I worked as a volunteer for LEAP -a Becoming I collaboration with Teach for India. This is my experience of teaching dramatics to the kids for the first time at Khushi Rainbow Home.
(this was also posted on my fellow's blog nakularora.wordpress.com )
(this was also posted on my fellow's blog nakularora.wordpress.com )
The emotion behind deciding to work with kids for the first
time in my life was an amalgamation of two very different things. First was the
greed for the purely selfish thought of feeling good, of feeling proud, you
might even add a scene from a movie here, i really wanted to feel the slow
motion moment of pleasure but what trespassed this feeling was an instant kick
back to the real world of knowing to only have a few favorite teachers,
of nick-naming them, of hating them instantly and eyeing them as a totally
different group of humans- the ‘teachers’!
Definitely I was scared at first because I didn't want to
ruin my chance and a brief session with our lovely fellow made me even nervous
as well as excited as the big day arrived. I have always seconded Jason Mraz’s
lyrics reciting ‘our name is our virtue’ (well rgere are always the exceptions being the
unfortunate ones who get christened with an opposite sex name), the kids in the
Khushi Rainbow Home truly embodied the spirit of the name.
Contrary to the fears of acceptance, the girls welcomed us
with arms wide open, no literally they did so. We were either welcomed for every
session by their wide innocent smiles or we would find them watching some movie
or the other, they were true movie buffs! They had pure warmth to offer, and an
always willing mind to use you as a pole to swing from!
Well a good homework is always recommended and we did ours
just fine. The Salman crazed students we were about to teach easily befriended
us with the utterance of three magic words-‘hud hud dabangg’ (obviously
followed by the famous hand-belt gesture) .Moreover these little Madhuri Dixits
of dancing made us dance with them which was definitely great fun except that
it wasn't our field in question. But we managed our way around inviting their
ideas in the script and doing fun dramatics exercises (tip- Simon says and
London statue ALWAYS works!) and finally producing our play.
A very peculiar thing about our class was that it wasn't a
classroom in the proper sense; we went to their shelter home and just like the
circus tiger and the ring master’s power relationship, we had to constantly
fight to lay a proper system keeping in mind the fact that it was their
territory we intruded upon. But they were kids alright, they understood, sometimes
they didn't but then we were prepared to be on our toes.
I remember reading it in a newspaper interview, the
interviewee said that to test a person’s creativity see how he behaves around
kids. And man did we come up with a powerhouse worth of energy and an Indian TV
serial writer’s creativity!
What i learned from this experience was that to be around
kids you need to think fast and in sync with the people you are working with. I
learnt that we couldn't lose control except for when we were dancing. Repetition
and inspiring interest is the key and speaking their language a must!
After crazy practices we put up a good show! And what I take
back from this experience is the understanding of how crucial co-curricular
activities are , how important education is , how impartial the world is, how
innocent a child is , how rewarding sharing is and how brutally honest the kids
can be!
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