Students are inspired to act on Waste Management!
A tidy classroom is conducive for teaching and learning. A school environment free from litter, amazes visitors, and that means that every school is obliged to devise sustainable ways of managing waste within classrooms and around the compound.
Since the
first week of stepping in my school of placement, I have been, and still is,
endeavoring to change how certain things are done but with minimal results. For
the first two days on reporting, I swept my P1 classroom and asked some
learners from P4 to collect the rubbish since my P1 learners couldn't think of
looking for brooms to sweep the classroom, they themselves being oriented. When
the SEA found me sweeping on the third day, he told me to let the pupils sweep
and learn on the job. So, later, the learners took over from me.
I must say
that before I had written and pinned any class values or norms on the walls, I
had already made it clear that I hate seeing litter or untidiness within the
classroom or outside. To my amazement, my P1 learners were so supportive. They
initiated a team of guards at the entrance of the class. Pupils who volunteer
to sweep the classroom, always ensure that whoever enters the class first
collects rubbish. This has been so effective as they sweep the class twice a
day. Interestingly, P2 and P4 learners started emulating shortly and they
report to me their colleagues' failure to cooperate.
“Managing waste needs a change of attitudes and habits. Everyone ought to be doing something about it ”
I always
try making sure that the learners throw rubbish at the gazetted dumping points
since we have no dust bins in front of the classrooms but these learners are so
uncontrollable when dealing with them alone even if you are so vigilant. I have
always been strict and harsh on whomever I find throwing mango peelings, orange
peelings, maize cobs, groundnut pods, torn pieces of paper, etc, around the
compound, in this fight, it seems I am 95% percent in the struggle alone.
General cleanliness is done almost every day, but it's so arduous to manage
waste in my school. After break, litter will be everywhere. This is so
disappointing especially when we receive visitors.
Towards
managing waste, our prefects are so adamant and negligent towards
responsibilities their roles demand. Initially, even the staffroom was no
different from the compound – being inhabited minus being swept. It’d take a
loud voice for some unwilling girls to pick brooms, often leaving the rubbish
at the doorway unless watched over – the same went for the classrooms but
currently there’s a change in behavior after my intervention yet not enough. To
preach this gospel to the community, I needed to clean my house first.
I have
been a role model in managing waste since the I joined Kisowozi Primary School,
but to my dismay, some teachers still throw rubbish in the compound and out of
the windows like the children we are educating. One day, I challenged a madam
who was throwing orange peelings in front of my class.
"Madam,
you are littering the compound. The kids will do it more than you," said I,
as I walked to the office to sign the arrival book. Could she even say a word
than just sit and fume after me?
If only
everyone within the school could ask themselves the question how best they can really manage waste, the end result
would be so satisfying. Managing waste needs a change of attitudes and habits.
Everyone ought to be doing something about it, otherwise, one person or a few
people will not be able to glorify the community, leave alone a school's name.
Not only one or two classrooms should be clean but the whole school. Not only
the school, but the community wherein we live.
Ojok Geoffrey
Teach For Uganda Fellow
Cohort 4
Kisowozi Primary School
Namutumba District.
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CycloEstee
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ojok-geoffrey-1b600a108/

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