Today is a really hot day without the sun visible in the sky. Today I
tried to open a bank account and that wasn’t so very easy. First I had to go to
the bank and get a letter to show at Fiji Revenue and Customs Authority in
Suva; I need a TIN-number. To get to that office I had to take a taxi. Then I
had to wait for half an hour to talk to an officer. He was very talkable and
explained for me that Fiji had improved their taxpaying routines since 2010;
they are adopting models overseas. He managed to help me quite fast and when
all was done he said: Welcome to Fiji! He was a nice guy! Then I went back to
the bank and got my bank account. Now USP can reimburse my administration fee…
It took a part of my day but I got some new impressions and I realize how hard
it it for a developing country to build up an administration. One of the
problems here is that not everyone pays her/his taxes.
Once a
month is Pacific Market Day at Campus where they are selling food, handicraft,
root crops, books, fruits, jewellery, printed fabrics and much more. We bought
some mangos and a small tanoa. Lunch at Govinda’s; a highlight of the day.
Their vegetarian Indian food is just fantastic. Gunilla had a coconut to drink;
you got it with a straw. Today’s class is partly presentations of the student’s
reflections over their group career counseling sessions and partly a discussion
about horizon of opportunities and the career wheel. Tomorrow we take of to
Beqa; taxi to the bus station, a Sunbeam bus ride for 30 minutes and then 60
minutes on the ocean and then…
onsdag 29 augusti 2012
Flip-flops
500
meters swimming in the pool; nice! An American pizza at the local pizzeria in
the small shopping mall near Campus followed. A Saturday in town that didn’t
gave any idea worth a reflection. On Sunday we took the early bus to Pacific
Harbor, on the southcoast of Vitu Levu. We had booked a beachfront bure for one
night just to come away from Suva. When we arrived from the ice-cold bus; this
bus company has airconditioning in their buses and they use them despite the
outer temperature… When we arrived to Uprising Beach Resort there were no
beachfront bure reserved in our name so we had to take a beachfront villa
instead. You can’t live more exclusive in Fiji. What we thought was the best in
the villa was the outdoor bathroom; just fantastic! And compared to how most
Fijians live their ordinary lifes this is something quite extra ordinary. We
had a very nice day in the sun and in the water and the evening ended with a
bottle of cooled white wine on the varanda to our villa. That was very good. On
Monday it has been raining all day and because the bus shouldn’t arrive until
4:25pm we had to sit under shelter the whole day and that isn’t good at all…all
days in Fiji are different and you can never predict how the coming day would
look like. This is very interesting but this time not so pleasant.
The
mood was low but my brains kept on working. Suddenly it stood very clear how
our programme at Malmö University should be changed to better match the demands
in the future. Not all new, but a change due to the outcomes we can see every
year when we look at our products; our students. A really great part of them
can communicate in a professional manner but they are no career guidance
counselors in the true professional sence according to what is required by the
learning outcomes we are set to guarantee. I mean that good career guidance
counselors can see themselves and their own actions and the ones of the help
seeker in a whole context that creates meaning for their dialogue. This doesn’t
call for talent nor persistence but rather talent, a humble attitude to
learning and reading literature, hard work and persistence. I think we lack
something here…
When
you are away from your ordinary work and duties it seems like your brains are
having a really good time. They are as free as your feet; mine have been
dressed in flip-flops now for more than a month and they are really enjoying
it. I think just like the feet the brains got more oxygen when not locked up in
the ordinary context.
lördag 25 augusti 2012
Hibiscus festival
Adi
Senikal was really a ¨spectacle”; men dressed in womens clothes were acting in
a way that have a great improvement potential. The sound was terrible but
people were having a really good time. We have watched the festival every day
at television (the festival goes from Friday to next Saturday) and today, the
last day; it was coronation of the king and queen of the festival. These were
the two persons that regarding the judges opinion should stand out as role
models for other adolescents in Fiji. This is a very good idea, though the
process of selecting them is a bit special, should I say. But as always; the
purpose gains the inventions (this happens to be swenglish).
Yesterday
I woke up and Gunilla invited me to breakfast; the whole table was covered by
leafs of different size and art. At the top of it was a wonderful bouquet of flowers
and a nice breakfast. It was my birthday! A very interesting book about all
trees and shrubs of The University of the South Pacific was hiding under a
banana leaf. Campus is like a great arboretum. I didn’t know there were so many
species of palms…
I have a reflection that took me a day to clear out. Today when we walked across campus I noticed that the moon was in sight, but the upper part of it was lighted; it looked like a cap. The same moon some nights ago was formed like a cradle, like a U. I have never seen this before. Or perhaps I have but I have never thought of it like I have done today. I have my own explanation. Do you?
torsdag 23 augusti 2012
Young clear voices
School
holidays for two weeks now. Not so many buses in the streets; the society slows
down a bit. But the pupils are still active. Near campus is the National arena
and around it there are several rugby, football and basket/net ball fields. I
have heard a speaker now for two days. The kids classes and schools are
competing. In the morning the buses comes down the road packed with expectant
kids. They are singing with clear voices. In the afternoon I can hear them
yelling; a sound of joy, happiness and excitement. I never hear that sound in
Sweden. It seems to me that our Swedish kids are more individualistic and not
affected about how their class or school performs in a competition. This is no
good! Are we not interested? Do we not care? Are we blasé? Is it only the
project “ME” that interests Swedish kids? Or, perhaps I haven’t listened enough
back home…?
