Balancing the overall shock that comes when you take a person, who has been living in an underdeveloped country, like Benin, for a year, and then putting them not only in the developed world, like the United States, but a Target no less, is a task that most Peace Corps volunteers face. But on my second trip to Target I think I handled myself well; making it out of the store in less than an hour, compared to the first four hour trip. Of course this was not without a slight pause in front of the back to school supplies section, which is a marvel paired with the dollar section at the front of the store.
Students in the United States are currently gearing up for back to school, obvious by the parents being followed by their whining children trying to distract them with things not necessarily on their list of supplies for the new school year. It isn't hard to spot when I used to be one of those kids, stocking up on spiral notebooks, three-ring binders, dividers, packs of blue, black, and red pens, a calculator, which if used to its full capacity I am certain could help you do quantum physics or nuclear fission, 6 packs of 100 sheets of lined notebook paper, highlighters, protractor, compass, colored pencils, markers, and of course a backpack to put all this stuff in for transport back and forth on the bus and from classroom to classroom. This doesn't even take into account back to school clothes shopping, which I would squirrel away money for from my summer job, and squander three times as fast when I was a teenager.
It is a stark contrast to what many of my students will be facing in Benin in another two months, when school starts in October, after students have helped finished working in the fields, providing them with the time to go back to school. At this point the students will go to the market and buy their cahiers (notebooks, which are half the size of American-type notebooks, and without the hard, plastic and cardboard fronts and backs). Then there is the standard metal box, which all students buy that has a compass and ruler, a pencil, and I believe one red and one blue pen, although those may have to be purchased separately. Most students don't have backpacks, and it is not rare to see paper bags that we, in the United States, give gifts in used to carry notebooks back and forth to school, and not on a bus, but by foot, and if you are lucky by bike. As for clothes, well all the students have to wear khaki uniforms, which may be bought new, but mostly are taken out, washed and mended for the new school year.
Now I have only considered the lists, not the costs of these lists. Huntington National Bank's Annual Backpack Index in Columbus, Ohio, provides and compares the amount spent to fill up a child's backpack here in the United States. For 2010 the statistics read as follows:
Elementary School: $472
Middle School: $535
High School: $998
As for clothes, one article from Louisiana reports that according to LSU AgCenter, the average family will spent a little over $600 for clothes, shoes, and electronics.
Those cahiers and the box of supplies in Benin equates to less than $10, which many students struggle to buy, and know they have to make last all school year. They can't lose a notebook, or fill one up too quickly. The one pencil they get is sharpened down to a nub, and since it doesn't have an eraser they use both sides of the pencil. Then there is the case of the missing chalk. If I leave little bits of chalk my students quickly take them, to use as white out at home, or in the case of younger students to eat for the calcium.
Finally there is one cost at least the students here in the United States don't have, which is paying to go to school. Education is free, provided by the government, but in Benin, the government doesn't even have the money to pay its teachers for months at a time. The students pay for their education. At Materi this price is equal to $25 (half the price of a pair of tennis shoes, maybe less), which is paid throughout the school year. This means not everyone is even going to school, especially girls, who may come from families whose parents don't believe in educating a girl, or choose to only use their money to pay for their brothers to go to school. For more statistics on the state of Benin's education visit here.
The contents of this website are of my own creation and do not reflect any position of the U.S government or the Peace Corps.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Project Make Space Update - August 10, 2010
Big things happening today for Project Make Space! Including the publication of a blog through national organization, Share Our Strength.
Link: http://strength.org/blog/jenna_hall/building_change_fighting_hunger_in_africa/
Also the launch of our t-shirt fundraiser. Buy an American Apparel t-shirt with the Project Make Space logo for $20. All proceeds go toward funding the secondary school building project (Project Make Space). To place an advance order on your t-shirt visit Etsy.
Link: http://www.etsy.com/shop/projectmakespace
Link: http://strength.org/blog/jenna_hall/building_change_fighting_hunger_in_africa/
Also the launch of our t-shirt fundraiser. Buy an American Apparel t-shirt with the Project Make Space logo for $20. All proceeds go toward funding the secondary school building project (Project Make Space). To place an advance order on your t-shirt visit Etsy.
Link: http://www.etsy.com/shop/projectmakespace
Monday, August 9, 2010
Project Make Space Update
I have been back in the States for over a week now, and between visiting family and friends, and getting sun-burned at the beach, I have been spending a large part of my time working to raise money for Project Make Space, also known as my Secondary School Building project. According to Peace Corps online Web site there is still $12,350 left to raise! Over the last week I have collected money from a few individuals and companies, which brings the total left to raise at $10,800! If you haven't donated already, please do so. If your mother, father, brother, sister, aunts, uncles, second cousins, dogs, or cats haven't donated, please do so. It is quick and it is easy, and just as little as $5 can go a long way. If you are thinking, "Yeah, hey I will do it later", then think about this:
In the time it could take you to donate $5 to building a secondary school in Benin you could do the following things ...
1. Brush your teeth (which can be done while donating)
In the time it could take you to donate $5 to building a secondary school in Benin you could do the following things ...
1. Brush your teeth (which can be done while donating)
2. Update your facebook status and stalk one person on facebook
3. Do 20 push-ups
4. Any number of staring off habits you have to avoid office work
5. Miss the commercial break for your favorite TV show
None of these take long or effort (except maybe push-ups) so go ahead click and donate. It takes 5 minutes.
https://www.peacecorps.gov/index.cfm?shell=resources.donors.contribute.projDetail&projdesc=680-192
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