This is the mural that the kids designed and painted towards the end of the 2013 dry season holiday program in Minyerri. It is now hanging up at Minyerri School.
In acknowledgement of our first program, the name, Teachabout, is based on the word 'tijimbat' which is used in Minyerri to mean 'teach your kids about everything'.
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Eamon: Just dance
I woke up
sore this morning. It must’ve been all that dancin’ during our second last day
of activities yesterday. While a few of the older girls in the program -
Marcianne, Dorissina and Patricia - ran a competition to find English words and
pair them with their Kriol counterparts, Jesse and I were enlisted as back-up
dancers in our newest activity, appropriately dubbed, “Dancin’ Amy”. By the end
we were all tired and weak but Lonely Boy and Gangnam Style never looked so
good!
Then we challenged
the kids to each build a watercraft out of two plastic cups, ten plastic straws
and a small piece of plastic wrap. Their designs were so successful at holding
up a handful of metal washers that I think we’re going to have to make it a bit
more difficult for them next time!
Our final
afternoon session for the program involved more art than you can poke a
popsicle stick at: painting with frozen watercolours, decorating covers for the
Teachabout Mix CD Vol. 4, putting the final flourishes on our awesome Minyerri
mural and finishing off T-shirt painting for those who missed out previously.
A couple of
hours for the Activity Leaders to rest, relax, eat and recuperate before we
were straight back into it for a movie night with kids of all ages. The Sapphires
proved to be a hit and the graciously-accepted homemade popcorn did not last
long!
This
morning we concluded the program with a sports day. The three teams – the Super
Speedy Scorpions, the Wild Horses and the Angry Tigers – played several rounds
of basketball and soccer before completing a few relay races to settle the
scores. The Super Speedy Scorpions won the day through a combination of speediness
and sportsmanship, although the other two teams certainly gave them a run for
their money.
What better
way to finish off a packed morning of sport, sport and more sport, than with a
good ol’ fashioned barbeque? Well, maybe with a bit more dancin’.
Day 15: Sports Day
Marcianne going for goal. Plenty of atmosphere from the pavilion behind.
For some reason, Thesilannias brought an egg and a spoon to the silly hat relay.
Damien's sixth false start in a row. He saw the funny side.
The ever-smiling Gershom, even when negotiating an awkward crab walk relay.
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Day 14: Floating straws and handprints
These straws were meant for making a water craft. Brittania thought that was silly.
Success! It floats!
Estherlita preparing a handprint for the mural.
Last chance for kids to paint t-shirts, with excellent results!
Monday, July 15, 2013
Day 13: Can you feel the water tension? That's science, not magic!
Beaded geckos.
Testing out water tension with a paper clip.
Floating water - science, not magic!
Posers on top of a rock at Renyin.
Amy: MacDonald and Renyin
Today started with the hope of a
fishing and hunting trip for the boys in the program. Jesse had tried numerous
times last week to organise this trip and today he was successful. The boys
loaded into a troopie with Jesse, Daryl and our friend Trevor. After a quick
stop at the shop to buy bullets, lures and a new billy, they were off to
MacDonald.
Despite Trevor complaining that
his game was off, he still managed to shoot a bush turkey. The turkey went on
the roof and the boys continued their drive to MacDonald. When they got there,
the kids dug a fire pit and helped Daryl make the fire. While the turkey cooked,
the boys spent time fishing. Trevor offered up his expert knowledge to the
kids. Unfortunately they didn’t catch anything.
Meanwhile, the girls had an
action-packed morning at school with Rita, Erin, Eamon and myself.
Erin ran an invisible message
activity where the girls wrote a message with lemon juice on a white piece of
paper and then put it in the oven and watched their message appear. Myself and Rita
taught the girls how to make geckos out of beads. The girls carefully planned
their design and then, slowly but surely, learnt the techniques needed to form
the gecko. Through a lot of trial and error all the girls completed their
geckos and many turned them into necklaces, bracelets and headpieces.
Water tension was the focus in
science with Eamon. The girls got to participate in many activities
demonstrating the fun side of the concept. A favourite was ‘floating water’
where they filled up a plastic cup, placed an index card on top of it and flipped
it over. The water looked like it was floating. They soon learnt it wasn’t
magic, it was science! Realising the delicacy required to maintain water
tension, the girls developed a game whereby they tried to get as far as
possible across the basketball court before their water tension broke and they
spilt all the water.
For the afternoon session we
picked up the girls (along with many of the beaded geckos from the morning) and
headed to Renyin. Renyin is a waterhole surrounded by rocky mountains. The kids
love it because there are lots of rocks to jump off and the water is deep.
During the drive to Renyin the girls taught Eamon and Erin some kriol words. We
spent the afternoon relaxing, swimming, looking at birds’ nests, sharing
stories and eating oranges.
On the way home we finally
got the CD player in the troopie working and danced and sung our way back to
Minyerri.
Sunday, July 14, 2013
Rita: Arabella the NAIDOC croc
On Friday, Minyerri was in the midst of NAIDOC celebrations.
