For the second letter from David Dix, one of CIIE Board Members, we got a glimpse of the impact CIIE and ILEP programs have through Shri. P.V. Thomas and Riyas P.T., ILEP graduates who came to Â鶹¾«Ñ¡ in 2014.
From Travel Diary of David and Janet Dix: At Malappuram
We went to Kendriya Vidyalaya to visit with Shri. P.V. Thomas, 2014 ILEP graduate. Kendriya Vidyalaya is one in a system of prestigious Central Government Schools that operate throughout India to better serve employees of the Central Government, who likely during their careers will serve the government in numerous positions in a variety of locations. Thomas, who teaches Economics, is on the faculty of Kendriya Vidyalaya in Malappuram in Kerala, but has taught in other Central Government Schools in other parts of India as well.
The rigorous curriculum at Central Government Schools is set by the Central Government and it is the same for all schools in the system so if the person is transferred, his or her children do not lose time. Tuition and fees are roughly 700 rupees per month. The demanding curriculum is in English and Hindi from Grade 1 and by the sixth grade students must be comfortable in both languages. For the last two years for grades 11 and 12, the student will choose to specialize in Science or Commerce/Economics. Students who fail are given one opportunity to repeat. If they fail again, they have to exit the system. Any graduate who posts respectable marks and test scores is virtually assured of admission to one of the nation‘s prestigious colleges or universities. The school week is six days except for one five-day week scheduled each month. The school year has two 10-day breaks and a 50-day summer break during June, the hottest month. Thomas, an ILEP graduate who came to Â鶹¾«Ñ¡ in 2014 and an award winning teacher, will receive coveted Central Government recognition in two weeks. Â鶹¾«Ñ¡ is well represented at Kendriya Vidyalaya!
Janet and I with Thomas and his family.
At the entrance of the school is a letter about education by Abraham Lincoln.
Janet and I with an 11th grader who flawlessly recited Martin Luther King’s I Have A Dream speech by memory as part of the daily school assembly.
A selfie by Thomas showing some of the students, Janet and I engaged in a lively one hour discussion
Janet and I with V. Santhosh Kumar, the newly appointed principal of the school.
David and Janet Dix: At the Teakwood Museum
Riyas P.T., another 2014 ILEP-KSU, planned to have us visit his high school in a community near that of Thomas, but a demonstration against the Central Government‘s new policy regarding Muslim refugees from neighboring countries made that impossible. Instead he and a colleague, Jaleel, treated us to a visit to the Teakwood Museum in Nilambur in the foothills of the Western Ghats. Alongside the Museum is a beautiful park dedicated to the preservation and education of nature. This is a favorite location for school field trips and we had fun watching the energy of young people learning in this setting. Teakwood plantations are an important source of lumber exported and domestically turned into handsome furniture by skilled craftsmen. Teakwood is called Carpenter’s Pride because of its strength and beautiful grain. The trees take more than 75 years to mature and, left untouched, some trees survive more than 500 years. Doug and Karen Fuller were the Friendship Family for Riyas when he was at Â鶹¾«Ñ¡. They are ones of the kindest and most positive individuals one could ever meet. His family hosted us to tea at their home. Riyas is another outstanding person touched by the Â鶹¾«Ñ¡College of Education and its Read Center for International and Intercultural Education. (Unfortunately, the ILEP program was cancelled by the current administration in Washington DC. An abbreviated Fulbright program survives.) What incredible hospitality Janet and I are experiencing through these ILEP Alumni.
Teakwood Museum and Bioresources Nature Park
Janet and I with Riyas and his friend at the Teakwood Museum
Janet and I with Riyas in the garden of the Teakwood Museum
Both alumni, Shri. P.V. Thomas and Riyas P.T., have amazingly contributed to the development of the local. We are impressed to see both alumni being active agents of change, which represents what ILEP, CIIE, and Â鶹¾«Ñ¡ value. This is why diversity and exchange programs are much needed in the world!