Peace Corps Fun!

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Location: Media, PA, United States

I grew up all over the east coast until we settled in pennsylvania my sophomore year in high school. I then went to college at Oklahoma State, graduated, then moved back home for a couple of years to figure out what to do next and prepare for grad school... then on sort of a whim I applied to the peace corps and if all goes well I will be moving to africa in june 2007! I can't wait!! I love learning and being around animals and nature, I love my friends and most of my family :) I have no idea what I want to do with my life, maybe go to grad school in anthropology? Not sure about after that though. So, why go to africa? With plans like mine, why NOT go to africa??

Thursday, April 26, 2007

packing list

Okay so like I mentioned in the last blog, I have most of the stuff I am bringing with me to the peace corps. I decided to post a draft of my packing list, just because I enjoy reading other peoples' packing lists so much and I find them very helpful :) I didn't add any quantities cause I really have no idea about that. I am going to try to go as lite as possible.

clothing

tank-tops/short-sleeve shirts
t-shirts (check)
blouses/button-down shirts
light, long skirts (check)
slip
light capris
jeans (check)
shorts (check)
chacos (check)
tennis shoes (check)
socks (check)
rain jacket (check)
bras (lots)
underwears (lots) (check)
sports bras
sleep outfit (check)
swimsuit (check)
belt (check)

Camping stuff

mosquito tent (rei bug hut 2) (check)
sleeping bag ( north face propel this bag is so AWESOME it is 1lb, synthetic, rolls up to fit in the palm of your hand and it was on sale at ems for 120!!(check)
sleeping mat ( ems crash pad the EXACT same thing as a thermarest for half the price(check)
very high spf sunscreen (I may have to continually have these sent from home if there isn't a good, strong brand readily available in burkina)
bug spray with deet (same as above)
tarp, one as a footprint and a huge one for a rain cover (check)
tarp rope, pegs
pocket knife (check)
water bottles (1 liter cyclones) (check)

technology

mp3 player creative zen sleek photo 20gb not sure how often I will ever use this, since my solio can't seem to charge it(check)
solio (check)
rechargable batteries (lots) (check)
battery charger that can work with solio (any suggestions?? anybody???)
hand-crank flashlight (check)
shortwave radio/clock/alarm
wristwatch
lantern?
headlamp (check)
digital camera (check)
large-capacity camera cards (2gb and 512)
UBS flash drive (?)
portable speakers (check)

other stuff

diva cup (check)
non-stick frying pan (check)
spatula (check)
peeler (check)
knife (check)
can opener (check)
sunglasses (2)
book of stamps
envelopes (check)
journals (2)
pens (check)
duct tape
ziplock backs (various sizes)
tupperware (various sizes)
scissors (check)
photo album to share
photo album to keep
towel (check)
games
pillow with pillow case

toiletries

shampoo/conditioner
toothbrush
toothpaste
dental floss
razer and blades (1/2 packs)
deoderant

luggage

duffle bag (check)
huge backpack (check)

teaching stuff

lesson planner
stickers (lots)
colorful pens/pencils
pencil sharpener
colorful paper
colorful markers
science text books
how-to-teach books
french/english dictionary
french text book
graphing calculator (check)

food stuff

mrs. dash
taco seasoning
italian seasoning
powdered drink mixes
candy/junk food

Thursday, April 19, 2007

my first peace corps post as a 24 year old!! My birthday was on the 14th :)

Haha okay anyway, so, today I was going to finally write an email to smartwareetc.com because I had ordered a tropic screen tent from them about 10 days ago and they still hadn't sent me an email with a tracking number. I figured they had shipped it and the email somehow just didn't get to me. No, no, I opened my email to find an email from them saying, actually, they don't have that tent. Hhmmm thats interesting, since it's still up on their site and it took them ten days to tell me they're not sending my tent.

