Thursday, October 31, 2013

Dental Health Project and Lessons Learned

Poster from Javkhlant school,
Uliastai soum
So, October is Dental Awareness Month. Well, not officially, but here in Uliastai, it might as well be.

This month, the Dental Awareness Project has launched at four of the five Uliastai secondary schools, as well as in Yaroo soum, Aldarhan soum and Tsagaanhairhan soum. The project involves all the 8th graders from these schools, and occurs in two to three stages, depending on who you ask and what you define as a ‘stage’:

It begins with a poster contest, with each 8th grade class working in pairs to design a poster about dental health. The posters are judged, and the winning pair gives a pre-made presentation about dental health and receives a certificate.

The dental posters from Aldarkhaan soum
Students at Devshil school, Uliastai soum
giving the presentation
Winning students from Javkhlant school,
Uliastai soum


Students from Chandmani-Erdene
School, Uliastai soum, playing a
game as part of their presentations
That, at least, is the basic structure. All the schools, even individual classes, do the competitions a little different. Sometimes all the students present on dental health together. Sometimes they make another presentation in addition to the pre-made PowerPoint. Sometimes the posters are less like posters and more like brochures. But in all cases, students are learning about dental health, so the variations don’t bother me in the least.

In addition, I’ve been doing dental assessments in preparation for the KIDS dental Dream Team coming in May. This has involved visiting all five schools in Uliastai and those at two of the outer soums, looking at the teeth of over 850 children. And it’s not done yet. I’m scheduled to go out to a number of soums to look at teeth and facilitate the soum school’s participation in the Dental Awareness Project.

Dental assessments,
Chandmani-Erdene school
I guess I kind of got lucky with this project. I think about the projects I tried to do last year, many of which ended in disastrous failures. Sometimes I thought the failure may have been a result of the projects being too widespread, but the dental project is now aimag-wide. Sometimes I thought it might be because it involved too many parties, but the Dental Project has involved teachers, directors, social workers, training managers, doctors, and volunteers from all the school.

So what makes this project such a success? I think it’s a combination of a few things, and with those things in mind, I’m writing a list of tips for future projects—as much for myself as anyone:

Hit on a need: When working on my Teaching Methodology Seminar, I had grand plans. The problem, though, is that no teacher is really that interested in improving his or her methodology; you’re not going to be fired for using an older methodology. But walking through town, you can look at our children’s teeth and know there’s a problem. In some cases, the teeth are literally rotting out of their mouths. But people who have seen it sometimes don’t really SEE it until you bring it up. Then, suddenly, you get those “Ah…!”s of recognition, and people are immediately onboard.

Make it easy: I wanted to do Lifeskills for the longest time (and still do). I went to the librarian at Bookbridge, the workers at WorldVision, and other people in the community asking for help. But no one wants to spend 2-3 hours a week teaching Lifeskills for free--teaching is a lot of work! When I went to schools, though, and met with the director about the Dental Awareness project, I came with a flyer of the project (in Mongolian) that could easily be edited, the dental presentation (in Mongolian) with pictures to show them, and a copy of the certificate, sometimes even an example printed on the nice certificate paper and sign and stamped (and looking nice!). It involved no work on the part of the director or, really, the teacher. It was an out-of-the-box deal. Easy.


Cuteness on wheels
All for the children: Children are so treasured here. I wish I had a picture of all the ways I’ve seen this demonstrated: old grandfathers carrying little children on their back, or rocking them as they slept on their shoulders; fathers scooping up their toddlers and ‘sniffing’ them affectionately; mothers cleaning them, playing with them, smiling at them as they called “minii khuu!” (my child!). The Dental Project is directly related to the health of children, and no one can, with good conscious, reject a project that focuses on such an important topic.

I guess an unofficial fourth tip would be to incorporate flexibility into everything. Every school does the project different, and why shouldn't they? Every child is different, every need is different, every situation is different. And I've rescheduled the project a dozen different times, but at least it's moving forward. I guess that's the way community development goes: it takes times, but as long as you're moving forward, that's what counts.

I hope things continue to move forward on this and other projects. I'm bolstered by my success this month, and hope November proves just as productive.

A quick shout-out to Purobi, who looked over the dental presentation for me, Bob, who taught me how to do dental assessments, and Bryan, Virginia, and Zack, who helped me do the dental assessments both at their schools--and others, as well. As in all successful projects, it's been a group effort.

Cheers,
Karen

Friday, October 18, 2013

A Garden in the Desert, Part II

I’ve gotten increasingly unreliable about updating my blog. It’s not that I forget about it, oh no. But with the surge of autumnal activity (the desperate bustle that heralds the end of summer and dread for the hiemal chill engendering, in funeral-soft voice, the uttered “Winter is coming.”), I’ve been swept up in the tide of projects, classes, and meetings.

Still, I take this bit of time to write about whatever became of my garden.

I planted my garden in May and fostered the seeds into seedlings, then left for six weeks to Darkhan. This is where the story left off, I believe (a gripping cliff-hanger, to be sure).


I returned to Uliastai to a jungle! The sweet peas came up in a tangled thicket of vining tendrils, the zucchini with dark leaves as large as my hand, and cilantro plants that sprouted here and there, without regard from the carefully furrowed rows Tsogoo had made for me. Lettuce sprouted in clumps of bright-green leaves.


The chill came swiftly, but I was able to harvest some things before the frost.I harvest one giant zucchini from my garden that was baked into a delicious loaf of zucchini and walnut bread (enjoyed by the PCVs and two of our JICA volunteer friends during a group pizza lunch).

The sweet peas were harvested and have been tossed into pasta sauces and soups (and gormandized with relish by yours truly). Some of the tendrils of the sweet pea plant were used in a dish made lovingly by my wonderful godmother Purobi.  The lettuce went into the Uliastai Peace Corps Volunteer’s taco night, for which some of the cilantro made a delicious salsa. I was able to salvage many of the cilantro plants from my garden by potting them and bringing them indoors.

The growing season in Mongolia is short, but the success of my summer gardening experiment will, I hope, have long-term benefits. Ulzii, manager World Vision and interested observer to my acitivites, is interested in introducing a greater variety of crops to Uliastai farmers, and we will attempt a project next spring to conduct trainings and supply seeds to potential growers. The additional variety will, we hope, not only create another revenue stream for these growers, but also increase the variety of produce available here, and help improve nutrition.

Closer to my heart is the hope that many families will begin keeping their own gardens, providing healthy vegetables for family members and giving families a chance to work together. But I suppose there is time enough for gardening to catch on, and if this project has taught me nothing else, it’s taught me that (especially in Mongolia), there is lots of space to grow.

Cheers,

Karen