Videos

A New Year

Hello again, after a winter holiday hiatus! Dave and I took the chance to see other parts of India during the two schools’ winter vacations. I think both of us saw far more foreign tourists in some of our destinations than we have during the months we have spent in Hyderabad! However, I think we both had nice, relaxing trips and met some interesting people along the way. We look forward to sharing stories about our travels in the next coming weeks!

We will recommence our classes starting tomorrow, so both APRS and Vijaynagar Colony will begin to work on their final videos. We are still working on getting complete translations and subtitles for the news video from Vijaynagar Colony but will have their news video about street traffic and child labor up for you to enjoy very soon. In the meantime, here is a short clip from a visit we took to the Girl’s Railway HS in Secunderabad. When we first arrived in Hyderabad, we attended a blind chess competition and befriended a group of girls who were there to draw and sing. This enthusiastic crowd gave us their school address and urged us to visit, so visit we did, and received a very warm welcome! The marching band wasn’t for us, haha, but we were lucky enough to catch them rehearsing for a news crew that was coming the next day to do a story on them. It looks like we beat the news crew to the chase and got footage of these great musicians first
The school principal told us that this is the only all girl’s marching band in all of India, since the few schools that do have music programs mostly focus on the boys. Being a former hardcore “band geek” myself, I was ecstatic to see all these young women in full force, and hope that they will continue to pursue interests that may not be as common for women in their communities. One young woman we were speaking with told us that she wanted to become a politician. I have not only worked with students here in India, but high school students from the west side of Chicago and students at a summer program for gifted and talented high schoolers, and she is the first young person I have met that has so enthusiastically expressed their interest to be part of a profession that may have picked up a negative stigma. Speaking to this girl was a great sign to me, for young people to realize that in order to create positive change, we need to have intelligent, strong, compassionate leaders in charge. Perhaps one day I will open the newspaper and find India’s new prime minister to be the girl we spoke to.

[youtube=http://in.youtube.com/watch?v=1Q7aSbUPrIU]


Some random entertainment…

Melanfloquine, the malaria medication I have been taking here in India, has made my sleep schedule extremely erratic, so I made a short little animation during a couple insomnia fits.  Stick figure animation is the perfect cure at 3AM, when your brain isn’t really up to the capacity to be fully productive, but it still wants to keep occupied.  So please take a look if you’d like, it’s only 90 seconds!

[vimeo vimeo.com/3161482]


Happy Holidays!

A a short video on identity by A.P. Boys Residential School

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A news package on disease in Nalgonda by A.P. Boys Residential School

[vimeo vimeo.com/3039415]

Happy Holidays from Hyderabad! Though we are both far from home, Dave and I have found our holiday season to be filled with warmth (from people and from the climate), friendliness, generosity, and of course, good food.

We are nearly finished with the news video at Vijaynagar Colony, and are beginning to get their wheels spinning on their third video, which will focus on “oral histories”. We are hoping to have them pick a specific event or issue in India, and interview their elders who can help them tell the story on video.  We will not be resuming classes at APRS in Nalgonda until they return from their winter holiday at the end of January.  However, we are very pleased to post both their first and second videos here today!  The first is a short video on identity.  In class they each filled out phrases about themselves such as, “At home I see….”, “I wonder if….”, “I feel that I am…” “I am concerned about…”  The second video is their news package on disease in Nalgonda.  The faced some challenges in finding people in the village who were willing to speak on camera, but this project gave them good practice, especially for their third video, which will have a documentary format.

Dave and I were not sure how much of the population here in Hyderabad celebrates Christmas, but were surprised to find that many businesses and people here-if they don’t celebrate it-they at least observe it.  Many store fronts were decked out in lights and tinsel, and we were approached by vendors on the street selling santa hats and (very creepy) santa face masks.  We were invited to accompany Salomi, one of the teachers at Vijaynagar Colony, to her church’s Christmas service.  It was held in a large open-air hall, and the sermon alternated between English and Telugu. The congregation was enormous!  After the service Dave and I attempted to get tickets to see Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi, a popular Bollywood film that is out now.  Little did we know just how popular this film is!  We have attempted to get tickets for this film at least five times, at three different theaters and have found the show to be sold out every single time.  On Christmas the tickets were sold out for every single showing the entire day!  Never have I seen such immense popularity for a single film!  Much of our Christmas afternoon was spent trying to find tickets but alas, it wasn’t to be.