I became instantly bitter about all online retailers. I went right out and bought everything I need for the trip from local stores. Seriously, everything. I shopped for 7 hours. I went to REI, EMS, radio shak, jc pennies, k-mart, and sears. I bought a mosquito tent, a tarp, a sleeping bag, a camping mattress, a non-stick pan, a spatula, can opener, more kitchen stuff, a headlamp, a sewing kit, a good knife, power converters and adapters, a 2gb camera card, travel clock/alarm/thermometer/calendar, rechargable batteries, a converter for my battery charger, and a TON of other stuff. I spent a fortune. I came home, moved money around and I now have 65 dollars in my savings account hahaha! But I am returning 100 dollars worth of stuff tomorrow at radio shak because it doesn't fit (2gig camera card), doesn't work (battery charger converter) or I decided I don't actually need them (super-high capacity rechargable batteries).\

SSsoooo ya, I discovered that shopping for seven hours is really tiring cause I'm really tired right now, I'm going to watch tv and go to bed!!

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

for the next two months:

Fill out passport and visa papers (check)
Take passport and visa photos (check)
Send out passport and visa information (check)
Reformat resume
write aspiration statement
send out resume and aspiration statement
fill out all the other forms and send those out
order chacos
order macabi skirts
get better memory card for camera
visit friends in oklahoma and maryland
see the museums in new york
go on a four day hiking trip in central pa
spend as much time as i can lounging around watching TV, movies, going online, talking on the phone, and eating junk food
order travel pack from REI
compile a packing list
have a blowout going away party in oklahoma
buy sara's wedding gift
try (try) to save a little bit of money before I leave
QUIT PETCO!!

mmmm sounds like a fun two months!!

Suggested reading list

Thought I'd share this in case any potential PCV's ever bump into my blog:

Suggested Books to Prepare for Peace Corps


   General


So You Want to Join the Peace Corps: What to Know Before You Go by Dillon Banerjee

The Travelers' Guide to African Customs & Manners: How to converse, dine, tip, drive, bargain, dress, make friends, and conduct business while in sub-Saharan Africa by Elizabeth Devine & Nancy Braganti

The Shadow of the Sun by Ryszard Kapuscinski

The Fate of Africa by Martin Meredith



   West Africa/Francophone Africa


Do They Hear You When You Cry by Fauziya Kassindja,

Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingslover

Somebody’s Heart Is Burning: A Woman Wanderer in Africa by Tanya Shaffer

King Leopold’s Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa by Adam Hochschild

Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe

Nine Hills to Nambonkaha by Sarah Erdman

Monique and the Mango Rains by Kris Holloway



Eastern/Southern Africa


Mukiwa: A White Boy in Africa

Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight: An African Childhood by Alexandra Fuller

The Power of One by Bryce Courtney

My Secret History by Paul Theroux

Dark Star Safari: Overland from Cairo to Cape Town by Paul Theroux

The Last King of Scotland by Giles Foden

The Zanzibar Chest by Aiden Hartley

Love In The Driest Season: A Family Memoir by Neely Tucker

Number One Ladies’ Detective Agency Series by Alexander McCall Smith

Any books by Nadine Gordimer



Books on HIV and AIDS


The Africa Placement Team has put together a list of suggested reading materials that we believe you will find both interesting and informative as you prepare for your tour of service. We encourage you in particular to become familiar with the growing AIDS pandemic in Africa. Peace Corps projects in all sectors are addressing the multitude of problems caused by the spread of HIV/AIDS in Africa.


Love in the Driest Season: A Family Memoir by Neely Tucker


Nine Hills to Nambonkaha: Two Years in the Heart of an African Village by Sarah Erdman


Global AIDS: Myths and Facts, Tools for Fighting the AIDS Pandemic by Alexander Irwin and Joyce Millen


The Skeptics Guide to the Global AIDS Crisis: Tough Questions, Direct Answers by Dale Hanson Bourke


A Generation at Risk: The Global Impact of HIV/AIDS on Orphans and Vulnerable Children by John G. Williamson, Geoff Foster, and Carol Levine


The AIDS Pandemic: Complacency, Injustice, and Unfulfilled Expectations by Michael Kirby and Larry O. Gostin


AIDS in the Twenty-First Century: Disease and Globalization by Tony Barnett and Alan Whiteside


Human Rights and Public Health in the AIDS Pandemic by Lawrence O. Gostin and Zita Lazzarini


