is not a set procedure to follow, and students must instead try various strategies to progress through these problems. Ruth and Emelia had fun creatively solving these trigonometric puzzles and were able to find more than one solution path for many of the problems. Additionally, through work on verifying identities, we were able to practice writing more formal mathematical proofs.  In the last section of chapter 5, the girls combined their previous knowledge of trigonometric functions with their experience using trigonometric identities in order to find solutions to trigonometric equations. Previously, the girls have solved many problems involving right triangles. With the addition of the law of sines and law of cosines in chapter 6, they are now able to solve problems involving non-right triangles as well. – Heather

Beginning Spanish:
The beginning Spanish students can hardly be called beginners anymore! Following midterms, the girls read what was for many of them their first book in Spanish, Patricia va a California. Without having to directly translate every word, the girls were successful in understanding plot and participating in discussions about the book in Spanish. They enjoyed following the story of Patricia, a girl from Panajachel, Guatemala who goes to study and live in California. We started the book while we were visiting Panajachel, just before meeting up with the parent group, so the story came more alive thanks to the students' personal familiarity with places mentioned in the book.  Students practiced new vocabulary and verb conjugation patterns as they appeared in the text and wrote a letter to the main character to tell her about the United States and ask her questions about Guatemala.
This week, the girls are achieving enormous personal growth during their language immersion experience here at the Mountain School. Each student receives four hours of daily one-on-one instruction in Spanish tailored to her specific needs.  The students' language progress was evident on a recent visit the home of a Mayan priest in a nearby village. On the hike to the village, they engaged our guide in a discussion about the history of the surrounding town. The girls were able to understand most of the description of the ceremony without the help of an interpreter, only needing a few hints about key new vocabulary related to the ceremony. – Heather

Advanced Spanish:
The girls are in the heart of the Mountain School where they are receiving one-on-one Spanish instruction for 4 hours a day.  They've been speaking, reading out loud, writing, and working on mastering grammar concepts.  They've also had the opportunity to practice what they're learning at meal times with their local host families.  After this week, I'm sure that their confidence will soar!  As we go into the final weeks of the trip, the girls will be finishing up El Principito (The Little Prince), reading current event articles from local periodicals and newspapers, conversing with people we meet, and aiding with local logistics in Nicaragua! --Liz 

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Language Immersion

Dear TTS21 Parents and Friends,

I know it's been a little while since you've talked with your daughters. I chatted with Jen during our weekly check-in yesterday, and she updated me on what's been going on since I departed with the parent group. Upon our departure, the girls began a two-day kayaking trip on Lake Atitlan. They paddled from the village of Santa Cruz to San Juan, hugging the shore, stopping for snacks and swims. In San Juan, the girls visited a women's Co-op and had a weaving lesson-- making their own bracelets. They spent the night with local families and enjoyed home-cooked meals and family time. The next morning, the group made a strenuous crossing to the coastal village of Santiago. Here they stayed for the duration of Semana Santa. They caught up on classes, witnessed a variety of Holy Week processions, and luckily for them, were invited back to San Juan to participate in making an alfombra with some of the families they met earlier in the week. According to Jen, these carpets are (in San Juan at least) typically created by the village men, so it was quite a feat to have our girls out there building a carpet for Easter Sunday.


Here's the amazing result of their work -- don't they look proud? Rightly so! Next, the girls packed into their own chartered "Chicken Bus" -- aptly named el Conejo or the Rabbit, as in the Easter Bunny -- and traveled to the Mountain School. The girls will be there through the weekend -- studying Spanish four hours a day, one on one with their native language teachers. The girls are already making huge strides with their skills and very excited to be practicing what they've learned with their families from the village who they're eating meals with all week. So far there have been hikes and there will be a service project in the village. There are also speakers every night, and the girls are so beat at the each of each long, satisfying day, that they barely get their teeth brushed before they're all asleep well before the regular 10 o'clock lights out call. Learning new things can be really exhausting!


El Conejo most likely looked something like this!


So, while the girls are at the Mountain School, they will have no access to the Internet or phones. They will be back in contact by early next week, but for now, here's a brief glimpse of what's happening for our TTS21 Spanish language learners.


