You've come a long way boss!!
   
  long live your teacher (in heaven)
   
  Umesh

mc mahant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
        This school is a lot better--has Tin Roof and Bamboo wall!
  I went to one LP(lower Primary)in Namti 1941-42  where we had a large 
tree(still survives) and a leaky thatched roof. Bamboo Door  could not be 
locked.There was a mechanical DAANG. Floor was worse than Assam PWD roads.We 
carried our sitting grass mats from home.
   One MAASTOR (must say he was dedicated - long live Late Mukuta Borkotoky's 
soul !) HANDLED all 5 classes-total about100. And we had in turn to bring 
delicate flexible Bamboo sticks for him to punish many of us  on our stretched 
palms for failing to learn/recite/apply.
   Once a year an Inspector of Schools with a half pant and stockings ,wearing 
a Sola Topee visited our school from the district Education office.We used to 
stand in Awe &...(what did Bush say aboutIraq?) .
  We will do something about all these.
  Just you Wait!
  Meanwhile MIT can think and tabulate what needs really doing? Maybe different 
optimum modes of learning. Sending a few Dollars will solve nothing.
  mm



  
    
---------------------------------
    
From:  umesh sharma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To:  [email protected]
Subject:  [Assam] Outlook: Tin Roof And Bamboo Walls
Date:  Thu, 28 Dec 2006 22:02:02 +0000 (GMT)
  

  I got this info thru ASHA www.ashanet.org DC chapter --who in turn got it 
from Boston/MIT chapter. Seems like we might get some funding from DC chapter.
      
     Umesh
      
     http://www.outlookindia.com/mad.asp?fodname=20060213&fname=Making&sid=1
      
                         That's enough to bring the sheltering shade of 
education to the children of a forgotten hamlet           Seven-year-old 
Sanjay’s father Mahendra Boro works at a stone quarry. His mother supplements 
the meagre family income by selling home-made fermented rice beer. Himashri, 6, 
is the daughter of a woodcutter,   
Haren Basumatary. And four-year-old Apon’s father Ratneswar Bora is a daily 
wage-earner. For these families with uncertain income, living in Pamohi and 
three adjoining tribal hamlets on the outskirts of Assam’s capital Guwahati, 
educating their children was a distant dream until Uttam Teron set up a school 
with a difference, right at his homestead.                                      
                                      As   
Uttam watched kids wander about aimlessly, it set him thinking about ways to 
keep them occupied. A school was the only answer. It began at his home.         
                           "I would see little children wandering about all 
day, some of them venturing dangerously close to the stone quarries near Pamohi 
where I live," 30-year-old Uttam told Outlook. That set this man thinking about 
a way out to keep these kids engaged during the day when their parents are out 
          working or looking for work. Uttam, who graduated in 1999 from a city 
college, was already an active member of the Guwahati Zilla Moina Parijat, a 
local group working with children, giving them training in leadership, music, 
physical education etc. "I "I was training kids anyway and decided to set up a 
school at home to take kids around my village under my wings." In 2003, Parijat 
Academy was born.     The four-room school has a tin roof and bamboo walls. 
Uttam had saved Rs 800 from the fees he received after giving tuition to a few 
students outside his village. With this amount, he got a pair of desks and 
benches made by a village carpenter. The school was ready to enrol students 
from nursery to Class III. Today, Parijat Academy has 41 students between three 
to seven years of age. "Initially, the parents were reluctant to send their 
children. What would they gain by attending school, they’d ask. Our persistence 
paid off, and now we have no seat to enrol more 
than what we have," says Uttam. If that sounds exclusionary, consider this: 
only three of the 41 students at his school pay the fixed monthly fee of Rs 80. 
The parents of the rest just cannot manage to pay. "We are too poor," says 
Ratneswar Bora, a guardian.           So, how does Uttam run such a school and 
pay his five teachers? Says he: "Sometimes, if we are lucky, we get small 
donations from individuals. A few organisations have helped us in a small way." 
Once, during a visit to Bodh Gaya, Uttam learnt of a Buddhist organisation in 
Thailand that renders assistance to underprivileged children. He sent an e-mail 
and within a month, the Supreme Master Ching, which has an office in Mumbai, 
sent him a draft of Rs 30,000 towards uniform for the kids. The blue-and-white 
uniform that his students wear have lost their sheen. They are more than a year 
old now. A welfare group in Guwahati donated textbooks and a small amount of 
money with which Uttam purchased three 
ceiling fans to beat the summer heat. "I pay my teachers whenever I have money. 
Rest of the time, they bear with me. I don’t know how to thank them," he said.  
         What does Uttam need the most? "We need furniture, funds to pay 
salaries to the teachers, school uniforms, textbooks and bags, milk for the 
undernourished students and medical check- up and treatment for kids suffering 
from various diseases." Tuberculosis, skin diseases and jaundice, he says, are 
the common illnesses which the kids suffer from. "Teron sir is working very 
hard but unless we receive support, it would be extremely difficult for us to 
achieve our goal of educating the poor children in this area," says Baijayanti 
Teron Handique, the headmistress. Uttam feels that if he can go ahead in 
educating the underprivileged children in the neighbourhood, the lot of the 
people in the hamlets can be improved in 15 to 20 years’ time. A beginning has 
already been made.     Uttam Teron can be 
contacted at: Parijat Academy, PO. Garchuk, Guwahati—781 035, Assam. E-mail: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Mobile: 098640-41711 


          —Wasbir Hussain 


Umesh Sharma
5121 Lackawanna ST
College Park, 
(Washington D.C. Metro Region)
MD 20740 

1-202-215-4328 [Cell Phone]

Ed.M. - International Education Policy
Harvard Graduate School of Education,
Harvard University,
Class of 2005

weblog: http://jaipurschool.bihu.in/
website: www.gse.harvard.edu/iep     
  
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Umesh Sharma
5121 Lackawanna ST
College Park, 
(Washington D.C. Metro Region)
MD 20740 

1-202-215-4328 [Cell Phone]

Ed.M. - International Education Policy
Harvard Graduate School of Education,
Harvard University,
Class of 2005

weblog: http://jaipurschool.bihu.in/
website: www.gse.harvard.edu/iep
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