Black Death: AIDS in Africa by Susan Hunter


A Broken Landscape: HIV & AIDS in Africa by Noerine Kaleeba, Reverend Gideon Byamugisha, and Gideon Mendel


Children Of Africa Confront AIDS: From Vulnerability To Possibility (Ohio RIS Africa Series) by Farid Esack, Arvind Singhal, and W. Stephen Howard


Children of AIDS: Africa's Orphan Crisis by Emma Guest


The First Year – HIV: An Essential Guide for the Newly Diagnosed by Brett Grodeck and Daniel S. Berger


Living Well with HIV and AIDS by Allen L. Gifford, Kate Lorig, Diana Laurent, and Virginia Gonzalez


AIDS Issues: A Handbook (Issues in Focus) by David E. Newton


A Woman's Guide to Living with HIV Infection (A Johns Hopkins Press Health Book) by Rebecca A. Clark, Robert T., Jr. Maupin, and Jill Hayes Hammer


Sustainability and Permaculture


Two Ears of Corn: A Guide to People-Centered Agricultural Improvement by Roland Bunch (Paperback - Jun 1995)


Permaculture: Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability by David Holmgren (Paperback - Dec 2002)


PERMACULTURE: A Designers' Manual by Bill Mollison and Reny Mia Slay (Hardcover - Oct 1, 1997)


Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture by Toby Hemenway and John Todd (Paperback - April 2001)


Gardening


How to Grow More Vegetables: And Fruits, Nuts, Berries, Grains, and Other Crops Than You Ever Thought Possible on Less Land Than You Can Imagine by John Jeavons (Paperback - Mar 2002)


New Complete Guide to Gardening (Better Homes & Gardens (Paperback)) by Susan A. Roth and Better Homes and Gardens Books (Paperback - Sep 15, 2001)


Vegetable Gardening by Dean Johnson (VHS Tape)


Soil Erosion


Soil Erosion : Processes, Prediction, Measurement, and Control by Terrence J. Toy, George R. Foster, and Kenneth G. Renard (Hardcover - May 27, 2002)


Soil Erosion and Dryland Farming by John M. Laflen (Hardcover - May 24, 2000)


Forestry and Africa


Contesting Forestry in West Africa (Making of Modern Africa) by Reginald Cline-Cole (Hardcover - Dec 2000)


Tree planting practices in tropical Africa (FAO forestry development paper) (FAO forestry development paper) by M. S Parry (Unknown


Social forestry in West Africa: Myths and realities by Marilyn W Hoskins (Unknown Binding - Jan 1, 1982)


The 2000-2005 Outlook for Forestry and Woodworking in Africa by Inc. Icon Group International (Paperback - Jul 2001


Okay that didn't paste as well as I thought it would but I'm too lazy today to go back and fix it so you'll have to figure out what books are hidden in the wide spacing. Also here's a link to the Burkina Faso welcome book:

http://www.peacecorps.gov/welcomebooks/bfwb686.pdf

tons of info in there.

Friday, April 06, 2007

My address

Hey I just started reading the Burkina Faso welcome book and I discovered my address during training! Here you go all you letter writers, fire up those pens, find some cute stationary and prepare for some serious hand cramps as for probably the first time in years you write an ACTUAL LETTER as apposed to an email:

Katharine Heaton, PCT
S/c Corps de la Paix
01 B.P. 6031
Ouagadougou 01, Burkina Faso

note my name will probably be "Katharine Heaton" instead of Cassandra though I don't know if that will actually matter or not. Remember you guys if you care about me at all you should start writing letters about 3 weeks before I leave so I will have something fun to read during my first few weeks of being completely freaked out/culture shocked. Remember candy and comics are ALWAYS appreciated!!!

And of course my email is Catasyne_7@yahoo.com though I don't know how often I will get to check that.

I also discovered through this book that my living allowance will be $240 a month, plus $24 a month vacation allowance, and $60 quarterly for work-related travel. So that sounds pretty good to me, I thought I would be making 50 bucks a month or something and its nice to have that travel and vacation money too. They also discourage bringing extra money because you are supposed to "live at the level of the villager" which is fine with me since I doubt I will have any money when I leave anyway.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Burkina Faso!!!!