Although they don’t celebrate it, our students were very open and excited to acknowledge the holiday for us.  On Christmas day, our mobile phone rang continuously throughout the day with calls from different boys at Nalgonda, calling from the 1 rupee pay phone at the school.  Some would call on their own, holding long conversations with us, while others would call in a large group, so all we could hear on our end was a lot of shouting and giggles, a quick and loud “merry christmas mona and dave!”, and then an abrupt click of the phone being hung up.  On Christmas Eve, we had a little celebration shindig with our students at Vijaynagar Colony.  We made paper snowflakes, snowmen, and paper link chains, and played an assortment of Christmas music and Indian pop music (including “Yamaho Yama”, their favorite song, which they play every single class, and which will stay in my head long after I leave India), which eventually ended in a wild rumpus of a dance party 🙂  We also brought some treats.  Dave made stuffing and cranberry sauce, to give them a taste of what we eat during the holidays in the States, they received mixed reviews.  He also shared the chocolate chip cookies sent from his parents in Massachusetts, which were quickly devoured.  I attempted to make halwa and ladoo, which are Indian sweets.  I think they also received mixed reviews.  The students surprised us with a lovely heart shaped “Merry Christmas” cake, which they had pooled money together to purchase, with Prithvi’s help.  The celebration was a huge “success!” (this is the catch phrase of Shiva, our resident class clown).

Whether it has been the students’ enthusiasm and friendliness, a Christmas morning spent at the welcoming home of a fellow teacher, a funny conversation with a talkative auto-rickshaw driver, shouts and waves from the roller-skating neighbor children in our building who like to call me “Monica”, packages of biryani sent over from multiple friends who want to make sure we are well-fed, a day spent touring around Hyderabad with a friend and her family, or a spontaneous dosa and chai with a new friend met on the street, this holiday season has been full of adventures and friends, and we are indeed feeling the love.  We hope everyone out there is having a lovely holiday season as well.


Young journalists in the making


[vimeo vimeo.com/3035602]

A week after the tragic attacks in Mumbai, we find Hyderabad quite calm, although there have been noticeable security changes, particularly in the hospital we live next to.  They now have very tight security in the entrance of both of their buildings, complete with metal detectors, extra guards, and one of the buildings has a phone you must call into before entering the building.  The assigned homework to Vijaynagar Colony was to either read a newspaper article or watch a segment on the news about the attacks, write about it, and also to write their own opinion or response.  Many students wrote that they thought the attacks were due to laziness from the Indian government, and that they were angry at their own government for not taking more preventative measures.

Due to exams and an unexpected holiday, we have been unable to get out to Nalgonda.  We are a little frustrated because their winter holiday is quite long as well, and as it is, we haven’t been able to have class for over a week.  However, we were able to move our schedule around with Vijaynagar Colony, and we will be able to get out to Nalgonda later this week and next weekend to make up for some missed classes.

The students at Vijaynagar Colony got some great investigative journalism practice this week, and I am quite sure we have some young reporters in the making.  Just to refresh your memory, they are producing short news stories, the two topics they have picked to cover are child labor, and street traffic.  Both topics are very pertinent to their communities here in Hyderabad.  Both groups explored the surrounding neighborhood in Vijaynagar Colony to find interviews for their stories.  The boys, working on the street traffic stories, conducted man-on-the-street interviews with auto-rickshaw drivers, and locals who walk on the streets.  They also were able to film some dramatizations crossing the chaotic streets to demonstrate just how difficult it is to get from point A to point B.  The girls were on the child labor story, and at first faced some roadblocks.  It was difficult to get to many of the children working in shops because the shop owners would always be there too.  We were harshly turned down and shooed away by many, which is understandable-I can see why none would be too willing to go on camera and talk about how they are exploiting children…Anyhow, the children that were allowed to interview with us, were the lucky ones who were allowed to attend school and were treated well by their shop owners.  While it was important to have these interviews to show different sides of the story, and I was glad to see that some of the children were happy, these interviews did not highlight the problem.  One of the girls has a friend who works in a shop down the street from the school.  Her shop owner does not allow her to attend school and treats her badly.  However, when we walked by the store, the owner was there and angrily told our group to leave.  Though at first discouraged, the girls finally relished the challenge and took a new angle, prompted by a clever idea from Dave.  Since they were unable to get any interviews, they instead just turned the camera on to film the first few minutes of each interaction, where they would introduce the project and ask the shop owners for permission to interview.  As expected, many of them angrily turned them away, and one shop owner even declared “there are no children working here!” while we saw several children working in their back kitchen.  This montage of rejections tells a lot on its own.  If they didn’t have anything to hide, they wouldn’t have such defensive responses.  We went handheld for these segments, so some of the camera work is quite shaky, but it will definitely have a gritty, raw aesthetic.

We are hoping to get a story about Prithvi posted soon, he has been a great help in the classroom, and we are so glad to have him with us in our Hyderabad classes.  He has been very busy preparing for the SAT’s, which are this weekend, so hopefully he will have more time after those are finished so we can share more about him on the blog.  The SAT was hard enough by itself, I can’t imagine having to take it in another language!  So we are wishing him the best of luck this weekend.

