I can hardly believe that that it is
almost six months since I first came to Happy House. My initial impression was one of happy,
smiley welcoming children (and staff) and this has only grown during my time
here. I have felt really privileged to have been able to be a part of the
school.
The children are so responsive as well as
curious; they are constantly asking questions about the UK.
Teaching in Kenya is much more formal
than in the UK and there is much more testing rather than teacher assessment to
check the children’s progress and achievement.
The children seem perfectly okay with this which is interesting
considering all the cries in the UK that testing can be detrimental.
When I first had to teach the empty number line, I
thought it was rubbish! However I have
to admit that I am now a convert and it has definitely improved my mental
maths.
In England the children are encouraged to discuss what they are doing
and we talk a lot about patterns in times tables . This can obviously lead to a pretty noisy
classroom and I have to say that our children’s actual knowledge of the times
table is not nearly as good as here.
What is clear is that no one method is
better than another but I hope having a few new ideas might have helped the
teachers.