So the package came yesterday and it turns out it didn't get lost in the mail, it really did take two weeks to get to my house. Very strange. Anyhoo, it's official: Burkina Faso!! Woohoooo!! I'm going to get the coveted stereotypical peace corps experience!!! No running water no electricity in a rural village in a country noone has ever heard of!! Awesome :)

Okay here's what the pamphlet says specifically about my assignment:

Country: Burkina Faso
Program: Secondary Education
Job Title: Science Teacher
Dates of Service: August 24, 2007 -- August 23rd, 2009
Pre-Service Training (in Ouhigouya, Burkina Faso): June 7, 2007 -- August 24, 2007

Here's some tidbits about the country, taken from the pamphlet and wikipedia:

Statistics:
Development efforts in Burkina Faso are important because Burkina Faso is one of the ten poorest countries in the world. Burkina Faso ranks 175 out of 177 countries in the UNDP's Human Development Index: of countries with a Peace Corps presence, only Niger rates lower. Life expectancy is 47.5 years, 50% of the population is under the age of 15, literacy rate is only 12.8%, primary school enrollment is 36% (31% for girls), only 9% in secondary schools. Less than 1% reach university levels. Official statistics show that between 2.3 and 4.2% of the adult population is infected with HIV/AIDS. Nearly 86% of the population lives on less than $2 per day.

However, the pamphlet assures me that Burkina Faso is peaceful, stable, and making steady progress towards transparent and democratic governance.

Geography:
Burkina Faso is a landlocked nation in West Africa. It is surrounded by six countries: Mali to the north, Niger to the east, Benin to the south east, Togo and Ghana to the south, and Côte d'Ivoire to the south west. 80% of the working population is in agriculture. There is mineral exploitation of copper, iron, manganese and, above all, gold. Burkina Faso has very few isolated hills it is overall a very flat country. It lies just below the sahara desert with the northernmost regions within the sahara. The middle of the country is dry sahvana and the south is more green and lush. Temperatures within the country range from 60 degrees (in the coolest darkest hour of night in the dead of "winter") to 120 degrees (all summer). I say winter and summer but really in africa there is only two seasons: dry season and wet season. The dry season is hotter ("summer") and dry with no rain, and the wet season is hot ("winter") and it rains about once or twice every day for an hour or so. The rain cools everything down to the 90's or so on average. This'll be fun for someone who thinks 80 is hot!!!! And no air conditioning!!! Ya I'm looking forward to some wonderful character building there :) :)

Religion:
Approximately 50% of the population is Muslim; Christians account for about 30%, and followers of traditional African religions (typically animism of various forms) make up about 20%. Many Christians incorporate elements of animism into their religious practices.

Peace Corps presence:
90 Peace Corps volunteers work in Burkina Faso right now, including 18 in Health, 21 in Small Enterprise Development, 24 in Education, and 26 in Girl's Educations and Empowerment. I will probably go to training with about 30 or so volunteers but I don't know the specific number yet.

Training will be for 11 weeks in a town called Ouahigouya (don't ask me how to pronounce that). At first I thought this was a misspelling of the capital city (Ouagadougou, can't pronounce that one either), but it turns out this is a seperate town about 182km north-west of the city. We will spend the first few days in Ouahigouya, then we will meet our host families and live with them for the duration of training in the surrounding villages. We will all meet once a week in Ouahigouya for cultural training. We will be assigned host families and villages based on our french proficiency and volunteer program, and we will be in groups of 4 or 5 per village where we will study french and have technical training together. So I will be in a village of 3 or 4 other people who have a similar knowledge of french and who are all education volunteers, and then I'll meet up with everyone else who went to other villages once a week in Ouahigouya. The training model is community-based with many opportunities for interaction with the community. On top of learning french, I will be learning one of the local languages too, such as Moore, Jula or Fulfulde.

