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LEGO Fun in COBET

15/1/2018

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One of the gifts sent out by Galway Education Centre this summer was a huge box of LEGO. Sr. Annette decided to start a Saturday building club in the COBET project. While preparing the LEGO for the first session, dividing it into boxes etc, I discovered that LEGO had never been seen before in Mbagala. The Tanzanian nuns, the teachers (primary and secondary) all expressed amazement at the colourful interlocking blocks. 
I got a bit worried myself and set about making examples for the pupils to see. As the COBET children speak Swahili and have very little English, I wouldn't be able to explain very well what they could make with the LEGO.
The first LEGO Saturday dawned and at 9am 14 kids and a teacher waited for me. The pupils were all in uniform and had been chosen by the principal as inventive children who could be good construction.
I showed them the samples I had made and then showed them the LEGO pieces. Through their teacher translating into Swahili I asked them to make a vehicle and off they went to work.
I have never worked with a quieter, more engrossed set of students. There wasn't a sound for two solid hours. I thought the two hours set aside for the workshop was too long and that I would have to break it up with activities. Not a hope!
These kids were intent on making their vehicles and trying every tiny piece of LEGO. It was amazing to see what they came up with.
After two hours of LEGO making, only interrupted by my insistence of photographs, we all gathered around a table to play "Sinking Ship", a board game also donated by the Galway Education Centre. Needless to say, the children had not much experience playing board games and they seemed to really enjoy this type of concentration game.
Finally I had to choose the best vehicle and pictured below is the winner with her prize of the Sinking Ship board game. 
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Tanzania Features in the Connacht Tribune!

11/9/2017

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22tc2017-09-01.pdf
File Size: 6524 kb
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23tc2017-09-01.pdf
File Size: 5954 kb
File Type: pdf
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The Connacht Tribune of Thursday 31st of August featured a lovely piece about Sr. Annette and her work in Tanzania. I had forwarded the July article from the Citizen newspaper to the editor Dave O'Connell thinking he might be interested in a good news story about a nun from Kilconnell.
Dave seemed to really like the story and talked very enthusiastically about it on the Keith Finnegan show on Galway Bay FM that morning! Click on this link and skip up to 1:11:40 to hear him talking about the article.
Here is the Youtube video he mentions:
You can read the article in full by following this link. 

The online edition doesn't have all the photos so above are pdf's of the actual paper kindly sent to me by Dave so I could email them to Sr Annette. 

If you are viewing this blog post on a phone you will probably have to download the pdf link at the top. If you are viewing this on a laptop or computer, you shouldn't need to do any downloading!
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Coderdojo Tanzania

25/8/2017

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Just over one year ago, there was no Coderdojo in Tanzania and now there are two!

Coderdojo

Coderdojo itself is an amazing story. The first Coderdojo club was hosted in Cork, Ireland by James Whelton. He had famously hacked into the iPod Nano and his schoolmates asked him to teach them about coding. This concept of peer tutoring has developed (with the help of co-founder Bill Lao) into the Coderdojo Foundation with over 1,100 clubs in 63 countries.

​Coderdojo Debrabant

Last year I had a mission to set up the first Coderdojo of Tanzania. Thanks the the great teachers and principal of Debrabant, that plan came to fruition. Read about it here
This year I returned with a gift of 5 Raspberry Pi's from the Coderdojo Foundation. The teachers were amazed and delighted with the gift and have great plans for their use. The possibilities are endless, especially with all the support materials available on the Coderdojo website. 
Debrabant Secondary school is known as a very innovative school in Dar es Salaam. With 80 computers for use by the students, it is giving the students a great advantage preparing for their state exams. The school already participates in Young Scientist Tanzania and these Raspberry Pi computers might be incorporated in a project in the future!
Picture
Equilax (Computer Lab Technician) and teachers Paulina & Reginald with the Raspberry Pi's and a folder of Coderdojo Scratch, Raspberry Pi, HTML and App Inventor sushi cards I printed from the Coderdojo website. I also gifted Paulina with my volunteer t-shirt from this years Coolest Projects.

MEMKWA Coderdojo

This year my plan was to open a second Coderdojo in the COBET Street Children School. I spent most of my time with the COBET school last year and their teacher of that time Rodney. Read about it here
Since then Rodney has taken a job in the bank but his wife Irene has taken over as the full-time computer teacher. Rodney still maintains a huge interest and participated in the Train the Trainer sessions with Africa Code Week in June. He also takes some pupils in his spare time to do some further work on coding with them-basically hosting an unofficial Coderdojo! Some of the COBET pupils also took part in the Africa Code week training sessions in June. 
He took a morning off work to catch up with me and was delighted with my plan of registering COBET as the second Coderdojo in Tanzania. We registered it in it's Swahili name MEMKWA and Rodney is the proud champion. 
Picture
Rodney in the process of registering MEMKWA Coderdojo.

​Further Reading

​Publicity and articles following the opening of last years Coderdojo in Debrabant:
 
  • Coderdojo Foundation website: https://coderdojo.com/news/2016/09/12/tanzanias-first-dojo/
  • Journal.ie Irish News Website:  http://www.thejournal.ie/coderdojo-fifth-birthday-2980639-Sep2016/  
  • My account of summer 2016:   www.folens.ie/content/eilis-treacy
  • Irish Primary Teachers Magazine p.50/51:  http://www.into.ie/ROI/Publications/InTouch/2017/April2017/InTouch_April2017.pdf​​
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Saku Primary School 2007-2016

10/7/2017

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10 years ago I was a 6th class teacher working alongside Mr Johnston in Creagh NS. 10 years on I'm returning for another summer in Tanzania and it all goes back to those years teaching 6th class with Mr Johnston!
A bit of background first. Mr Johnston started the Confirmation project many years ago with his sister in law Sr. Annette. Each year before the 6th class made their Confirmation, Sr. Annette would write and tell them of a project that needed funding. Sometimes it was a well for a village, the first ever project was tools for an apprentice and often the project was something to do with a school.
In 2007 Sr. Annette wrote and told the pupils about a remote village called Saku.  The children had to walk an hour to get to the closest school. In rainy season this was impossible and very dangerous due to flooding and wild animals. She asked the pupils for their help to build the school. She had started schools before with the assistance of the Creagh and Attyrory pupils. Then when these schools are up and running, the government take them over and fund them from then on.  
The pupils rose to the challenge and pledged some of their Confirmation gift money. They also took part in a sponsored walk. Mr Johnston decided it was time to visit all the projects he had been involved with down through the years and flew to Tanzania that Easter with his two sons in tow. 
A sum of €7000 was sent in total that year. 
I prepared a short video with Mr. Johnstons footage of 2007 and my visit to Saku school last summer. The number on the roll now is over 3000 pupils. Yes three thousand! 
Enjoy!
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    Tanzania

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