Ciao,
Jennifer

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

A few "Where I'm From" poems from the Poetry Slam

Picture this -- a terrace with hammocks and benches overlooking a lake guarded by three volcanoes, 11 TTS21 students, 8 TTS21 parents, 4 TTS21 teachers and myself. Imagine Literature students, after weeks of writing, practicing, and even reciting in a San Cristobal coffee shop in front of strangers their original poems, the day has finally arrived for their final recitation (aka, the Poetry Slam). There are even judges! So now that you're with us, and after you read through some of these poems -- I presently have 4 of the girls' poems and will try to collect the rest, I promise -- you may also be able to imagine that there was nary a dry eye in the house.  Read on, and you'll understand why! There may be a few typos/mistakes, as I'm reading hand-written poems in pencil (or one's that I photographed), so bear with my transcription!


I am from grey hair and wool sweaters
bad jokes and crinkled eyes
the youngest of three daughters
born in November
the one who ruined Thanksgiving and Christmas
I am from rocks kicked down
the dead-end street.
Cereal in the bushes
and kingdoms in the trees
I am from frogs at the farm
where blueberries are picked when the sky is red
from Unadilla theatre
chocolate chip cookies and ladled out punch
I am from
“I hate that dog!”
but let me give her a kiss before bed
from golden days and rugby stripes
and singing around the fire
underneath a million other universes
floating up in the stars
I am from Christmas trees that scratch the ceiling
and family dinner under our own kitchen forest
from spaghetti and mac & cheese
and flank steak as our favorite present
I am from one if by land, two if by sea,
hand-me-downs and
“stop stealing my clothes!”
the three sisters that travel the world
I am from endless days of rainy games
of Lancaster and Route 2
from the field of dreams
and wheels and dash
I am from Mama Mia in the kitchen
Petoskey stones and blue eyes
those mountain tops and many miles
that are covered in my sweat
I am from where I want to be
from who I am and
who I’ll become
work hard but let yourself dream
from memories that travel
over the earth and to the
house at the end of the street
to where I stand under
the tree with
the swing
Maggie O. – Sophomore, Massachusetts

My Turf-filled Shoes

Walk inside the door of where I live,
   and what do you see?
A big, green carpet, black and red curtains
   and a plasma screen TV

I come from my mom’s bedroom
   then moving across the hall
As I got older, I got the depths
of the basement
   Basically my apartment – mini-fridge and all

Three little creatures roam near my feet
    small paw prints traced throughout the floor.
Jumping, scratching, barking
Even their tiny howls when the fire trucks are near the door.

I come from pound and blasting music
Where I’ve been taught about
   Free Fallin’ from Tom Petty
Where I’ve been told about Night Swimming
   time and again by R.E.M.

I’ve learned there’s no crying in baseball
Even when you’re bleeding or
   hit in the temple
I get hot and sweaty in treacherous
   catcher's gear
Never remembering to throw off
   my mask without an example

Turf-filled shoes and spit-covered instruments
Seven hours a day of band camp
and pointed toes
   I’m from drum-stick clicks and
bamboo reeds
The saxophone at all of the Friday
night shows

8-5 step with shoulders to front while sliding
    Podiums and slight breezes that
Give us great satisfaction
G-man, Yo mama, no practice Thursdays
   and eyes with pride
   when we’re rehearsing with our
pants off.  Wouldn’t call it attraction

I’ve been taught Cleveland Indians
all the way
Baseball caps and Jacob’s Field
   on radio, TV, or even in the
Stadium I listen
   Oh, and if you like the Yankees,
better carry a shield.

I’m from traditions that only we know
   one present and ‘Twas the Night
Before Christmas on Christmas Eve
Watching every award show possible
   And witnessing the ball drop at
Times Square on TV

My radio station in 97.0 WNCI
   and my mall is named Tuttle
I shop at Bath and Body Works
and  Hot Topic
If you have Graeter’s Ice Cream
without me, better make it subtle.

We’ve been to Max & Ermas every Wednesday
   So many times, we’ve memorized
   The menu
I order Laredo steak and my mom –
A nice, big salad
We get free cookies every time,
   good enough to send you.

I come from an interesting series of injuries
one so bad – changed forever & my
   lip split open.
   A crazy neighbor who watches
If you touch his car
If he sees it on camera, your
   trust is nearly broken.