"The technical training component will prepare you to teach effictively in Burkinabe secondary schools. You will learn about the structure of the Burkinabe educational system and the main differences with the US school systems. You will learn to prepare lessons to meet the needs of students with different learning styles and to implement them effectively. You will learn how to write and administer a test. Youw ill have an opportunity to learn stragegies for developing students' critical thinking and problem-solving skills. Classroom management can be a challenge so stragegies for dealing with this will be covered during training. In addition to the theoretical sessions, there will be a number of opportunities for practice, starting with peer teaching and working up to teaching full-length, full-size classes in a four to five week Practice School (in the form of a summer school program for local youth). This will provide the opportunity for you to strengthen your pedagogical skills and prepare for the donditions you will likely find in your assigned school at your site."

Pre-Service training also includes health and safety/security and cross-cultural sessions. There will also be opportunities to travel away from the training location for a "site visit" with a current volunteer. There will also be a 2-day counterpart workshop where we meet our future counterparts and visit our future volunteer sites. My permanent site will be assigned based on my level of french proficiency, the second language I have been learning and the need for education volunteers in the area. I will almost certainly be the only volunteer in my village.

Teaching Conditions:

I will work about 20 hours a week in a classroom with between 50 - 100 students, sometimes over 100 students per class. Students will not have books, and there most likely will be no photocopy machines, no printers, no overhead projectors, often the only resource will be a blackboard and chalk. I will have to come up with (very) creative ways to get the kids to learn without books or handouts. The Burkinabe teachers usually lecture and have the kids copy notes from the board and memorize everything. We are encouraged to be more creative than that. I will have a counterpart (another teacher) which should help me to integrate easier into the school and will help me and give me feedback about my teaching style and other classroom issues. The classroom schedule is flexible and will allow for time to incorporate issues like AIDS prevention and evironment lessons. All volunteers in Africa are involved in HIV/AIDS education and prevention. As a science teacher with a captive audience I will have a golden opportunity to teach that subject extensively.

Living Conditions:
As a secondary school teacher, I will be placed in a large village or small town. I will be expected to live in a manner similar to my Burkinabe counterparts. Housing will likely consist of a modent building constructed from mud bricks or cement blocks with a tin roof. Floors are made with cement.

SARA AND ASHLEY STOP READING NOW






("dont be surprised if you occasionally have vistors in the form of spiders, cockroaches, mice, ants, etc")









OKAY SAFE TO CONTINUE

I will most likely not have running water or electricity. Water may come from a well or a pump. Depending on the distance, I will either transport the water myself or pay someone to do it. This means I will take bucket baths (big bucket full of water with a plastic cup. I hear from the PC blogs the best strategy is to dunk your hair in the water first to conserve water, then lather up and rinse off with the plastic cup. I'm not sure if I will ever really be clean that way), and pit latrines. A pit latrine is basically a hole in the ground surrounded by concrete and four walls. It's usually outside apart from the rest of the house/hut. Usually this is also your "shower" area or there may be a second "shower" area in an attached room.

The staple food in Burkina Faso is called To. They pretty much eat this stuff breakfast lunch and dinner. It is made of millet and it is ground and baked into a playdough-like texture and served in a large communal bowl. You eat with your hands (did I mention most Burkinabe don't us toilet paper? Do you know what they use instead? I'll let you imagine what they use instead of toilet paper and how that relates to me sharing a bowl everyone is eating playdough out of with their HANDS), roll the To into a little ball, dip it into some type of green sauce (haven't found out yet what that green sauce is made out of), and eat it. I hear from the blogs that it tastes terrible and can actually make you really sick. Mmmmm looking forward to that!! Food selection is actually pretty limited in the villages. Usually there will be only one fruit or vegetable available, especially in the dry season, and I hear right now that fruit or vegetable is onions. Yum. Nothing like a fresh, crisp onion in the morning!! Haha!

Okay well that's what I know so far. I looked through the paperwork last night and it's daunting but doable. I have to get passport and visa pictures taken, and fill out a bunch of forms. But first I have to read through the peace corps volunteer manual and accept my invitation. I have ten days so I will do that today or tomorrow. I'm soooo excited and I feel soooo lucky to have gotten Burkina Faso!! I had a feeling for a while I was going to Burkina Faso and I was getting really excited about it but I was worried about siking myself up just to be dissapointed if it turned out to be somewhere else so I wasn't allowed to read about Burkina Faso anymore and I read as much as I could about other countries and started to get excited about those too but then I ended up actually getting the country I wanted!! Thats so awesome!!!

