The classroom is sometimes also used as a classroom, but I must admit very little teaching goes on. This could be because it´s the last week of term and not particularly typical, and there are signs of work on the walls. But I´m not sure time is always very well spent. School starts at 8, and when I get there at 9-ish, kids are still arriving, wandering round the playground, and class has sort of started. Then at 10 there´s a 30-minute break, when the kids all go out into the playground, if there aren´t wandering around there already. And this week, straight after break there have often been very long teacher meetings, so guess what, yes there´s more break for the kids! You´d think the teachers would meet during break, but not here ...
In the 5-year-old class they´ve been working on colours and numbers up to 20 all year, and some know them quite well and others are lost. They really like art activities though, and this one kept them in the classroom!
The classroom is also used for eating lunch, which means food gets all over the desks, books, floor and there´s usually a fairly big mess to clear up afterwards. They often get something that looks like big brown kidney beans and they have to remove the skins, so they get everywhere. Hopefully they are very nutritious as otherwise it´s a really silly choice of menu!!

I must admit I´ve delayed posting this entry as I´ve been waiting to have some positive things to say. There have been times this week when I lost the will to carry on! Part of the problem is just the way things are here - it´s a bit of a culture shock. And I was hoping to work with Marisol, but she´s too busy and I hardly ever see her so I´m all on my own and it´s not much fun!!
We had a meeting with the parents last Saturday and Marisol did a great job chairing. Only a handful of parents spoke other than the presidente, and several went to sleep - Marisol reckons they´ve got parasites too. We agreed that the priorities for improvement in the school were the kitchen, toilets, rubbish, and to cover the playground with concrete to stop all the dust. I agreed that with our contributions we could help with the kitchen, as the local government is supposed to be dealing with the rest, though true to form nothing is happening. Marisol is on the case, but getting pretty fed up too.
We agreed that if I use our contributions to fund the materials, the parents would organise themselves to do the work. Things started off well with agreement at the meeting that an improved kitchen would be a very good thing. We decided we´d use a spare room on the other side of the school, much nearer to the water source, and big enough to also have a little dining room for the 4- and 5-year-olds who have lunch here. I arranged with the presidente of the teachers´association to meet on Sunday morning to go the various shops to get quotes on the materials we needed.
In Peruvian time-keeping tradition, we finally met up at about 4pm, when most of the ironmongers had closed - it was Sunday afternoon afterall! We did manage to get some prices though, and the presidente assured me by Monday morning he´d have the full quote ready and that he´d meet me at 9 the next morning at the school to start work.
The last few days have been a bit of a nightmare! On Monday the presidente didn´t show up and the quote didn´t materialise, which meant that I couldn´t go and buy the materials. There were a few parents hanging around, and another man had been sent to start work, but he didn´t speak much and when we tried to get him to start preparing things, he said he didn´t want to and didn´t have any time ... I´m still baffled as to why he showed up at all! So I wasted a whole day and left feeling pretty frustrated thinking that if nothing happened the next day, as I´d been assured it would, that I´d pull out and find another project to support. I didn´t come here to do this on my own!
On Tuesday the presidente made an appearance and he explained that the parents were going to raise money by having some kind of food event at the weekend to pay for him and some workmates to do the kitchen. When I asked for the quote he said he was working on it right then and showed me a half-completed scribbled list. He´d also lost the list we´d made on the Sunday! After a few hours of hanging around, I gave up on the quote and managed to persuade him to come with me to buy the materials, as I had a rough idea of what it would cost and knew it was within our budget.
We managed to get most things from one shop and they agreed to deliver the next day - sand, cement, stucco, pipes, taps, sink, etc... and we found a chimney and a stove in another shop. At least the day wasn´t wasted, but no workmen showed up at the school that day, so no actual work on the kitchen itself in two days! And we only have this week, aarghh! You´d think they´d grab this opportunity and get on with it, but I don´t think they have it in them!
Working on the quote ... the one that is yet to materialise
Buying the stove and chimney ...
Wednesday, I dragged myself back to the school, and this was the worst day so far ... I arrived to find no workmen, no presidente, no parents, and what´s more all the children and teachers were leaving the school as they´d been invited to a private school for a chocolatada. They hadn´t told me about it and I wasn´t invited, and had to wait for the men to arrive anyway, also for the materials to be delivered at 9.30. None of the teachers came to ask if they could help, they just left. I sat in the playground on my own for about an hour, looking at the dust and rubbish, wondering what I was doing here when nobody else seemed to care! Very depressing. By about 10.30 two men and the presidente appeared, and by 11 the materials finally arrived. Then a bit of work was started - filling in the holes beneath the roof with stones and mud.
But I must admit I´m feeling a bit better now (Friday) as work has continued Weds-Friday with the same group of men who seem to be doing a good job, as far as I can tell - don´t know much about adobes! And we now have water connected, pipes and sink are in, and an adobe kitchen worksurface is nearly finished. When I left today, they were going to cover the walls with stucco and start on the cement floor. Also some adjustments are needed to where the stove will go, as they hadn´t made a big enough hole for the fire, and we need two stoves for the big pans to heat the water. So we´re not going to finish by end today, but work is also planned for tomorrow, and I´ve been told that parents are going to come next week to clean the playground and rubbish area. So fingers crossed that I´ll have more good news to report when I go back on Monday ...
Arrival of the materials
Filling in the gaps under the roof
Coca leaf and chicha break - they have a lot of these!