Wednesday, November 28, 2012

SAISA Volleyball

SAISA Volleyball my Senior Year was fantastic. As a team we got third place and we continued throughout the tournament to challenge the other teams and push ourselves as individuals and a team to our limits. The photos are courtesy of the Lincoln School Yearbook Group.




Thursday, November 8, 2012

Recently our group went to the hospital, instead of interacting with the children we cleaned the main playroom for the kids. Some people complained about how they signed up to work with the kids, which I think is a good reason to join the group, and they didn't want to clean. This made me think though, even if we aren't brightening the children's lives through interaction, do we still have the obligation to attempt to improve their lives through smaller actions? In my opinion, we do, as we made a commitment and we need to work collaboratively to bring about a better world as the next generation. This is why I have no problem with cleaning for the children, as simply dusting and sorting and helping through those types of things can help slightly. This is my personal belief and one reason why I feel good about my continual commitment and collaborative work with Hope for Kids.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Hope for Kids


For the first four meetings of Hope for Kids, we only managed to go to the hospital once and we spent the rest of the Thursdays planning. As a team we decided on different activities that would appeal to different interests of the individual kids. Being sensitive to the kids’ needs and generally their lack of ability to participate in physical activities, we had to come up with activities that would still be fun and engaging. As a group, with individual ideas being reviewed as a whole, we came up with activities such as origami, leaf painting, and board games. I took on a more leading role as I strove to keep the ideas flowing and the topic on track.
Some time during last year or this summer there were several hundred Hope for Kids t-shirts ordered. I was unaware of this, but we now need to find a way to sell them and raise money for the hospital. We first had to sort through all the t-shirts and organize them so as to not be a burden on the teachers who were kind enough to let us store them in their classrooms. We then needed to think of a way to sell them. As I believe that these shirts can be a great marketing method, I am very keen on continuing work in this area, however a conclusion hasn’t been made as to what the group feels we should do first. Several ideas were thrown around including selling tickets to a show of some sort that then pays of the t-shirt price and also raises money for the hospital, or if we could sell them at UN day, or something similar.
The future of this CAS is good for me, as it allows me to take a leadership role through committing to the program and being able to understand the new requirements of the program. Additionally, the group requires me as well as the official leaders, to initiate activities and have the leadership position in maintaining focus and perseverance within the group. Finally, I am lucky because the hospital allows me to have a hands on way of connecting with the people whose lives I’m trying to improve.

Volleyball as a Team Sport

This year has had a short volleyball season. As a senior I am disappointed at this fact as volleyball has been an activity I have committed myself to passionately for over 6 years. We were very lucky that last year’s team was a truly special combination of incredible talent, passion to push ourselves to new limits, and not afraid to try new things. Coming from last years team into a team that is starting almost from scratch is a bit of a challenge; I am one of the first to admit that I sometimes (basically: a lot of the time) lose my temper when we don’t get something this year that we did perfectly last year. 
But I am also very proud of our new volleyball girls. While I am not team captain or co-captain, as one of the three seniors on the team I have a crucial role in that my actions on and off the court and even outside of the gym play an important role. I must be a good example, something which doesn’t always come naturally to me. As one of the older girls I have to often initiate activities, undertake and develop new skills and be supportive. Volleyball more then most sports is a team sport, which makes communication and teamwork crucial. I am thrilled to say that our team this year is much more of a team mentality then the team last year. We have all worked very hard and made much improvement and I’m looking forward to all of us being able to show our ability at SAISA.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

CAS Goals for Semester One of Senior Year



·         Blog at least once a week about CAS accomplished.

·         Include at least one photo or piece of evidence per post. 

·         Improve collaboration with others. Become more of a team member and less of an individual worker.

·         Participate in Hope for Kids: Cancer Hospital weekly, showing perseverance and commitment in my activities, and push my own boundaries in the Service, understand my areas of weakness and work on improving them. Push my boundaries while working with the children. The creative element would come through if I could improve their website possibly.

·         Take leadership roles more often and initiate activities within this role. This would be through Volleyball and Hope for Kids.

·         Simultaneously participate in SAISA volleyball and follow individual training plan outside of school (Tough Mudder training plan).