My memories live in the stars
   in music and inside jokes
   The people and places engraved
In my mind – lock and key
   hard to find.

Ava D.–Sophomore, Ohio

Every Other Week

I am from starfish and coffee
maple syrup and jam
from runin’ round in circles
and accidents will happen

I am from shepherd’s pie, treacle pudding
overcooked roasts, and mushy peas
from hummus, pita bread, and rolling grape leaves
I am from homemade mac n’ cheese
tuna casserole, and hamburger spinach and rice

I am from family dinners at 6 o’clock
and eating dinner in front of the TV
from hardwood floors and stiff couches
deep red carpets and sinking into cushions

I am from settee beds and toast
I am from late nights in the hospital
that bring false hope
I am from sun-bleached ticket stubs
safely guarded in my Tom’s box

I am from two rooms that hold different memories
two pasts divided into every other week.

Simone M. –Senior, Washington

Where I’m from is a Georgia farmhouse
                                     a Kentucky street
                                     a Maryland neighborhood
                                     a Virginia suburb
                                and a Tennessee mountain.
I’m from 1314 AD and
                plaid clothes
                green armchairs
                stuffed bookshelves.
Candy filled jars, Cape Cod beaches
   And a basement that could run its own yard sale
I learned to trust from an Elvis Costello poster
   and
I learned to sing listening to Athens Bands
I eat vegetarian  haggis and
                pineapple stir-fry
                pumpkin bread and
                Indian food on Thanksgiving
I’m from ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas once a year,
                Easter egg hunts in the early morning
                April Fools Day food and
                homemade Halloween costumes
Cards for every holiday with
   a piece of gum included
   and too much tape.
Where I go to school
   we stomp the feet and
   Wednesdays are practically Fridays
At that campus where dogs attend class
   and socks are worn with Chacos
I’m from that town
   where she loves the beat and
   a huge marble cross  glows into the night.
I’m from 4th of July fireworks and
the rooftops of University buildings
                Sawdust, wood fences
                and a best friend who lives in a stall
I’m from the places I’ve been and
                The faces I can’t forget
I can’t leave them behind
                they live in my mind
I’m from mix CDs of memories and
                Overstuffed bulletin boards
I’m from 272 miles of perimeter trail
   and
The guardian angel I carry with me
   as I seize the opportunity for change
   and chase the sun.

Eliza M. –Junior, Tennessee

Oh, and did I mention that the parents and teachers were invited to join in with their poetry? We had  "Where I'm From" poems from Caroline and Jen, original poems delivered by Holly B & Suzi S., and a song from Ira too. What a powerful moment for our group.  Below is a poem written by Holly as a tribute to all the girls and how far they've come this semester.

Assurance to Step Back

She moves with Assurance
Although lighter of skin, she blends in somehow
Accepted as she speaks their language
She is different from the one we knew at our home.

She leads by stepping back
back from comforts; back from technology..
She expresses with pencil, not keyboard.
Her American idols are no longer center stage
but a guide who charged her up a mountain
and one who led her through a poor school.

She moves with Assurance
    towards a heart filled with compassion
   and thoughts toward others; not self
She gives me confidence that I can change –
metamorphasize into someone more global
with the ability to step back, so I can
   move ahead like her.

Holly B. – Ruthie’s mom – writing about the TTS21 girls

And . . . from me -- one of my old favorites (that I borrowed and didn't write myself) . . .
Prayer for our Daughters

May they never be lonely at parties
Or wait for mail from people they haven’t
written
Or still in middle age ask God for favors
Or forbid their children things they were never
forbidden.

May hatred be like a habit they never developed
And can’t see the point of, like gambling
or heavy
drinking
If they forget themselves, may it be in music
Or the kind of prayer that makes a garden
of thinking.

May they enter the coming century
Like swans under a bridge of enchantment
And take with them enough of this century
To assure their grandchildren it really
happened.

May they find a place to love,
   without nostalgia
For some place else that they
can never go back to.
And may they find themselves, as
we have found them,
Complete at each stage of their
Lives, each part
They add to.

May they be themselves, long after
we've stopped watching.
May they return from every kind
of suffering
(Except the last, which doesn’t
bear repeating)
And be themselves again,
both blessed and
blessing.

--Mark Jarmon