Boo boo in select company

Boo boo in select company
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Sunday 5 September 2021

Teachers' Life

 Teachers' day. Now, there's a thought. I was a teacher from 1963 to 1998. Actually, I never stopped being one. That tone - pedantic and authoritarian, does not please my children. Actually, the best teachers' days in my view are Saturdays and Sundays. Bliss to get up late, hang around in a housecoat all day, drink lethal numbers of cups of tea...

I was a smorgasbord kind of teacher -- I taught Secondary School, Primary school, Teacher Training college and nipped at the heels of University without much success. Too much like work, that last one. Until the British Council gave me a fancy name ('Maths Adviser -- deceived no one) and sent me to Africa to educate the 'natives.' Who knew a lot more Maths than I did, and a great deal more about how to train teachers without any resources other than a blackboard and chalk . One wag said to me, 'Just give us the money and go away, Anand.'

Uganda, for instance, put up with me with genuine affection and a smidgen of amusement. One day, the Makerere University lecturers invited me to one of their parties. No women around; I think I was a honorary male. They exchanged stories about the Tanzanian soldiers marching in to get rid of Idi Amin and the bombs whizzing past the top of the flat where we were meeting.

These guys were seriously clever, one of them had two Ph.Ds in Maths. Why two, Omurotu? I asked. Scholarships, he said. Whenever one was offered, I took it. The second one was in India and he came back with the Indian habit of wobbling their heads, which is often caricatured on T V in England. In the process of those two five-year scholarships, he lost his wife -- she gave up waiting around and left.

All the Maths syllabuses in Africa were too ambitious at Secondary level and sometimes at Primary level. Often the teachers at Primary level, who taught all the subjects to one class, did not have enough Maths in them to manage the aspirations of the Ministry of Education.

My first job was to get some consensus about what needed to be taught, when. Simultaneous Equations in Primary 5??  Jesus wept!

It was in Nigeria, in a tiny little town called Ikot Ekpene, on the Aba road, that I started my teaching career. My salary was nineteen pounds a month. It was a girls' training college and I loved walking into my first classroom of The Sacred Heart College, Ifuho. The college was run by American Catholic nuns, and all the girls had to wear uniforms -- brown pinafores over white blouses. Skirts had to touch the floor when the girls knelt for prayer, which was many times during the day. But that dirty brown on polished dark complexions?An abomination. Grass green is what I would have voted for.

They stuck their pens into their tight curls and firmly believed that my long knee length plait was an add-on. Until someone gave it a tug and it didn't come off.

That was just the beginning in Nigeria. I lasted five years in that country, until the Biafran issue brought war and destruction. We fled, leaving possessions behind.

I can see there is a great deal to talk about my peripatetic teaching life still to come. Zambia, Sierra Leone, ... Even Wickford in entrancing Essex. So, the rest in part two, if you don't mind.

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