·         Come up with new and positive ways to document active progress to show perseverance and improve moral. This is response to the understanding that an area of weakness I have is losing commitment when progress isn’t shown in obvious ways.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Contacting Ashwini and Ashani


Ashwini:           
When I needed to get in contact with anyone in the dog rescue/adoption/rehabilitation field, I knew to contact Ashwini again. We exchanged emails and worked collaboratively to determine what organization I would work best in a collaborative sense considering my strengths and weaknesses and what talents I have, and then who we should contact for me to work with. Over the course of several long emails exchanged at unholy times in the morning we worked out that I could meet and discuss my ideas with a friend of Ashwini’s who worked at Odel and Embark, named Ashani.

Ashani:
I spoke with Ashani, the woman who Ashwini recommended over email several times about the global issue of stray dogs and their effect on the community, then I had to face one of my weaknesses, which is talking over the phone with people I don’t know. After several phone calls we organized to meet at Waters Edge to talk about my individual skills and how I could help Embark and Ashani, and which way would be best for everyone for me to help.
Over the course of the meeting I outlined my technical and artistic skills, and we compared schedules to see possibilities of when we could work collaboratively and initiate activities such as the Maharagama Clinic. Overall she outlined several basic possibilities that benefitted my already existing skills and help me find new skills such as public speaking (which I’m terrified of) and advertising. Overall, I could:
·      Help raise awareness on the importance of sterilization and vaccination,
·      Especially in schools to help educate children on sterilization, vaccination and preventing dog bites, also help promote responsible and correct pet ownership,
·      Encouraging others to help save street dogs by adoption,
·      Helping a litter of rescued puppies by fostering or encouraging others to,
·      Volunteer at events like adoption day, sterilization clinics, fundraising events, and more,
·      And helping to fund raise.

Overall we decided I could:
·      Work at the Maharagama Clinic (which spayed and neutered dogs), helping around and cleaning up.
·      Working with special needs dogs.
·      Advertising.
·      Fund raising.
·      Creating awareness in the community of younger individuals (visiting schools, etc.).
·      Possibly training dogs.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Hope for Kids: Cancer Hospital: Second Trip

During my second trip to the cancer hospital, I got to actually interact with the kids (doesn't make the first trip sound to good, does it?). A small group of us including Avinash, Ian, and I were in charge of working collaboratively with each other and the children to do finger painting. We had only two colors of paint, green and blue so we had to get a little creative.
This was an interesting challenge for me because, while I'm artistic and basically enjoy any type of art, I prefer much more precise forms of art. For me to do something vague and more impressionistic was much harder then I expected.
As individual children came to our table we would work through basic instruction on what they could do, then really just let them have free rein over their creative talents. We were also in charge of making sure a large scale mess wasn't created. We had to plan around who would help each child and do what at the station, therefore we created a system where I tried to keep the station generally organized and have the papers drying out after they were painted without flying away. Avinash did most of the interaction with the little kids.
One of the sweetest things I saw happened when a small child saw Ian's painting of a crab. The child then proceeded to recreate the picture, in a different color, and write "Crab." Just like Ian's painting. The fact that the little kid noticed the painting was super sweet, and I know that Ian felt complimented.
It was challenging at clean up time because of the need to keep the kids organized while still accomplishing the task at hand. It is important to understand the implications of our actions, and we must be careful how we act around the kids. Therefore, when a little boy ran up and grabbed some paintings I had made, I simply allowed him to do it as he expected a response. After he grew bored, he put them down on a table and walked off. I then proceeded to collect them.
I know for a fact that this Service trip will increase my tolerance and patience levels, as they are both necessary for interaction.  I also hope that over the rest of the time I do the project, I can bring hope to the kids lives.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Redoing the Service Plan

While I signed myself up for the Service program run by school, I also redid my plan for individual work outside of school. I made sure the plan was specific enough that I would follow it so I could credit the service. I also made sure that it was interesting and detailed on what I wanted so that I would continue to want to work with my ideas. This is the plan:

Margaret Watts
CAS Plan
February 19, 2012

The first time I met Ashwini was when she was boarding our dog, Tina, at her boarding house. Ashwini loves dogs and has adopted several strays before, and we bonded over this mutual love for animals. After my family and I moved into our house with Tina we frequently visited Ashwini to hang with the new dogs and so she got a chance to see Tina as well. It was over these return trips that we started discussing the possibility of a CAS project with street dogs and adoption.
I would work with Ashwini individually except that I need an organization that I could work with collaboratively over a long period time commitment, while doing different stuff such as designing a website or creative networking. Working, as an individual volunteer would be a new challenge for me –and also an area of weakness since I have never really done it before- since I generally am not very comfortable contacting groups and interacting with individuals I don’t know personally. I believe a good way to help an organization would be to design and maintain a website for them, since it would be a modern way to advertise the organizations needs, show their mission, work collaboratively with them, and also develop new skills of my own that would help throughout life; obviously, it would be necessary to first see what the organization needs, instead of simply deciding for them. Also, a website would be a good way to possibly advertise street dogs available for adoption or fostering from the organization, which would deal with the ethical issue of overpopulation of dogs roaming the streets and possibly spreading diseases.
To document my progress with the street dog organization I would blog about it weekly in my CAS blog, “Thinking of Tomorrow.” If I do end up creating a website, and if they allowed it, I could have a link to my blog so that a visitor could see the link between my creation, CAS, and my blog.
The first step to the plan, which will be done in the first week, is to contact Ashwini to see which organization she thinks would be most efficient in interaction and would benefit most from the volunteer work. I would then contact the organization she recommended and discuss with them what they would need in terms of volunteer service. If that went smoothly, I could begin the prerequisite research that would contribute towards developing whatever they wanted me to do (if thy had wanted a product like a website or something similar that I had never done before), or begin service work if they wanted me to interact with the animals and get them acclimated to human interaction (or other direct action similar to that).

Activity
Deadline for Completion
Output/Deliverable
Telephone Ashwini for advice re: street animal organizations and my idea of a website linking people to street animal services available.
19 Feb
Blog re: her advice.

Additional activities input into plan.
Print notices for street dogs and post at school and at other locations where people congregate (Il Gelato).
21 February
Blog re: effectiveness of this approach to get dogs adopted.
Post notice in school newsletter re: puppies for adoption.
21 February
Blog re: effectiveness of this approach to get dogs adopted.
Meet with at least one street animal organization to ask about needs, discuss my skills and time commitment.
27 Feb
Blog re: needs of organization.

Add details and next steps to my plan.
Possibly design informational website where people can find links and resources to help street dogs.



On going
On going blog re: how many people visit the website and the effectiveness of this approach to get street dogs adopted.


Hope for Kids: Cancer Hospital: First Trip

On my first trip for Hope for Kids we only got to spend about an hour at the hospital, still it gave me a good introduction to the individual Service program. For some reason the first thing that really struck me was that we had to remove our shoes before entering the building. I felt this was partly due to the cultural respect, and partially to keep the germs and dirt away from the kids. When we walked into the building I immediately realized that I could return to this place to help out. As we split into groups, I was partnered with Ian and we were assigned with cleaning the common area with the toys such as bikes and toy cars. While some people might feel this was demeaning to have to clean while others got to play with the kids, I feel like this is almost as important because, while the kids need fun interaction, the area also needs to be clean to make sure their already weakened immune systems don't catch anything else.
Ian and I collaboratively came up with the plan to divide up the area of the floor into three and move the equipment that Ian needed to clean in to the middle so I could sweep around it and under the tables at the edges of the room. After that we moved the equipment back, swept the middle of the floor, and then let our perfectionist sides take over. We definitely showed commitment in cleaning the entire area and we both know that an area of strength for us is our perfectionistic tendency to want whatever we start to be finished to the highest level (mainly when it comes to cleaning). We managed to completely clean the entire floor of the room and all the toys/equipment in it in an hour by working collaboratively together.

Overall, I'm really happy with my participation in this Service project and am looking forward to continuing.

