Both adult nuns and government teachers (in traditional teacher white shirts with green skirts, who must be moonlighting for extra money) do the teaching in Buddhist Free Schools. |
One of the nuns as teachers |
One of the youngest nuns-in-training getting clean, filtered water from a tank. |
The tank was donated by Burmese Buddhists who escaped to the U.S., donating the clean water tank, perhaps to accumulate Buddhist merits for the next life. |
Preschool for mini-nuns and monks. Preschool nap time. No one slept. Just a few feet away were multiple outdoor classrooms with kids chanting loudly. |
The monk preschool teacher, glaring at and threatening the preschoolers if they didn't lay down and pretend to sleep. |
Older students, with their sun protecting hats laid by their side, along with their signature Burmese bags used to carry their school books. |
The students painstakingly copy what the teachers write on the board. Not much critical thinking promoted here, or at the government schools. |
Happy nun student. |
Chanting their lesson, learning in pairs. |
This charming monk student, on the left, reminded me of Zander, my nephew, charming, witty, crinkly smile, and a harmless, disruptive cut-up in class. |
This may be my favorite photo of a nun-in-training that I have taken. A look of wonder. |
June 9, 2011
The Buddhists provide an education that the government won’t
provide for the most poor students. In other countries, like Malaysia, NGO’s
would provide an education that the government will not provide. In Burma,
there are not local NGO’s and the international aid organizations like UNICEF
and Save the Children do not have the ability to do so here. I am finding that
the more oppressive governments in Southeast Asia do not educate the most needy
in their countries, leaving other groups to fill in the gap for those in
poverty. Often those who fill in the gaps are religious groups.
Outside of Mandalay, we visited a Buddhist free school
taught by Buddhist nuns, monks, and volunteer government teachers. Click HERE to see what the entrance, and loud, more free-wheeling Buddhist school feels and sounds like. As the title
suggests, it is truly a free school where you don’t need to pay for the small
number of items the government schools make you pay for – uniforms, ceremonies,
renovations, etc. -- which makes school prohibitive for so many poor children in
Burma.
Even with such free schools, many poor parents still cannot
afford to have their children be educated. It’s said that over half of Burma
lives on $5 US a day. Many of these families feel like they cannot feed their children when times get rough. So, in Mandalay (2nd biggest city in
Burma) rural parents send their 8 year old and older children into town to
live, indefinitely. These kids are serving tea and food at tea houses all over
Mandalay, and at midnight you can find them exhausted, passed out asleep on the
tea house tables, after they have cleaned up. Then, they are up again the next morning
serving tea. These children do not get to be kids.
The kids who can still live with their families but are too
poor to go to government schools can go to Buddhist free schools. We visited
one in Mandalay that was busting at the seams with hundreds of students, and we
visited another one filled with only 8 students at the ancient, glorious Bagaya
monastery. The larger Buddhist Free School was located in the hills outside of
Mandalay, in an area called Sagaing Hill populated by over 10,000 students in serious
Buddhist study at monasteries in the golden stupa-studded hills. The school had
young Buddhist nuns, monks, and civilians.
There was much less structure at this big Buddhist school,
compared to the government schools. The government schools lock their entrance
gates at 9am, not letting in latecomers. The Buddhist school let kids come and
go from class as they please. And, it was a loud school. Supposedly, that is
similar to the government schools because both institutions use repetition via
incessant chanting of memorized text. Click HERE for a class of younger students incessantly repeating the letters the nun points to on the chalkboard.
The older students would sit around class, chatting with each other and sometimes practicing their memorized chant. The only impetus to studying was if your turn to chant for the teacher came up. They you’d practice in a hurry. Click HERE for some young monks avidly reciting their chants all in their row, looking like they were worried what might happen if they got it wrong. I wondered about the consequences too. Note that their chants were not necessarily of religious text. Often they were of English, reading, or even math.
The older students would sit around class, chatting with each other and sometimes practicing their memorized chant. The only impetus to studying was if your turn to chant for the teacher came up. They you’d practice in a hurry. Click HERE for some young monks avidly reciting their chants all in their row, looking like they were worried what might happen if they got it wrong. I wondered about the consequences too. Note that their chants were not necessarily of religious text. Often they were of English, reading, or even math.
The youngest among them were going through the motions of
taking a nap, supervised by a very bored monk. The early elementary school
students were given the toughest nun, even draped in pink with her shaved head.
This nun teacher in her 20’s did not mess around. There was discipline in her
class, loudly wacked onto the tables of distracted students by a long cane that
supposedly was intended as a pointer for the chalkboard. She would use it to
wack the table, or really close to the offending children’s bodies, to start
the chanting of one subgroup who would yell out their chants then she’d wack
the table of another subgroup, always keeping them on their toes over whose
turn was next. In the front of the room stood the greatest offending nun girl
students who had perhaps been disruptive or not paying attention, and they had
to stand with their arms high over their heads, fingers clasped at the top.
Even that stance wasn’t strictly enforced, with the girls breaking down in
giggles, dropping their arms to their sides often. That’s behavior management
in the classroom, Buddhist Nun-style.
Click HERE FOR VIDEO titled: Burmese Buddhist Nun at the Buddhist Free Schools -- Wielding her cane to inspire chant-based learning and corporal punishment via standing with your hands over your head for a video of the nun teaching her class,
wielding her cane like a harsh conductor of a symphony.
I think this Buddhist nun saw it as her job to break the
kids in, literally, to the rigid, chanting system of learning in Burma. The
government schools also are said to start harshly socializing the youngest
children to a strictly obedient way of learning that requires you to memorize
then be checked by the teacher, in small groups. Not only is harsh corporal
punishment used in the early years, or so I’ve been told, by the teachers, but
the harsh punishment may be part of a larger system to squelch “free thinking”
or critical opinions being expressed. So, the government, the teachers, and the
parents all silence the free speech by “wiping it out.” Maybe the harsh
punishment is used for simple disruptive acting out, or is it used for dissent
in class? Or for “unrest” in response to the harshly controlled chanting
learning style?
Outside of this 10,000 Buddhist student hill was a huge
propaganda sign placed by the government. I think it was placed there because
these 10,000 Buddhist students were also a part of the 2007 Buddhist monk
uprising. In fact, after their protests were squelched by the military, the
military made most of them return to their rural villages, so there weren’t so
many potential dissidents causing an uprising in the same location, all
together. In the end, the Buddhist students only left for a few months, and
they return to study again, all 10,000 together. Click HERE for a video of the monks lining up for lunch, the monks' last meal of the day, at the monk dormitory, with the young monks-in-training chanting a prayer before lunch. These meals are precious to the monks and their parents who can't afford to pay for their children's meals at home.
Now the monks, who were formerly protesters, study under the big propaganda sign that the government placed in front of their schools and in town, that said this:
Now the monks, who were formerly protesters, study under the big propaganda sign that the government placed in front of their schools and in town, that said this:
“The people desire: Oppose those who do not support
stability.” I’ll have to put a word into the military about my desire that they
avoid double negatives in their propaganda. And, this desperate effort by the
military to oppose critical questions and disruptive behavior in “the people”
trickles down to the management of child behavior in the classroom and home.
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