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My Village, My Life

What's in the resource

Meet some of the people who live in villages in West Africa.
Find out about their lives and the choices they face. Talk about how you would respond to the same situations.

Using this resource in the classroom will open up areas of creative involvement and exchange of ideas, based on real-life development situations and involving genuine choices for all participants.

It is based on three true-to-life situations:

Making Choices in Bilam Perga, about deciding how best to use the profits from the sale of a sheep.

Landing on Your Feet, about making a start in business as a young disabled weaver.

Shall We Plant Trees, about convincing the family to look after the environment.

For more details or if you want to buy a copy, please email Betty East

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Curriculum Links and Ways to use this pack

My Village My Life meets KS 3 and 4 Citizenship teaching requirements as follows.

Key Stage 3

1. Knowledge and understanding about becoming informed citizens.

2. Developing skills of enquiry and communication

3. Developing skills of participation and responsible action


Key Stage 4

1. Knowledge and understanding about becoming informed citizens.

2. Developing skills of enquiry and communication

3. Developing skills of participation and responsible action

In other curriculum areas, for example, Geography and History, the information in this pack can serve as a valuable source of information and visual images.
 

Get started with role play.

Each main exercise in My Village, My Life has four characters and can be the basis of a role play. How do you introduce role play in the classroom?


“What’s Important?”  - See Graphical version of this site for the exercise below

One exercise in My Village, My Life asks pupils to rank some of the things that are important in their lives.
The exercise has been done by pupils in Carlisle and in Piela, in Burkina Faso. Find out how their opinions differ. But first, try the exercise yourself.
 

Place these items into the circle that show how important it is to you. Only three items can go into the “most important” circle. You may add two further words of your own if something not on the list is very important to you.

 

School, Food and Homes came top when the exercise was done in UK schools. Pupils in Carlisle added Sports and Holidays most often, but some put School in the "Least Important circle.

Sometimes things we have readily at hand are not so important even though they may be essential to life.

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What's important for pupils in Bilam Perga?

The exercise was done in the school at Bilam Perga in January 2004.
Good Health was the thing most groups selected as most important overall. Water, School and Land came next. Animals and Clothing received no "most important" rankings.
Pupils added these things to their lists: horses, work, cattle, grain stores, wool, trees and certificates (qualifications).

Other schools do the exercise
Two more schools did the "What's Important?" exercise in January 2004.
At one school near Fada N'Gourma, pupils asked why people in the UK put such a low priority on the importance of land. We replied because few people are farmers. Most people buy food in supermarkets and do not grow food themselves.

The class then wanted to know if the farms in the UK were very large. We said that they were. A long discussion followed about the pros and cons of large farms. Every child in the class in Burkina Faso had some vegetables growing near their home.

Updates on some of the people from My Village, My Life

Going back to Bilam Perga:
The role play on the importance of girls' education was set in the village of Bilam Perga. In a day-long visit in 2001 we had attended a women's group meeting and discussed many things. Sheep purchased as lambs through a loan scheme were paraded. The only woman to attend school explained why she agreed that it was important. Many mothers' hands went up when we asked "Who will send her daughter to school?"

The good news from Bilam Perga this January was that in the youngest class at the village school, a class of 52 pupils, there were 27 girls and 25 boys. In the class where I had done the exercise, two year-groups were housed together for a lack of teachers, making it a class of 73: with only 18 girls.

But the case study was based on one woman and her plans for her baby daughter. Dayamba Dayéri and her baby were on the cover of the resource. A neighbour saw the photo and ran to get Dayamba. When she came towards us, accompanied by several other women, she stopped in her tracks at the sight of the photo. She said something to the other women, but not to us. Finally someone translated: the baby in her arms in the photo had died. The other women turned the pages of the resource and recognised many of their neighbours. But for Dayamba it was not a happy moment. We left without prying into all of the details: why, when, how? One of the other women held the resource up for me when asked. Dayamba did not want to touch it.

It's a lesson in the realities of life in West Africa, and a sad one. Thankfully there was good news as well: much more good news than bad, in fact. Things are changing for the better overall. But one little girl would not ever get to school.

Did George's father plant trees?

People at George's school in Burkina Faso, Taagou School, were very happy to see photos of their class in My Village My Life.
Some remembered the visit we made in 2001 to collect photos and information. This time everyone wanted to be sure to get into the photos, just in case another book was written.
But where was George? He'd left school; no one knew why. So we would not follow up on the story about whether the lessons in the environment had resulted in George's father planting trees near his home.

We asked the class if anyone present had convinced their fathers to plant trees. Two hands went up. It's difficult, of course, telling your parents what to do: more so in Burkina Faso than in the UK. Besides, environmental education happens not just in schools, but with adult farmers during training at model farms.

We asked another question: how many of the pupils present would plant trees when they were adults and had their own families? All the 47 pupils said that they would.

How to feed in your comments

To International Service:
Download a feedback form in word format,
complete it and email it back to IS, Betty East

To the Global Dimension website:
My Village, My Life is described on http://www.globaldimension.org.uk/res/resultsdetail.asp?resID=849
You can send your review straight to this DfID website.


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