The highlights included football and basketball competitions and a big disco in
the evening. The kids proudly showed off their NAIDOC t-shirts that had been
hand painted by one of the organisers of the festivities. We spent the better
part of the afternoon watching the girls’ basketball competition. The court was
a hub of activity with women of all ages watching the game. Little children ran
frantically around the painted boundary lines while the older women sat on the
side chatting.
I am pleased to report that the Blackwater Cats football
team, who are coached by our friend Trevor, won their first match. However, the
Brisbane Lions (deceptively an all-Minyerri team) won the grand final.
On Saturday we revisited the Flatrock waterhole at Minamia accompanied
by Hilda, Mary, Loris, Isobel, and a massive drove of kids. Eamon and Amy
joined the women on their fishing venture while the rest of us swam and
explored the rockpools. The kids spotted a goanna hiding in a tiny waterhole and
spent the next hour staking it out, hoping to land the lizard. No such luck.
Between them, the four women returned home with 2 turtles,
13 brim and, most spectacularly, Mary caught a freshwater croc on her fishing
line. The 1.3 meter croc was immediately given the name Arabella. Mary, a
slender woman, outmuscled the croc. Later, she admitted that it almost pulled
her in.
Sadly, Eamon and Amy didn’t score any lucky catches…
although they did lose a hook. We had to settle for can corned beef damper.
On the return home we got bogged in sand at the bottom of a
steep incline. We got out thanks to Loris’s expertise, using smashed up termite
mounds to toughen the areas in front of the wheel.
Today was spent planning for our final week in Minyerri. We
have planned a jam packed three final days. Spoilers – a boys hunting trip, a
new activity fondly called ‘Dancin’ Amy’ and the big sports day.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Day 12: A giraffe, a rainbow and a rubber band guitar
Kelvin's liquid density column; honey, dishwashing liquid, water and oil.
A less familiar creature during a clay animal session. This is Gershom's giraffe.
DIY junk instruments (see rubber band guitar).
Every mural needs a rainbow.
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Day 11: Pancakes and goo
Flippin' fantastic.
Worth the effort and the wait. Gershom was pretty happy with the final result.
Goo brothers.
Flubber gone wrong.
Kids: Johanan's stop motion story
Johanan loves writing stories and drawing pictures. So Amy turned it into a sweet stop motion flick to show his story to the kids.
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Jesse: Bush gum and white ochre
This morning was characterised by backup plans, and more
backup plans in case the backups fell through.
The hope was that there would be a boys fishing and hunting
trip led by some Minyerri men. The girls had their turn last week, tearing
their hands up on spiky pandanus leaves. It was only fair that us boys had the
same opportunity.
Alas, of the three men we were hoping would don an activity
leader t-shirt for the day, one had broken a rib and was under strict orders to
rest up, another was busy with an unexpected visit from an old friend and the
third was nowhere to be seen. Both Eamon and Daryl were in bed with mysterious
illnesses.
Two ALs down. No, worries. We had a backup day full of great
activities, and the rest of us were feeling chipper.
I told the kids the story of the great David Unaipon, an
Aboriginal writer and inventor who had an incredible knack for ideas. He’s also
the bloke on our $50 note. The follow up was an activity in which each kid had
to draw themselves on the $50 note and write a sentence about the cool things
they’d done to get their face in everyone’s wallet.
Elizabeth wrote, “I am on the $50 note because I’m good at
maths, reading, cooking, marbles, cleaning and English work.”
We watched an episode of Bush Mechanics, (which the kids loved!!!),
and the kids tested their engineering talents on our Egg Drop activity. The kids
designed, made and tested an egg protection vessel in an attempt to save their
egg from a 3 meter drop onto concrete.
Minyerri is buzzing with anticipation for the NAIDOC week
celebrations happening this Friday. We’re hearing things about basketball,
football and softball tournaments, dancing, music and people coming from
everywhere! There will be a great ceremony, with the dancers painting their
bodies in white bush paint. So the afternoon session saw us back in the
troopies searching for white ochre.
Hilda was one of three women who took us and the kids out,
teaching them where and how to collect the bush paint. The first trick was
finding the place. Hilda was sure we were going the wrong way, despite the
convincing directions that were coming from the other two women. When we hit a
(creekbed) dead end on an old bush track, Hilda was humble in her rightness.
She found the right way pretty soon after she took the reins.
When we got there, the women were straight into it, hacking
at the white ochre rocks with sticks and knives to break it up, keeping only
the whitest, cleanest portions of powder in bags and old flour drums to take
home.
Some of the kids had never seen the process before. Others
clearly had. Nonetheless they all got right into the experience, collecting
their own samples of powder. For the kids who began to tire of breaking up
rocks, the natural progression was to cover themselves (and us) in the freshly
acquired bush paint.
Towards the end of the session, the kids took the activity
leaders out into the bush in search of bush chewing gum (sap from eucalyptus
trees) and spinifex grass that we were to bring back to Minyerri to help Eamon
and Daryl feel better. It was a really nice way to round out the day – with the
kids being the teachers.
There’s a chance that we’ll get our boys trip in tomorrow.
But today wasn’t too shabby for a backup plan.
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