It’s
Hibiscus festival in town the whole week: amusement park, food, gadgets,
flowers, lotteries, shows and as the French says “Spectacle”. Here is no alcohol
at all. Some have been drinking grogg/cava, but it’s very peaceful except the
high sound of music. People are happy; especially the children. Television
(Fijione) is broadcasting the competitions called Queen, King, Princess and
Prince of the festival where people are presenting different skills or just
talks about their cloths and their sponsor. Interesting, very special. We are
going to a show this evening “Adi Senikau” where men dressed as women are
acting… Let’s see what it gives. It’s sure enjoying and will give us several
culture points…
Yesterdays
class was good and I felt very warm inside and had a smile on my face when I
walked home under a clear shining moon (like a cradle) in the dark evening. My
students were after my introduction and lecture acting in the snake form (as a
colletive career guidance counselor) with a help seekers difficulty. I was
acting as a very active supervisor and took a time out as soon as anything
should, due to my considerations, be commented. It was really a good learning
experience (in the shadow of Krumboltz’s theory). Really good!
måndag 20 augusti 2012
The sound of a fan
Woke
up at 3 and could very distinctly hear the sound of a fan in the house.
We
had locked the door when we came home last night after a nice dinner with
Poonam and Michael at a nice indian restaurant in downtown Suva. We lock the
door when we know that no one will enter…It’s perhaps the maid who has forgot
to turn the fan off while cleaning the room next to ours.
I
couldn’t fall back to sleep and my brain started to reflect; it seem as it has
a great workload - I’m dreaming a lot. This reflection is about my knowledge
and skills in English: I started learning English in 4th or 5th
class. We had a disputed teacher! (The explanation is that I was a pupil at the
Teachers School, were pupils in class 3-6 were integrated). After that I have
studied English in secondary school and in Highschool. My whole first year at
the University studying sociology all the literature was in English. But, the lectures
were all teaching in Swedish! This was before the PowerPoint time. The lecture
was writing on the blackboard or was it on a whiteboard; I don't remember, and
the students were copying what the lecturer was writing and saying. I didn’t
read all the literature, that’s for sure. The result of this was that I didn’t
learn so much English as optimal and that was due to both my own acting and the
lecturer’s behavior. After my university studies I have tried occasionally to
read novels in English and I have even practiced English at work at the Swedish
Immigration board and at the former Växjö University. During my time at the
latter I had the opportunity to have a two weeks course in English in
Colchester in England. At my present work at Malmö University I have really
tried to recover and improve my knowledge and skills in English.
When
you are lying in your bed, either asleep or awake your solutions on problems
and situations can be very smart and trustworthy. My thoughts about the
explanation to my limited knowledge of English fell back to first what the
disputed lecturer in class four or five really was teaching and the second to
how smart it was to teach a topic from the sociological literature in English
in Swedish…
I’m
doing the same thing at work. Through my own behavior I contribute to the same
acting of my own students as I myself did when I was a student a long time ago.
Why do I teach basic counseling skills from Egan’s The skilled helper via Power Point in Swedish? This is not so very
smart!
The
questions now are: Can I change this? Is it appropriate to help the students
over the average line and facilitate for them to be better in English in the
long term? Is this way the right for a society where we are talking about
lifelong learning and internalization?
The
sound of a fan came from next room were a new guest, Tom, has slept this night.
söndag 19 augusti 2012
The Milky Way
This
weekend we went to an island on the northwest coast of Vitu Levu. To travel in
this country is not so easy… Early morning taxi to the bus station. Trying to
find the right bus; we didn’t found the bus from the company we were told to
take, but we found another. We took Inter-Cities from Suva to Ellington Warfh,
a journey on 150 km. Four hours for an Express Bus gives an impression of the
quality the roads hold here in Fiji; they are bumpy and the potholes are
uncountable. Our kidneys had a really hard time. No announcement of the stops
and just occasionally I asked the bus host to tell me when we are to reach
Ellington Wharf. He sad: It’s here and we got off the bus. What luck! We were
standing at a junction just in a sugarcane plantation. We had by the guidebook
seen that it’s only two kilometers to the harbor. So we took a warm walk to the
harbor; a harbor? Two shelters and a small jetty and no boat. Some people in
one of the shelters, called a restaurant. The woman helped us to call the
resort and a boat arrived in 30 minutes. The sun in zenith, a fairly hard wind
and wonderful green-blue water. 20 minutes later we reach the sandy beach of Nanuna-I-Ra’s
southeastern side. Two people standing at the beach welcomed us. Our beachfront
bure was very nice. Not more than 20 meters to the wonderful water and 30
meters to the restaurant. We took a quick bath as quick as we could and it was
as warm and nice as in our dreams about the Pacific. Later in the afternoon we
did some snorkeling too but it was a disappointment. This place couldn’t
compete with Tambua Sands on the Coral Coast. On this little island the
electricity must be produced on the island; the resort had a diesel compressor
that was working daytime and was put of at 10pm. No lamps mean that you can see
the heaven – and we really did. All the stars and the Milky Way were just
astonishing. Personal best…! We stayed for two nights. The journey back to Suva
was just like as it was coming here except it was Sunday and a lot of people
walking on the way to or from church, all properly dressed. I have one
reflection concerning the bus ride: the important role of the bus host (or what
we can call a person who writes out the tickets and helps people handling their
luggage). He has the money and makes all the works with passengers so the
driver can concentrate on driving the bus. And that takes sure all his
attention because the road looks like they do. Being two personal on the bus
makes it safe for them and It’s always to have a working mate to talk with… The
bus tickets are filled in by the bus host and a copy is given to the traveller.
