Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Girls Club at State School for the Deaf


Submitted by Lindsey Hanson; Adjei Kojo, Greater Accra

A girls club can be a great addition to any community. It teaches young women leadership, independence, assertiveness, and pride. I think all volunteers should have at least one club that meets either weekly, or monthly, depending on your schedule. It has been one of the best parts of my experience and lets me work outside of my primary project to teach students about issues that I feel are important to them. These topics are often things that are not taught in school and perhaps the parents do not discuss with their children at home, such as personal hygiene or proper condom use.

Based on an outline generated my Stephanie Carey, an education volunteer, I designed a girls club at my school. (See below) The first step was finding strong women teachers who were interested in running the club. I spoke with them about what issues female students at our school are having. From there we outlined what topics would be best to discuss and I arranged them in an order that made sense to me, several to coincide with National and International holidays. My main role in this club is to inform teachers and students when the meetings are and what topic we will discuss that month. I make the teachers run the meetings themselves, but I sit in and assist. I also was able to procure through the GYD SMALL FUND GRANT Ghc150.00 to purchase some items for the club meetings. These include red ribbons to support National Aids day and beads to make menstrual cycle bracelets. My other role is to contact guest speakers and put them in touch with the teachers running the meetings. I hope to forge some strong relationships, so the speakers will continue to come in the years after I am gone. By giving the teachers the lead role in this club they are setting good examples for the female students and also learning that they can run the club with little help from me. I hope this encourages them to continue the club in future years. If you need any more advice on starting a girls club feel free to contact me or your regional GYD representative.

Month
Topic
Activities
November
*December 1st National Aids Day*
HIV/AIDS
Making pins and posters to raise awareness for National Aids Day. Learn about the ABC’s and play the risk game led by peer educators.
December
Personal Hygiene and Menstruation
Making fertility bracelets using recycled glass beads.
January
Entrepreneurship
Tour of Global Mammas distribution site in Ashaiman.
February
Assertiveness and Communication skills
Assertiveness role playing games, Deaf Pride slide show and discussion
March
*March 8th International Women’s Day*
Leadership
Guest speaker from Leading Ladies Network in Accra to discuss leadership and what skills are found in a good leader.
April
*April 16th World Malaria Day*
Malaria
Risk Game and Neem Cream demo and Net hanging demonstration. Guest speaker from Ghana Heath Service.
May
Self Defense
Basic techniques of protecting oneself demonstrated by local Tai-Kwon-Do instructor.
June
Self Esteem
Making God’s eyes craft and taking photos of the girls to be printed.
July
Birth control
Family Planning
STD’s
Guest speaker local nurse to discuss family planning and condom demo. Watch videos from PEPFAR and discuss the situations.



Tuesday, 1 January 2013

Green Nets

Submitted by Mike Mayo

Green Nets is the name of my startup project where my students and I make soccer nets out of recycled material. Our material of choice is water sachets. I thought up the idea at the Peace Corps All Volunteer Conference. At the conference, every PCV in Ghana comes together to share ideas and help each other with projects they are working on. After seeing the water sachet hammock created by another PCV, I realized that I could make something using the same method but much bigger: a football (soccer) net. Since then I have been collecting sachets and making nets.

There are two obvious benefits of this project. The first is it helps clean up the environment by collecting and reusing the plastic sachets that are typically discarded on the ground. You need at least 3500 sachets for one net. Even though that seems like a lot, if you can get your community and the surrounding communities involved the sachets really start to pile up. The second is it provides soccer nets for villages throughout Ghana.

If Green Nets becomes as popular as I hope it will, there is the potential to start selling the nets and creating job opportunities for the local villagers. There is no mechanical way to make the nets so you would need to pay the men and women of the village to weave the nets together. You don’t have to stop at soccer nets. You can show people how to make hammocks (Ghanaians love taking a midday nap and a hammock is much more comfortable than a bench), and volleyball nets. This weekend I even made a kite using water sachets, straws, some thread and a needle. The primary school students loved it! This project is only limited by your imagination.
The most important aspect of this project is its feasibility and sustainability. All you need to make a soccer net out of water sachets is a pair of scissors, plenty of sachets, and some free time. “But Mike,” you might say, “you said you need at least 3500 satchets that is 3,500,000 cedi (old currency), how can I afford that on my Peace Corps stipend?!” My answer for you: you don’t need to buy the sachets, you gotta be a good PCV and pick’em up off the ground! As for scissors they can be purchased at your local Melcom’s at a reasonable cost. In terms of sustainability, as long as Ghanaians keep drinking water out of sachets, PCVs will be making things out of them.

Recently I have partnered with GreenIsEasyGhana, an environmental organization trying to clean up Ghana and supporting small projects they feel can make a difference. They will be supporting my project by providing funds that will help me buy new quality scissors and recycling containers that I will place around mine and the surrounding communities. I will also provide them with pictures and videos that they will post on their website to promote the recycling of water satchets and show the process of making the nets.

To sum up I think this is a great project for everyone to take up. It is easy to learn and the communities love the nets. I will be trying to host an IST in Cape Coast sometime in the future to not only teach the net making techniques, but also to show Cape Coast the possibilities of recycling their massive amount of water sachet waste.