Hope for Kids: Cancer Hospital

For my Service requirement for the IB program I recently signed up for a group activity organized by the school, which is the Hope for Kids: Cancer Hospital. While I am still continuing with my own individual Service outside of school, I needed to join in Service in school to keep up the commitment of hours required. I chose the Cancer Hospital because it is an issue close to my heart since almost all the females in my family are genetically predisposed to having cancer. I also chose it because I know cancer is an issue of global importance yet deals closely with every individual who has had to suffer because of it's affects. At the same time, I can work collaboratively with others, both my own classmates, the staff at the hospital, and the kids who have to be there; however, due to the circumstances that we interact in, I must consider the ethical implications of all my actions since it's a very different environment and therefore interactions must be dictated by the situation at the present moment. I also know that every day I go to the hospital I have to plan new activities with the kids because I'm interacting with a human being whose mood changes and I have to plan and initiate new activities to whatever they want and whatever mood they are in that day. I also know this will be a new challenge for me to undertake because I generally haven't worked closely with children before, so it will be a new learning experience where I develop new skills, and at the same time, as I interact every visit, I will develop more awareness of my own areas of strength and areas that I can grow on.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Reflection on Day 2 of Week Without Walls

Famous last words. Today's painting was borderline excruciating. The day started hard enough since we were all tired from yesterday's work, but we showed perseverance by putting on a smile and going and helping the children. When we got to the school the language barrier was there again, however, since we found that we had the time limit of working until 2 PM, we decided to the leave the Sinhalese speakers and extremely patient individuals with the children to play games while most of the maintenance and mural people went off to work.

Our first issue occurred when an individual, in our now very small group dedicated specifically to our mural, decided to repaint and redo the details of a couple of the main animals. Looking back at it now, even they say it was a bad use of the time. This took them about an hour and a half of time we really needed to focus on other issues with the mural.

The next two issues are not related, though they were both relatively major at the time, and do slightly influence each other; the first being that before lunch it was just me, Kavindra and Zahara, and after lunch it was just me and Zahara, the second being that there wasn't enough blue paint to cover the entire sky in one color of blue. The first challenge was actually slightly beneficial because we had space to work around each other and also get to know each other better despite the fact we were rushed for time with so few people to do so much.

As the afternoon started and progressed, the difficulties became almost comedy-like. Right after lunch we had Bryce come and work with the tall roller and paint the higher places that were still out of our reach and beneath the sign. Suffice to say we basically took a shower in blue paint sprinkles. However, this teamwork showed that we could work collaboratively together, since we both had to stand on a wooden table to reach everything we needed to on the wall, we then had to work around each other doing different tasks in similar spaces at the same time. The real difficulties started when Bryce was called back to the maintenance team and another guy, he-who-shall-not-be-named, came in to help. He-who-shall-not-be-named then proceeded to paint past the border of the sign we said to stop at, then after we tried to clarify what went wrong and clear any communication issues, he painted up to the roof on one side as well, so we couldn't make it even without painting the entire upper wall as the sky. I'm not using this as a place to rant. But I was, and still am, annoyed.

To make matters even tenser we were almost completely out of the blue paint we had been using to paint the sky with and the top area of the one side he had been painting was sketchily done and still needed to be gone over. Even though Zahara and I were both pissed off, we knew we still needed to regard and respect his feelings so we gently told him we could handle it from there. After he left we then proceeded to panic. We knew we had to think of a good plan that would actually work with the meager amount of time and materials we had left before we actually started anything. We came up with several plans but the one we decided upon was to paint the top of the wall a slightly different blue we had a bit more paint in, then blend the two colors together with water. It worked well even though it was time consuming and it was just me and Zahara working at this point. The blending actually ended up looking very good and almost intentional.

When we finally finished the sky we then had to deal with the sign saying the name of the school. It would have been blatantly disrespectful to leave the pale green, white and orange of the sign with blue paint splatters and drips  on it. However, even after we roped Onkar into helping us we still had the challenge of being unable to reach the highest parts of the sign. So we came up with a solution that wasn't particularly safe, but it worked, and by this time in the afternoon we were desperate. We put a wood bench on top of the wood table we already had there and then held it while Onkar stood on it and painted.

I feel very proud of the mural we completed for the school because we faced many challenges and overcame them, and we also created a beautiful piece of art for them to enjoy and draw attention to the school with.

During the performances the language barrier was almost painfully obvious because they couldn't understand, and therefore really comprehend and appreciate, the lyrics to the song Stand by Me, though they could appreciate the effort we put into it. Also, we couldn't understand any of the performances they really put effort into presenting for us. Still, it was their thought that counted.