This copy is to be hand over to the driver when leaving the bus. Is this a
control that everyone has paid for the journey and even a control of how the
bus host is handling his job? I think so and it is good! I can just compare
this Fijian style with the Swedish were we have problems with security on our
public transportation to the extent that the Öresundtraffic can’t control the
travellers tickets because the train hosts are working alone and due to the
security situation. I just ask myself if Fiji should be considered as a more
secure society that Sweden and my answer is by no means: “No”. We have made so
many so called rationalizations that we have forgot the main purpose of the
activity and we have made many people unemployed. In Sweden it seems to be
better, in the name of competition, to have people unemployed and dependent on
social welfare and on the job centres jobcoaches than to let every individual
have a job to go to and by that means have a chance to feel proud to contribute
to the good for everybody. This is not good!
torsdag 16 augusti 2012
Singh has got everything + Power Point is king
Thirteen
lengths in the pool this nice morning, I start enjoying swimming. It’s never to
late to adopt a new and healthy habit. A small bit of the moon together with a
star (wonder witch one?) is seen in the clear blue sky. The sun is to rise. Lots
of mongooses. The grass is soaking wet; it must have been raining. Gunilla is
much faster than me. The American student has left for Samoa. This means that
we are free to eat white bread today; she left some that we can transform into
toast.
This
morning I stayed at home to watch some videorecorded dialoges; I have no chance
to do this at work because I have no access to a television and because I can’t
hear a word from the camera due to the noise around me. The dialogues were
quite good. Some closed questions and the paper in the counselors knee… This is
not good!
Lunch
at the campus café; chicken kebab with frites and a Fijiwater. Preparing for
today’s class. Meeting with the woman from the Ministry of Education who is
dealing with career counseling issues. My question to her was about how to get
access to the schools so my students can do observations of teachers och
counselors acting in career guidance matters. I started the meeting and Tima
closed it. I had to go to my class. Today nearly all my student attended, only
one was missing. She had informed me via internet.
I
gave a short and lucid lecture about career development theories. Then I let
the students, in two groups, discuss two questions: one about appropriate
theories that can help us understand and explain career development among
people living in the Pacific och the other about Holland’s theory. They
discussed the questions, after a rather long time of silence in one of the
groups, and came to concensus in both groups. The final discussion in the whole
class was truly interesting. The answer I got after asking them: What is your
reflection over this last activity? was: we must be better prepared before the
lecture. I was very glad to hear that answer because it proves that my idea of
pedagogy has landed in their heads, although at this time… a little bit to
late. But, they will perform better next lecture. That’s good!
Well
tasting Fijian food and a glass of chilled red wine closed a very interesting day.
It’s
not only the fact that Sing’s shop across the street has all you need of
breakfast and evening food; he has also got a liquor store. He, I think it is
Singh’s son, is the head of this part of the enterprise. He sells cold beer and
it is only 50 meters from MQ5. This is good!
My
impression is that a great lot of the education here is characterized as
mediation pedagogy. From my own office I can hear lectures talking for long
periods without interruption. Some rhetorical questions is asked but I see or
hear no sign of discussions among the students during class. This is quite a
big difference compared to how my collegues and I work at Malmö University. At
the career counseling programme in Malmö we have many hours together with our
students compared with what I have with my students here. Perhaps it is due to
the fact that I’m working with postgraduate students here… The training in
practical counseling our students in Sweden gets is far more that they get
here. Here there is no chance to be so clever as it is in Sweden. I wish my
students in Sweden should realize this and really take advantage of their
advantageous situation. I think some of them does but it could be more common!
To climbe above the average line ought to be a habit for more students, here
and in Sweden. What is my responsibility in this? How could I encourage them?
How can I make my teaching more interesting so it generates interest among my
students? One thing I know for sure is: it’s not by using Power Point more
frequently…
After
lunch today Gunilla and I went to the book shop to buy a book about the trees
and shrubs of the Pacific. There was a sell out, so we found a kind of story
book for primary school: Tali Magimagi: weaving stories. Perhaps this can give
me an idea. This is a clear example of Planned Happenstance… That’s good!
Prenumerera på:
Inlägg (Atom)