The girls were talking to me about coeducation the other day.  They mentioned that even though they attend a coeducational school, their teachers discourage the boys and girls from conversing with each other and still like to keep them separate.  This largely explains why the class tends to self-segregate itself by gender when we work in groups.  The girls complained that now they feel like they don’t know how to socialize or talk with boys, and they feel uncomfortable when they work with them.  The students here are obviously curious and have an innocent interest in the opposite sex. The girls especially love to point out different boys to me that they think are “cute” or “beautiful”.  Then the more curious ones like to drill me with questions about boyfriends and marriage, which I like to evade, or jokingly tell them that I’m married to Dave.  The toe ring that I wear just for fashion has brought me particular attention, because married women here wear toe rings.  However, when I shot the question back at the girls and asked if they had boyfriends, they scoffed at me like I was silly, and said “of course not”.  The boys at Nalgonda are similar in some ways.  They like to make offhand jokes about singing love songs to girls, and one boy has asked me for a lot of advice on a special birthday gift to give to a girl he knows at home.  When I asked this group about girlfriends, they gave me a similar reaction as that of the girls at Vijaynagar Colony and pretty much said, “of course not-DUHHH!”  We have definitely reached a point with our coed class at VIjaynagar in which it’s a space where everyone feels very relaxed and comfortable with each other.  Although they continue to choose to work with their own gender for projects, it’s very apparent that all of the students truly enjoy each other’s company.

The conversation I had with the girls earlier led me to think about the prominence of male comraderie here, which continues to strike me.  Heterosexual romantic displays of affection are not very common in most of the areas I have been, and are far outnumbered by the amount of males holding hands, draping their arms around each other, and just being very physically open with each other.  It is rather nice to have this openness, especially knowing that in some areas of the United States, this type of behavior might illicit not so nice comments from others.  Although from asking around, it seems that homosexuality is not something that many people are open with in this area.  My theory therefore (and feel free to let me know if I’m mistaken, I’d just like to learn more about this) is that since the culture doesn’t encourage as much interaction between males and females, many turn to their companions and friends for physical touch and this has led me to wonder about where sexual education stands in India. If students at some school are discouraged from even talking to the opposite sex, I have a feeling they probably aren’t learning much about sex education.  I know everyone eventually learns about this in their own way, shape, and form, but it seems like such a basic human thing that everyone should learn about, and they shouldn’t learn about it through the movies.  The students we work with may be too young, so perhaps they have more classes for this when they get get to 11th or 12th class.  I will ask Prithvi, our handy reference on schoollife about this.
Posted above, you will find video #1, “Dreams” from Vijaynagar Colony.   The students created a video based on Dave’s lesson plan, which allows the students to share about their lives, their interests, and their ambitions for the future through drawings and interviews.  Hope you enjoy, and next week we hope to bring you video #1 from Nalgonda, and an animated short about The Modern Story propelled by my late night fits of insomnia.



Nalgonda Photo Scavenger Hunt!

[brightcove vid=3507354001&exp=1185143629&w=300&h=225]

http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid3698418001/bctid3692380001

http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid3698418001/bctid3663854001

We apologize for the delay in posting these videos, we have been facing some weak internet connections that prevented us from posting these earlier. We hope this won’t be a problem for future videos. Group #3’s video is uploaded, and below it are the links to Groups #1 & #2.  They will appear in a new window.  Better late than never, right? Hope you enjoy!


Photo projects finished, now on to video!

Photo Scavenger Hunt-Vijaynagar Colony

What an eventful week! I mean that in terms of classes and life here in Hyderabad, of course, but also for our people at home in the US. Here is a summary of some highlights.

We split our classes this week into two groups, which rotated. One group learned how to upload photos from the cameras onto the computer, as well as an introduction to Final Cut Express. The other group began brainstorming, writing, and creating storyboards for their first video projects. At times it was a little difficult to get the students who were in the writing group to focus, since the other group was working on the computer, which is always an automatic distraction. But they are excited by the prospect of planning for a video project, and many of our artistically inclined students especially enjoyed storyboarding, so they should be pretty prepared with their pre-production by next week.

The biggest difficulty for the students on the computer so far seems to be just getting used to the Mac mouse, which can be very fussy, and doesn’t have the separate right click button that PC mouses have. Several students became easily frustrated that they had less control over the pointer, especially in Final Cut Express, when they had to move different sections around on the timeline. However, it was a great opportunity for leaders to emerge. The students who had a better handle on using the computer were quick to patiently help their peers, and explain the process to them in their own language, which helped clarify some confusion. Pretty soon, the students were all taking turns placing photos into a sequence in the timeline, using the razor tool to trim the sections, and were using the text tool to create captions for each photo. The still image sequences from the Vijaynagar Colony group are uploaded here. The Nalgonda group is still finishing up, but we will post them early this week.

