About Me

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I am a scholar, writer, dancer, traveler, dreamer, adventurer, and tea connoisseur. I love to travel whether it be through volunteering in the Peace Corps, interning internationally or for my own delight.
Showing posts with label Summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Summer. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

GLOW CAMP 2014

Yay! GLOW (Girls Leading Our World) Camp is finally over! No more pouring over large excel spreadsheets consisting of ~300 girls' contact information, no more calling counselors and giving them the new updates about transportation to and from camp (information that they will relay to the campers), and no more crunching numbers to make sure that we get confirmations from all the girls that we invited to come to camp.

I've officially been away from site for 28 days. Almost a month mind you. The first portion of my long absence was due to MST (Mid Service Training) with Peace Corps. This was a time for us volunteers to reflect about what we have accomplished the last year, what our plans are for the coming year and build up our personal goals. I thought this training was a great tool for me to reevaluate my service and figure out how to make it more worthwhile. I have less than a year left here....what haven't I done or what do I want to improve before I leave? Was this the Peace Corps experience that I had set out to have when I first joined? All of these questions of how to make the most of my time left were going through my head. This training was definitely a great way to reset my mental attitude about role in Georgia as both a volunteer and as a member of my host family.

I set some personal goals to work even harder on my Georgian language skills, spend more time with my host family and strengthen my relationships with fellow community members in Sagarejo. Those are my main goals.

In the midst of this deep thinking period, I and a few other volunteers put on the first ever Jort Off competition as a fun way to break up the somewhat serious mood. I think it was a success and a fun way to let off some steam. My friend Aaron is now the current Mr. Jort Winner but I think he'll have to defend his title in November since we are planning on doing another competition during our All Vol Conference with the new G14s.

Enough about training though... 
LETS TALK ABOUT GLOW!

To start off, GLOW is the biggest project I have worked on and probably will be one of my greatest accomplishments of my volunteer career. I and three other PCVs (Peace Corps Volunteers), along with four Georgian Board members created GLOW Georgia this year. Pretty exciting stuff to say that I co-founded an NGO but there is so much work behind it. We created the NGO in January and since then we've had to switch mindsets and focus our efforts towards GLOW Camp preparations.

I was head of the Recruitment Committee for the NGO so a lot of what I had to do was needed way before camp even started. I was in charge of creating application workshop materials, finding and interviewing counselors for camp, receiving all the potential campers' applications and creating a master excel list of all of their info to send out to our counselors, developing a grading system for the campers' applications so the counselors could review and pick the very best candidates to attend camp, creating a info packet for all the campers selected (what to bring, what to expect, where camp was etc), and balancing our numbers to make sure that we had enough girls to attend each camp. It was a lot of work and many hours pouring over the master excel sheet but it all came together in the end.

Below is a description of Glow Camp. You can also watch our GLOW Camp videos:  Beginning of Camp and Closing of Camp courtesy of Alan, one of the G14 GLOW Committee members that will take over this year.

For more pictures and information about GLOW you can find us on our Facebook page: GLOW Georgia .

The Beginning: 
GLOW Camp officially began on August 2 and continued until August 20th. Over that period we hosted two 1 week camps, held two ToTs (training of trainers), trained 13 counselors sand 7 PCVs, and saw GLOW come to life with the 97 girls who attended our camps.

Here is how camp went:
ToT
First we had two days of ToT before camp. ToT is basically the time in which we train the counselors who will be hosting the camp that week. We go over the camp schedule, assign and diviup presentations, go over camp expectations and the mission of GLOW. That's usually what happens the first day of ToT. The second day is a working day for the counselors as they prepare their power point presentations and activities. The PCVs meanwhile are assisting their counselors and preparing the physical materials needed for these sessions. It's a long two days but everything needs to be really before the 50 girls arrive at camp.


Camp: Day 1
1:00pm
The campers arrived from one of the three marshrutkas that we had for camp. These three marshrutkas met campers earlier that day at assigned places and times. It was quite hectic to somehow get 50 girls meet one of these three stopping points across the country in a timely manner and make it to camp but somehow we did it.

3:00pm-9:30pm
After greeting the smiling girls with room and group assignments, we officially began our camp with an opening about what GLOW is and what was to be expected over the next few days. This was followed by camp group icebreakers, dinner and a camp wide scavenger hunt.


