Aarti Rajaratnam, who helps children challenged by an unfriendly
education system.


PHOTO: E. LAKSHMI NARAYANAN


As a student, Aarti C. Rajaratnam didn’t quite walk the conventional
path. She hung out more with the watchman than in class, trained the
school dog to pee on teachers, wrote 14 plays one year and read her
way through the school library. Once, a geography teacher interrupted
her while she was buried between books, and asked her to cut out the
newspaper’s satellite weather forecast picture for two weeks, paste it
sequentially in a notebook and trace the movement of the fuzzy white
patch. Then the teacher said, “That’s the trajectory of the South-west
monsoon. That’s also what’s on Page 144 of our textbook. Now would you
like to come to class?” Aarti did.
Teaching without books
In adulthood, she went on to design a curriculum that taught through
play and took it to 400 schools across rural Tamil Nadu, incorporating
teaching tools made from trash. She also became a clinical
psychologist, specialising in child and adolescent mental health, to
help children drained by an unfriendly education.

Aarti’s work with children began during her Masters in Delhi
University, where she interned at Rajkumari Amrit Kaur Child Guidance
Centre assessing and counselling 7,500 children in 14 months. “It’s
where I learnt to fight for poor and differently-abled children, find
schools that would take them in with their difficulties and actually
care for them,” she says. In June 2002, Aarti brought these skills
back to her hometown, Salem, and began Kriti Play School in a friend’s
spare garage, along with Vasanthi Subramaniam. “We wanted to create a
space where all nine domains of a child’s development — sensory,
self-help, language, physical and gross motor, fine motor, cognitive,
emotional, social and spiritual — could be enhanced through daily
graded activities. Every child learns through visual, auditory or
kinesthetic aids, so we brought these into the classroom too,” she
says.

Aarti’s agrees with philosopher Michel Foucault’s theory that prisons
and schools have similar architecture because the aim in both is to
discipline and correct. “How can you nurture creativity that way?” she
asks. Kriti, therefore, has classes without the standard
chair-and-desk in rows but with walls lined with everything from
tweezers to kitchen scrubs as teaching aids, and a central empty space
for children to use them. Over 12 years, Kriti developed 180,000
different activities, each documented to observe the varied skills it
promoted.

All through Aarti’s journey of discovery at Kriti, she ran a
counselling centre as well and observed increasing numbers of
neurologically capable children unable to perform at school. Many of
them had learning disabilities. “That’s when I realised just how
deep-rooted the problems of our education system were and that I was,
thus far, reaching out only to people who could afford it. There were
thousands in the villages who couldn’t,” she says.

Thus began Aarti’s collaboration with People’s Solidarity Association
(PSA), Trichy, which had a network of micro-credit women’s groups
across villages in Tamil Nadu. Together, they began one-roomed
supplementary education centres where rural children spent their
evenings strengthening their English and Math skills through the
activity-based curriculum. So a centre with 20 children, for instance,
would have one teacher who was a member of the micro-credit group or
an unemployed youth who’d finished school. “We don’t need B.Ed.
graduates. We find just one person who wants to give back to their
village and train them in the curriculum,” says Aarti.

The training focuses on using locally available material as teaching
tools. Hence empty coconut shells, discarded tyres, kola maavu , soda
bottle caps, painted stones, feathers, ropes, wires and leaves find
their way into daily learning. Aarti also has an elaborate waste
management and recycling system in place in which trash from urban
schools is directed to the rural centres and converted into education
aids there. For example, an activity like threading beads through a
rope for hand dexterity is replicated in the village using empty
sketch pen barrels instead of beads; and wooden tools are recreated
from the cardboard sides of used notebooks. Aarti works closely with
each centre for the first three years, after which they grow into
self-sufficiency.

“A centre survives only if the villager has a sense of ownership over
it,” says Aarti. So, in one village, the children’s fathers built the
resource room and the centre provides a daily meal made from egg,
milk, rice and other produce sold by the micro-credit group mothers.
Some centres even kick off with training on pre-natal health, child
care and nutrition for mothers. Every centre, though, compulsorily
runs through a module on child sexual abuse that teaches the children
about their physical, emotional and sexual safety. “There’s much that
goes unnoticed because it’s not spoken about and, most often, it is
incest. To begin healing, the child needs a therapeutic ally and we
train teachers to be that,” says Aarti.

Every new village has caused Aarti to combine her training as a
psychologist and experience as an educationist differently; first to
gauge the needs specific to the area and second to formulate aid from
available resources. The two were tested most vehemently, in early
2005, when People’s Watch roped her in to counsel child victims of the
tsunami. Over 7,000 children in 11 villages such as Colachel, Muttam,
Kelamanakudi and Mellamanakudi had lost their families, homes and
schools. “We couldn’t even think of restarting education because the
children had to overcome trauma first. They also had to learn to
forgive the sea, which was once their home but had turned hostile,”
she says.

The process began by training two teachers — each from the different
schools in the villages — to become barefoot counsellors equipped with
basic group therapy skills using a combination of creative methods
such as puppetry, drama, music and art. Over six months, children
sketched their thoughts on blank paper and the counsellors identified
those with post-traumatic stress disorder from their art. The early
drawings show calm waters full of floating bodies, villagers running
from rising waves, families drowning, fishing boats hoisting the dead,
mass graves, destroyed churches and schools, suicide and abandonment.
Over time though, the pictures evolve to depict rebuilt homes and
schools, small festivities, sowing and reaping — semblances of
normalcy returning.

Close to a decade has passed but the challenges faced on the coast
have permanently shaped Aarti’s approach to teaching, as have the
experiences of easing first-generation learners from villages into
education. Despite so much accomplished, Aarti interrupts every few
lines of conversation with, “We’re here on this earth for barely a few
years, but there’s so much we can do that time!” Even so, her
immediate plans for the future remain unwritten. She says, “I know
there’s a purpose for me and that plan will unfold in time; I’m just
an instrument here.”



We don’t need B.Ed. graduates. We find just one person who wants to
give back to their village and train them in the curriculum.



-- 
Avinash Shahi
MPhil Research Scholar
Centre for the Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India

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