Sunday, 23 February 2014

Akagera National Park - Guest blog by Mum


Last weekend, we visited Akagera which is only 1 hour from Amy's home in Kibungo, provided you are not in an ancient land cruiser with a defective fan belt !! 5 hours later, we were rescued by the kind manager of Ruzizi Tented Lodge and were whisked into paradise. 


Despite the delayed start to our safari, we were able to take a boat ride early evening to see the hippos and the birds. It was a magical trip. 

We had a League of Nations dinner at the Lodge that night (delicious food) and somehow, quite by chance, the Europeans grouped themselves at one end of the table with the Americans at the other. A restful night was had by Jem and I, but Aimes was plagued by a hippo grazing next to her tent and woken by a mongoose scurrying by!

After an amazing breakfast at sunrise, we met our intrepid land cruiser and travelled to the plains at the top of the park, where we saw zebra, giraffes, water buffalo, crocodiles, hippos, warthogs, impala and baboons. 


On the journey home, we stopped off at Amy's favourite watering hole, Jambo beach. 

Friday, 21 February 2014

Gisenyi -guest blog by Amy's Dad

Staying in fab tented lodge accommodation with all mod cons:

Had an interesting ride by moto-taxi to the old market in Gisenyi where the girls bought lots of fabrics. 
Visited a very interesting craft cooperative where we all bought bags and colourful things as presents. Now at a beautiful hotel on the lake/ beach where swimming is great. Just enjoyed excellent food and a bottle of sparkly. Now relaxing in the sun and preparing for a ziz. 

Back to our beautiful tented accommodation tonight and who knows what tomorrow will bring. 

Thursday, 20 February 2014

Birthday gorillas - guest blog by my Mum

On Amy's birthday yesterday, we visited the Titus group of gorillas in Volcanoes National park. We were told afterwards that our trek should have been a medium one but ended up being long as we had to trek further in the end to find the group.

I could not believe how close we were allowed to be to them. We first met a mother with an 8 month baby, and then close behind a young blackback who literally pushed past Amy to go down the hillside. 

When he had settled we went to see him again and I was really looking into his eyes !!! The guide realised he was getting a little anxious so I had to break the stare - it was an amazing moment . 

(This is actually the silverback as we didn't get a shot of the blackback staring!).

Then we met another mother with a 13 month  baby who was as cheeky as anything and a real little showoff. He swung on the branches about three foot above our heads doing all sorts of tricks for us and then flung himself onto the ground as if he was diving  ! 

 We saw the main male Silverback ( Rano, son of Titus who is now the dominant male ) and he gave us some lovely yawns but no beating of the chest.

 He had two female gorillas lying by his side having a siesta. Finally we watched the same cheeky baby play fighting with another young female for a good ten minutes, then just as we were leaving , the adult female rushed over and literally slapped Amy on the leg. That is a sign they want to play !!! we then left the group, had our sandwiches and descended back to reality. 

A round trip of about 6 hours, so our very own Silverback (Amy's dad) enjoyed having a snooze when we got back and Amy and I had a glass of birthday wine! 

Friday, 7 February 2014

English Teachers in Action: Touch the Board

Here is an English teacher playing the game Touch the Board with her learners. She brought in real objects from home to make the game multi-sensory. The children, as you will see, loved it! Next time she is going to try to choose learners quickly so that even more can play within the five minute time period.

Working with English Teachers

The start to the new term has been extremely busy. Having identified 20 English teachers for P4 and P5 in my 12 focus schools, I trained them for two days on the use of Phonics and Comprehension activities in the classroom. The training went very well and the participants were  enthusiastic about the new methodologies. We spent time in classrooms so that the teachers could try out the activities, which gave them the opportunity to highlight any difficulties. I then spent the past 2 weeks visiting all my teachers in schools, where I observed them teaching a lesson and trying out the activities we had looked at together. The results were great and I was incredibly impressed with how quickly they had mastered the activities and how positive they seemed about using them every day in English lessons.