Saturday, March 16, 2013

Science Unfair

Yeah I said Unfair not Fair, pun fully intended.

We have a local science unfair contest, that can take a winner all the way into the nationals. I also learned that the contest information and dates were known and announced some time ago.

But of course, our dean, who coordinated this contest for our school, scrambled and had kids do their science projects the day prior, to have everything ready as they will be leaving for the unfair tomorrow.

The dean asked me to open the computer lab in the evening for "small" time (meaning long time).  So I opened the computer lab at 7p-8p, but actually it was 7p-10p. And I ended up typing project reports for like 6 teams because they were taking forever typing with one-finger, and it was already 9:45 but most of them went as far as their cover pages. So I rapid-typed the rest of their reports (most are only 3 or 4 pages long each fortunately).

Looking at the 20+ students working on the computers to research on their topics and writing (no printing) down what they needed.  It was great seeing the computer lab true purpose being put into use.

I asked the Dean how come I do not see any deaf students participating in the Science Unfair? The Dean seem a little perplexed not really able to see any deaf students.

These students told me "God blessed me, for my help". Aw what a way to wrap it up that evening!

On the following day, the day of the Unfair, I decided to grab my dSLR and was about to leave the school to walk down the road to the nearby boys High School where the Unfair is held.  But I noticed 4 students still working in a classroom.  I popped in and realized three of four students were deaf.  They said the Dean grabbed them at 5:30am this morning and made them think up of a science project and work on it.  Of course the Dean took all other students and walked toward the Unfair, leaving them behind, totally unprepared and unmotivated.

But fortunately they decided on a mathematic solution explaining why a Cylinder water tank holds more volume than a Square water tank, thus it is more efficient, and so forth.  I helped type their reports and they managed to pull together some posters and wrote their project o it.

We three walked to the Unfair together, and fortunately (for me) we did not have to wait long for our turn, they managed to get called to present.  Of course there is no interpreters, so a student from our school volunteered to interpret.

Watching their presentation was bittersweet experience, knowing the unfair circumstances they were placed in, they explained their project the best they could, but I noticed that out of like every 200 signed words they used, the student interpreter voiced like 5 words.  I have no clue how their presentation sounded on the judge ears.  At the end, the judges asked questions, but the interpreter could not facilitate it well enough to make an impression.

Breathe in, breathe out, breathe in.  Counting one, two, three.

I am proud of these boys, they are winners in my eyes.

Addendum:  I just learned later in the evening that these boys won 4th place out of 13 schools competing in the mathematics category, and that our school won 4th place out of 13 schools in total scores in all categories as well.  I am stratching my head on how that is possible.  Maybe I have such a high expectations and standards from America, and everything I saw that I thought were "wrong" are actually "normal".  Umm.
 







Monday, March 4, 2013

Kenyan Election Day Update


Today is the election day, a national holiday.  33,000 poll stations opened at 6am and will close at 5pm; however, for only those people who are already on queue will be allowed to vote past 5pm.

Some tidbits:

  • Long queues at polling stations, some as far as 2-3 kilometers (abt 1.5 miles)
  • Some technical problems such as thumbprint reader not working, female names with male faces popping up on poll station computers, etc.
  • Some people started queuing at 4am, and voted at 10am, half of the time waiting in the cold and dark.
  • Some polling stations got some mix ups causing either delays in opening poll (6am)
  • Unlike in America, there is not really any "exit poll" where we would know which candidate are unofficially leading
  • Also we do not know when exactly an official announcement of winning candidate (must be within 72 hours tho), or if we will have a run-off election on April 10th (I think) of only two top candidates
  • Other than typical local and isolated violence, not necessarily related to the elections itself, they were mostly related to the police (some of them were killed), unlike in 2007 where it was mainly community against another community.

My uneducated observations:

  • Elections should be peaceful, in despite to the long waits, and technical glitches
  • The real problem (if it should arise) would probably be AFTER the polling closes -- on how things are counted, how things are kept honest, and if there are too much glitches raising speculations of corruption.
  • The Peace Corps remain tentative on our release back to our sites, and whether we would consolidate again should there be a run-off election.  We will know by Thursday.

So, we continue to enjoy our little Paradise here in the getaway resort.  We had Football (actually football), and Football (soccer).

More updates to follow.










Life in Paradise

Now that all Peace Corps volunteers are consolidated at a nice resort during the Kenyan elections, we are having such a great time, great food, great facilities, and so forth.  We even had Peace Corps Olympus!

Enjoy these pictures and most of them are self explanatory.

Running with the wild!




Love to run in the sunrise!



Having a who-blinks-first contest with the Giraffe!

Wildebeests











Education Sector