Showing posts with label Wednesday facts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wednesday facts. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Wednesday Facts

Today is Wednesday. It's no Friday but it's not Monday, either.

To honor the fact that we are in the middle of week, I will tell you five facts of life, about me or someone else, faith, world and existence in general.

And what I want from you, my readers?

I want to know about you! 

Leave me your facts, so I can enjoy reading them!

They can also be about you, your life or anything you find fascinating in this world or in the world beyond.

Today I want to share you facts about our work here in Ecuador.


1. I work in a developmental project called “The learning path for indigenous disabled children and young people in district of Napo”. It is a mission by Finnish Free Evangelical Church and its sister church Iglesia Pacto Evangélico del Ecuador or Ecuadorian Covenant Church. The project is funded by Finnish Foreign Office and its part of their developmental work in third world countries. Our local partner here, the church, has a foundation called Fundación Adelanto Comunitario Ecuatoriano or FACE that administrates the chuch’s diaconal work. We are part of the local Covenant church’s diaconal branch. I know it’s long and complicated and sometimes even I don’t who I actually work, LOL.

2. The projects started because the local Bilingual Intercultural Education Department in Napo province in Ecuador, asked for support to create an inclusive and special education program. There have not been any special education schools in the bilingual system, ever, in Ecuador. There are several indigenous groups in Ecuador but in Napo the biggest group is Kichwa indigenous people and that is who we are working with.


3. Our goal here has been to develop a culturally appropriate model for inclusive and special education in kichwa schools. It has been a challenge and a blessing. On one side the disability is a huge taboo in the culture and has made our work hard, on other side, there are no bad educational practices to get rid of. The educational department has opened their doors and, surprisingly, the communities and the people have opened their hearts to the disabled students. It has been a struggle but they are, mostly, receiving an education.

4. We provide training for the special education teachers and regular teachers about inclusion and special education techniques and methods. The foundation has a multiprofessional team that both educates the teachers, administrative staff and parents and does evaluations, assessments and helps the teachers to create personal learning plans for the inclusive and special education students. We also do rehabilitation to the students together with the teachers.

5. There are 37 schools involved in our program with a total of 42 special education teachers. These are all regular schools with a special education classroom. The students’ needs range from learning disabilities to severe and multiple disabilities. In total there are 456 children and youth with disabilities included in our program and in the different schools. Some of them are in total inclusion; some are in a support program where they are drawn out of the classroom for specific classes. There are students who study in a special education classroom, students who are visited by a teacher at their homes and as something brand new we have started a program that prepares youths and young adults with disabilities to an adult life.

There are a lot of challenges, a lot of needs but also a lot of will and love.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Wenesday facts

Today is Wednesday. It's no Friday but it's not Monday, either.

To honor the fact that we are in the middle of week, I will tell you five facts of life, about me or someone else, faith, world and existence in general.
 
And what I want from you, my readers?
 
I want to know about you! 
 
Leave me your facts, so I can enjoy reading them!
 
They can also be about you, your life or anything you find fascinating in this world or in the world beyond.
 
 
Here I go:
 
1)  When I was a child I used to love cross country skiing and skating. My mother's brothers are Finnish champions in Winter Biathlon (skiing and shooting) and I used to play that I was a biatholonist myself. Until as a teenager I started to suffer from undiagnosed astma that was triggered, among other things, by cold. It finally got so bad that I started to hate cold Finnish winters. You would too if you couldn't breath. And that is one of the reasons why I am here in Ecuador, in a country without winter.
 
 
2) I have always wanted to be a missionary. Or at least since I was six years old. That was the first time I told my parents that I wanted to be a missionary when I grew up. But as a child I thought I would go to Africa, like all the other missionaries. When I grew up alittle, I felt that my calling was in India and then I started dreaming about going to China. But when I was in High School I met a girl whose family was missionaries in Bolivia. I talked with her and her family and went to home and told my parents that we were all going to go as missionaries to Bolivia. My parents did have a calling but they felt, after many disapointments, that it was just not what God had meant to happen. But my insisting got them to call to our Church and led to them coming to Ecuador as missionaries. After I graduated from High School and couldn't come with them anymore. So, I came to visit them, and here I am 17 years later. It was a long visit :)
 
 
3) I co-sleeped with my son and carried him around in a sheet, as they call carrying cloth here in Ecuador. He was a colicy baby and cried a lot. And the only thing that would make him stop crying, eventually, was me carrying him around, wrapped in the sheet and singing my lungs out.
 
 
4) I studied first three years in the college for a teaching degree. I dropped that and studied a year for a year in a nursing school. Then I dropped that and got me a degree as an English as Foreign Language teacher from a University. After I graduated I told myself that I was finally going to study something that I actually liked. And started to study my Masters degree in Psychopedagogy. It is about the same as Special Education teacher but mixed with some Psychology studies. It took me some time to find what I really love to do but when I found it, it was love for ever :)
 
 
5) I am a movie cryier. I was already before I got bregnant. But after that it has been impossible. Now I see a pic of something sad, or see a video at Youtube of poor children, or watch a movie, and as they say here, I'm a sea of tears. I just can't stop them. I keep sobbing and sobbing and it's really embarasing. We went to see Toy Story 3 with my son to the movie theater and I cried out loud. And it hasn't gotten any better. I still keep crying at the movies and my son is nine. Can't blame it on him anymore.


Now it's your turn...