Friday, 28 September 2012

Contrasts


We have been in Torit now for nearly 5 weeks.  The weather was very hot and dry for a few days giving us a taste of what is to come in the dry season but it is cooler again now.  We are settling into a bit more of a routine now. Working from about 08.45 until 13.00, then having lunch and returning to the office from 14.00 to 17.00.  There isn’t any power or Internet access available over the lunchtime period.  It looks as if we will have to stay in the guest house (see below) for the immediate future although basic when compared with home, it has water and electricity from 18.00 until 23.00 most evenings. 

Eastern Equatoria State Guesthouse


Torit Meeting Point (where we eat)



I’ve been mainly office based in the State Ministry of Education, my role is to provide advice on anything from leadership, management and planning to teacher training, HR and finance systems. The work I’ve done to date has mainly centred on planning and advising on job descriptions.  I made one school visit last week (see below).  The schools fall into 3 main categories, government, community or private.  This is a very new government school, only established in February this year and currently has 610 children on role in the main school and 110 in the pre-school.  The school has a number of challenges including not having enough classrooms for all the children, insufficient desks and textbooks, teachers not turning up to work, not being able to retain pupils until the end of their primary education particularly girls, the community using the toilet and water resources during the day, no electricity or boundary fence.   Sometimes there isn’t even chalk to write on the blackboard.  Teachers often have to go into the market to buy the chalk!  There is very little funding made available to the schools other than for teachers’ salaries.  Funding is generally very limited due to the austerity measures imposed by the government due to the cessation of oil exports.  Parents are able to make a small termly contribution to their children’s schools education.  Children start primary school aged 6 (Primary 1) and finish in Primary 8. Pre-school children come aged 3 years.  The system works in a similar way to the grade system in the USA with children promoted or held back at the end of the school year depending on whether or not they pass their end of year exams in November.  If a child is promoted each year they finish their primary education aged 13 years.

Dumak Primary School, Torit






We had the opportunity last Saturday to visit the new hotel that is being built in Torit.  This just gives a picture of what the future might hold.  The hotel is a short drive from where the locals get their water either from the river or from boreholes.

The old and the new





This week’s personal highlights include showering with a frog which then spent time in my room, finding a huge moth in the loo, seeing newly born kittens (minutes old) and seeing the spider below which incidentally is harmless believe it or not!  Monday was announced as a bank holiday as the Speaker of the National Assembly came to visit the town and speak to State Ministers and senior officers.  The photograph shows school children going to greet him.

School children at the Speaker’s visit


Some local wildlife




1 comment:

  1. Sounds interesting and challenging in equal measure. Like your wildlife pics! I've had a few geckos, cockroaches and mosquitos in the house. Some nice birds outside (of the feathered variety). I am jealous of the wall-to-wall premiership football you can enjoy. Would have loved to see Ajax beat City last night!
    All the best!
    Ruud from Lusaka

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