Day 2-6
8:00am
The girls woke up early meet their exercising rotation group for 8am exercises. I and my fellow PCVS offered different exercising stations for each day of camp. I taught Zumba in the gym, Brenna taught combat in the lecture hall, Betsy taught yoga on the upstairs balcony, Alica taught relays on the field and palates and full body workouts were taught by our visiting PCVS for that week.

8:45-10:00am
Once exercise was over, there was a quick breakfast followed by our daily camp opening before launching into the day's sessions.

11:00am -1:30 and then 4:30-6:30
We covered: Hygiene, Smoking and Alcohol awareness, Men's Health, First Aid, Nutrition and Fitness, Problem Solving and Conflict Resolution, Self Esteem, Peer Pressure and Bullying, Relationships and Communication, Women's Health and Reproductive Educations, Gender Based Violence and Women's Rights, Gender Roles and Gender in My Life, Children's Rights and Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Diversity and Tolerance, Leadership, Civic Responsibility, Volunteerism, Youth Participation and Project Development, CVs, Cover Letters and Social media, Setting Future Goals, and a Q/A with a Women's Guest Panel.


Some of these were lecture based large group sessions while others were discussion based small group sessions. In between these sessions we had lunch and  fun afternoon activities planned for the girls (capture the flag, hiking, board games, tag, volleyball etc.).



We would close the last session of the day with journaling time in which the girls would reflect on what they had learned that day and how they could potentially use that information to create a community project back home.

6:30-7:30
Dinner

8:00-9:30
Evening activity: Movie Night, Disco Night, Campfire Night, Talent Show Night and Farewell Dinner Night


Day 7 (Last Day!) 
8:45-10:00am
Breakfast

10:00-11:00am
Number and contact information exchange

11:00am-12:15pm
Camp Closing

12:15pm-1:00pm
Lunch

1:00pm
Departure (PCVS doing happy dance in the background as girls load into marshrutkas)


Day off and then repeat again.


There were a few mishaps through these two weeks of camp.
*The first camp we had ~30 girls separated on the hiking trail for two hours. They were with their leaders but the group had taken a wrong turn. All girls and leaders were accounted for in the end

*During the first day of our second camp, an hour before the campers arrived, one of our counselors had to leave due to a death in her family. We scrambled to find a replacement counselor and ended up calling one of the previous counselors from the week before. She graciously accepted and arrived at camp two hours later.

*One of our PCVS was doing a pre-exercise run and was attacked by a dog. She was bitten three times and had to be sent to Tbilisi for rabies shots and recovery. We managed to do without her the rest of the week but  it was still very unfortunate for both her and us.

*Water randomly was shut off time to time...not too much of a problem except for the fact that we exercised everyday and the day we were hosting a guest from the US Embassy we greeted her with a fresh post workout aroma.

Again GLOW Camp was quite a production but talking to those girls and seeing them open up about issues and topics as the week progressed was worth it.




Monday, September 9, 2013

Summer Camp Sagarejo Style

So if you’ve been following along, one of the activities I have to do before I start school is plan and implement a summer camp for my community. Not an easy feat when you lack materials, money and oh I don’t know…basic communication with vendors, students and others alike. However my camp ran really smoothly thanks to the help of my two counterparts and my sister and her friends. They helped me out with translation and guidance when I needed it.

The camp was 5 days long with each day being a different theme. Themes are as follows: Introduction Day, Sports Day, Arts & Crafts Day, Pop Culture Day and Nature Day.  I would open each day by passing out an attendance bead to each of the campers…this served as an incentive for the campers to come back each day. By the end of the week the campers who attended every day of camp would have enough beads to make a summer camp bracelet. After the bead passing and roll call, the students and I would warm up by dancing the call and response song called “Funky Chicken”.  After “Funky Chicken” I would give the day’s vocabulary lists to the campers and go over each word to make sure that they knew them. Afterwards we would do various activities and games that involved the words from the words list of that particular day.

I tried yet again to teach kickball to another group of Georgian students….just as hard as the first time but by the end of the hour they had a pretty good grasp on the rules and such.

I think they activity the kids loved the most was the clothing relay game. I brought some articles of clothing for this activity and asked each student to bring one article of clothing for this activity as well. I divided the clothing into two piles, each pile having the same amount of shirts, pants, hats etc. as well as equal numbers of colors and patterns. I would shout out an article of clothing or a color and each time would have to find the item and then run to the other side of the room and dress their other team member. They got so into it!