After the performance I got really pissed off because, again, it was only me, Kavindra and Nikhita cleaning everything paint related. I believe that it is important that we clean up after ourselves since it's not our school and we should be respectful of their space. I also felt like I showed true commitment when, once again, I was washing stuff in burning chemicals, killing braincells, and was sticky to touch for the rest of the day until my shower because of the turpentine.

In the end, I'm really glad that we managed to help out with the school, finish the mural, and improve the lives of the children and families hurt by the tsunami. But I was also glad when we got back to the hotel and I got to take a 45 minute shower to get all the paint and turpentine off.

A picture of the finished mural. Unfortunately you can't see the bottom part of the mural, but it gives you a good idea of what the product was. What you can't see in the picture is the Octopus in the lower right hand corner, the seaweed across the bottom, the crab in the middle, the second and part of the first fish, and the two starfish. So actually you can't see a large part of it.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Reflection on Day 1 of Week Without Walls

After the first day or working and helping at the school, I'm exhausted. The day started with us playing Duck Duck Goose with the children, and I immediately found the challenge of the language barrier. Since a large chunk of the class doesn't speak the native language, we dealt with it by having some people go off and start planning the maintenance, and others, me included, demonstrated physically how to play the game as the Sinhalese speakers explained.

I'm actually quite proud of our mural of the underwater scene. We had to consider what to put on the wall, as we needed to include the previous school's, ASD's, elephants that had already been painted, and we needed to cover their signatures. We came up with water and a whale, starfish, octopus, seaweed, fish, and a turtle. As a team, those of us who specifically worked on the ocean mural worked really well together. We planned ahead with the sequence of painting various areas. We started with the main chunk of ocean, then sketched the animals out in chalk. We started painting the animals individually and separately, but realized it went a lot faster if Yanika painted the base color and then Zahara and I did the details and beautification of the animals. One of the main difficulties we faced was when we started working on details and had to use different brushes that we shared with the maintenance crew painting inside. We overcame and even benefitted with this challenge because we ended up using 1 large brush, 2 small brushes, then used our fingers for things like outlines.

By the end of the day we were exhausted, but cleaning up was necessary and an important part of the day. I ended up with Kavindra and Nikhita and we cleaned all the brushed and buckets and rollers in paint remover/turpentine. I think I really showed perseverance in this because a lot of people were just standing around because they were so tired, but I actually got going, finished the job, and completed the day. It is also, quite blatantly obviously, an absolutely annoying and often painful process to clean all the stuff in chemicals that burn skin, leaves surfaces sticky and dyes everything it touches.

By the time we got back to the hotel I wasn't feeling so good, so while we were reflecting I went up to Ms. Lenk who proceeded to hit me on the forehead a couple times and deemed I had a fever. The last part of the day was spent rehearsing our songs for the performance we had on the final day at the school. We chose the to sing Stand by Me as a group. I think that it's a good song, and very meaningful, but I believe we could have chosen a better song that the children could possibly enjoy more, or that they could understand or that was interactive (like Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes). I simply left midway since we were a disjointed and distracted group and I already had everything I needed to know since previous research had been done on the lyrics of the song to memorize them.

I'm proud of the fact we managed to paint all the underwater part in one day and now we just need to finalize the details and paint the upper background/sky.

Goals for Week Without Walls

  • Plan and initiate activities (this can include creating new games with the kids, starting setting up or cleaning up, planning time saving ways to paint the walls, etc.).
  • Be creative (again, it can be any way, creativity is in the approach and execution of a task).
  • Interact collaboratively with others in a way that benefits (this includes being able to make the kids smile and be happy, helping make the teachers lives easier, and working well with my classmates so we can work productively).
  • Be respectful to individuals and the environment we're in (there are cultural differences, gender differences, etc. we need to be respectful of this, as it's not our environment).
  • Have fun (self-explanatory).
  • Help the children and make sure they're comfortable (they don't know us and we're a group of strangers turning up and working at their school, we should at least try to make them comfortable around us as we work there to improve their school).
  • Help throughout the whole trip. No laziness, show perseverance (the school needs to be worked on just as much at the end of the second day as it does at the beginning of the first day).
The picture below shows the the Primary Schools in the area of Hambantota, OSC's grade 11 helped out at school 2 and school 3.