Why was Burkina Faso my first choice? Well, lots of us PC volunteer wannabes are attracted to this extreme climates/conditions. If I wanted comfortable living conditions in another country I'd move to canada! But I want to see how different life can be, and live and work and get to know people in a community as different from my own as it can get, and fill a need in the community. The most daunting thing about this task is being a teacher since I have never taught and teaching conditions sound very difficult but that is all part of the challenge! I am looking forward to this sooo much and I'm super excited and can't wait to go :) Oh and you guys had better write to me!! I'm surprised I actually got a couple people at work wanting to write to me while I'm gone so that's super duper awesome!! I'm sure I will have plenty of awesome stories to write about and plenty of time to write them to all of you :) You could even send me packages with candy and stuff in them if you really want to :) and I could send you genuine african gifts like dresses or voodoo potions! You could even visit if you wanted to!!!

Okay well believe it or not I actually was supposed to be productive today and I've been on here writing this blog for over an hour now and I haven't even eaten breakfast so I am going to go hope you guys enjoyed learning a little about my future awesome home of Burkina Faso!!

Au Revoir!!! (see I know lots of french!)

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Monday, April 02, 2007

learning persistence thru the peace corps application process

the pc application process has definately taught me persistence! It actually surprised me today. I've been waiting almost 2 weeks for my invitation letter and it still hasn't come. This is especially strange because my po told me that it was sent out two wensdays ago, and I live about 20 minutes from philadelphia so it's not like I'm out in the boonies. I started to freak out about how long it was taking and every morning was getting more and more frustrating when I discovered my letter STILL hadn't arrived and I couldn't get a hold of my placement officer because I lost my cell phone and I didn't even remember his name (only talked briefly once when he told me the invite letter had been sent). So I called the regional headquarters office and I asked if they could tell me the name of my recruiter and the guy said no, he can't do that. (two weeks ago a guy in his chair actually did do just that so I know he actually could!) I told him not to refer me to the placement office because that just goes straight to a machine that noone ever checks. He said well then there's nothing I can do for you. Well, I ended up leaving a desperate plea on the placement office's machine, then I called headquarters again and I got a new person this time. I asked her if she could tell me who my placement officer was and she immediately transfered me to the answering machine aka. the placement office. So I called back again and asked to be transfered to my former medical screener because he at least usually tried to be helpful but he wasn't at his desk. So I called headquarters again and asked to be refered to ANY po. At first she said she couldn't do it but then she did and that guy wasn't at his desk but he gave a number of someone you could call if you needed to speak with someone. I couldn't get a pen in time and my horrible memory couldn't even retain the first three digits after I found one. So I called headquarters again and asked to be refered to a po again, and this guy said he couldn't do it he needed a name. I said that the other person JUST did it so he actually can refer me to someone. The guy was actually laughing at this point because he and the lady he was sitting next to had talked to me about five times by then. He told me to hang on a sec and promptly hung up! Or maybe we got disconnected, but I sure wasn't talking to anyone anymore. I went online to my toolkit to see if there was any contact info for anyone on there but I only found the number to the headquarters office. I even checked the archives of the yahoo forum to see if anyone had any success with finding their po's. I ended up calling headquarters again and got a new person. This time I explained everything about how I was waiting for the invite for two weeks blah blah he listened and then transfered me to the placement office machine. So very frustrated and starting to loose it I went through some old emails seeing if there was any contact info where I could possibly get ahold of my old recruiter. I then found at the bottom of an old forgotten email there was a direct number to a student aid in the african placement office! I called and she was there! I told her my situation, she took my info, looked up my file, reassured me that my spot was still open and available for me, and said to wait two more days and if the letter still has not arrived she will have it sent again. She even gave me the name and extension number for my placement officer! Wow. My faith in the peace corps staff and humanity in general was restored. This is of course only one example out of dozens during the medical screening process where I stretched my level of patience and persistence. Before applying for the peace corps knowing me I definatly would have gotten frustrated and given up on this last epic battle but I'm surprized by how much persistence I have now and it actually paid off! Hot diggity!