The other activity that was a huge success was the making of God’s Eyes. This was a craft that my family and I would do when we would go camping. All you need is two small sticks and some yarn and presto a cool craft and as I have come to realize from my memories of family camping… a way to easily keep kids occupied and in one place.

Besides god’s eyes, the clothing relay game and kickball we also  did the hokey pokey to learn body parts, made collages from magazines (each student had to spell their name, I love Georgia, include a picture they liked and spell out one new word that they learned that day), wrote poems with 3 new vocabulary words, went on a nature scavenger hunt, a human treasure hunt (students had find other students in the classroom who had something in common with something on their list…asking questions in English of course), watched and English film (Finding Nemo), made team posters and team songs, and had a celebration picnic at the end of our last day of camp

Though the camp had a lot more work/planning/improvising than I had originally anticipated…it all worked out in the end.

Below are pictures from my camp…my counterpart Zaira took most of these photos

Playing Everybody who has...
Maka, one of my students, and her collage
I know you all are jealous of my beautiful handwriting...
Just a sample of some of the god's eyes made...my students picked the craft right up 
Checking off the Nature Scavenger Hunt list...(and for your information I'm thinking...not picking my nose)

Last day of camp supra picnic 
The infamous clothing relay
Learning body parts and action words with the help of the Hokey Pokey
Kickball! The sheets of my summer camp schedule also doubled as bases
Nature hike exploring
Pictures and collages time!
One of the team posters...We had team Funny Children (poster above) and team Smile
Woot Go Sagarejo's 2013 Summer Camp!

Friday, August 9, 2013

Five Things Friday 08.09.2013

Five things that happened at site this week:

1) On Thursday I made ice cream floats for my family as a dessert. They told me they liked it but they might have been being polite.

2) Mari (my host sister), her friend Nino and I had a girls night in my room and watched August Rush. We were going to watch Notting Hill but the external hard drive was having none of it.

3) My whole family and I moved our very large wood pile into our barn space so that the wood can stay dry during all of the summer thunderstorms we've been having. I think my family was concerned that I was helping them but I reassured them that there were many a day back in East TN where my family I would chop and stack firewood....not to mention pick up sticks, rocks and rake leaves (Now that I'm looking back at it, I'm pretty sure my parents had all of us so it would be easier for them to do yard work...just a theory)

4) I was only asked three times this week by people in my community if my hair was in fact my hair. That's a new record.

5) I accidentally broke one of the glass panes in my bedroom door when a gust of wind closed it quickly...oops


Five words/ phrases I've learned this week:

1) ობობა (oboba): spider...I thought with the word being oboba that it would be the translation for a much cuter animal....I was wrong

2) დარჩენა (darchena):  is the verb "to stay" ...useful when my family was asking if any of my  friends in Georgia would come here and stay for a weekend

3) ვირი (viri):  donkey...we have one on our street who always eats the blackberries off of the bush on that corner

4) დოქი ( დoqi):  yarn...i need to know they one because I want to buy some yarn at the bazaar in order to make god's eyes for camp.

5) საფული (saphule): wallet...because the former Volunteer who lived in my site before me lost her wallet the day before she COS and my family was asking me where she had lost it.


Five books that I have read while being at site:

1) Getting Stoned with the Savages - J. Maarten Troost

2) Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoyevsky

3) The Road - Cormac McCarthy (Yay Knoxvillian!)

4) The Dharma Bums - Jack Kerouac

5) Lost on Planet China - J. Maarten Troost


Five books I read in Georgia before I got to my site:

1) Into the Wild - Jon Krakauer  (Love the movie...had to read the book)

2) The Art of Being Single - Judy Ford

3) Wild Things - Dave Eggers

4) The Definitive Guide to Stuff While People Like - Christian Lander (Makes fun of every and all trends...some I am guilty of being a part of lol)

5) This Twenty Something Life - Jon Rance


Five things I'm looking forward To:

1) Going and and exploring Tbilisi with my host sister sometime next week

2) Having my summer camp in Sagarejo

3) Receiving care packages from home...bring on the taco seasoning and peanut butter. 

4) My overnight trip to Khevsureti with some of the G13s and G12s

5) The start of school...though I am kind of nervous about it....and when I say kind of i mean mortified