The Nalgonda group had a bit of a rough start to the week, as it was difficult to keep the boys in one spot and to focus and listen for more than five minutes. However, by Tuesday, after a brief conversation with the class, things ran much smoother. These boys have immense amounts of energy, and though it may be a challenge to get them to focus that energy, it is obvious that they are bright and quick to learn. I am confident that they will be able to produce creative, thoughtful projects, and am excited to see what they come up with. Shamstabrez, a student of Sarah’s and Ioana’s from last term, has been a frequent visitor in our class. Though he is one of the smaller boys and has an exceptionally sweet demeanor, he is a strong leader amongst the boys, and helping out with his camera and computer skills. On Monday, he asked if he would be allowed to come to our classes even though he had already taken it the previous term. I told him he could, but I also warned him that he had already learned a lot of the skills we would be teaching, and it might be repetitive to him. However, I also welcomed him as a helper and peer leader. He said he didn’t mind, but he also said, “Challenge me.” I was immediately impressed by this appeal, and am also beginning to see that once the young mind is exposed to something, it just whets the appetite for more. In particular, forms of creative expression seems to really open this floodgate, and soon a student will thirst for more and will ask to take on challenges. It gave me confidence that programs like this, really can create positive change. So we will start thinking about ways to challenge Shamstabrez and anyone else who may be more advanced, and we shall indeed bring it on.

The Vijaynagar Colony group has come to feel much more comfortable around us, which in turn has brought out more spontaneous activities, nick names (one student calls me “akah”, which means older sister in Telugu), higher participation, and many many giggles. Friday class ended with Dave demonstrating a break dancing move, the “coffee grinder”, when the students asked about dancing in America. This was quite the hit with the whole class 🙂 This was also Prithvi’s first week working with us at Vijaynagar Colony. He has been a very positive presence in the classroom, the students appreciate not only having someone who speaks both Telugu and English fluently, but also someone who is their age working with them. Prithvi has not worked much with video or editing software, but he is already picking up extremely quickly, and was already able to help instruct with Final Cut when he sat in on our lesson.

This week was full of excitement for Dave and I as Americans. Last week was full of anticipation mixed with agony, at the fact that we were on the other side of the world for this event. Leila, the woman who has helped us with our living arrangements here, is a huge Obama supporter, though she lives thousands of miles from the US, and knows that Dave and I are both also huge Obama/Biden supporters. She gave us a phone call in the morning just to make sure we were watching the coverage on television. Though we could not be in the US, we did watch the polls and also watched Obama’s speech in Grant Park. We were both filled with immense joy, when we shared the news to our students. I wasn’t sure how much they knew about the US election, but all of the students seemed to be familiar with Obama. I have gathered from news coverage on various Indian channels, and from speaking to students and other locals, that India has quite a favorable impression on our new president. In general, there is a hopeful air, and I think many here see Obama being in office as a step in the right direction as far as India’s relationship with the US goes. Listening to opinions from several locals made me happy that I did get to be here in India during the election, to see the perspective from another country.

The students never run out of questions to ask us about American culture. They are also just as eager to share their own culture with us, especially when it comes to discussions about food, music, and dance. When asked to share about American culture, Dave and I have been quick to reply with information about current politics, historical figures and events, food, and popular culture. We played some Elvis and M.I.A. for them. And for the boys I also played them Lupe Fiasco, a Muslim hip hop artist from Chicago, who they enjoyed. However, after some girls shared some traditional Indian dance moves, some asked me what types of traditional music and dance we had in America. I felt frustrated that I was so hard-pressed to provide them with a solid answer. Discussing with Dave, the closest we could think of to any type of traditional music or dance that was specific the the USA was country music, or perhaps folk music, the likes of what would have been heard at Woodstock. And perhaps rock n’ roll? But these still wouldn’t be considered traditional, by any means. In contrast to the extremely defined and rich traditions of Indian culture such as music and dance, that of the US may seem slightly sparse. However, I also thought about the fact that there is a good-sized community of almost every race you could possibly think of living in the US. And though it has taken us this long to finally elect an African American president, we have finally reached that point, and continue to grow as a country of many different races. It’s hard to define an identifying culture in music or dance for Americans, but I do believe that it does at least have the ability to attract other cultures and therefore promote sharing and understanding amongst them.


Digital Story Examples

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Dave and I both created short pieces to show the students on the first day in order to show them a little bit of what our lives are like, and also to show them examples of digital stories, and the types of projects they will be able to create.


Islam and Our School

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The students of A.P. Residential Boys’ School – the only English medium school for all Muslim boys in Andhra Pradesh – proudly present their final video project, “Islam and Our School”.