Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.09.2006, Blaðsíða 12

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.09.2006, Blaðsíða 12
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca Hulda Hauksdóttir with Lilja S. Sigurðardóttir On Iceland’s national holiday this past June 17, Margrét Pála Ólaf- sdóttir received The Knight’s Cross of the Icelandic Order of the Falcon from the President of Iceland for innovation in educa- tion. This has meant a great deal to all those working within the Hjallastefnan organization, as this kind of recognition is un- common when it comes to the education of younger children. Born in 1957 in northern Iceland, Margrét Pála Ólafs- dóttir graduated as a preschool teacher from the Icelandic Col- lege of Education in 1981. In 1989 she became the director at a new preschool called Hjalli, located in the Hafnarfjörður community. There she developed rather unusual pedagogical methods such as single-sex classes, natu- ral play material instead of con- ventional toys and a long-forgot- ten belief in positive dicipline as a way of training social skills. These methods were considered provocative and the school was a matter of much dispute in the beginning, but in later years the Hjalli pedagogy has been gain- ing ground. Today about 17 preschools in Iceland use the Hjalli Method partly or in whole along with a few preschools in Sweden and Norway. The Hjalli method is becoming more and more popu- lar and even Hilary Clinton has heard of it, as she has visited Hjalli-model schools in Swe- den. Margrét Pála is now direct- ing her own company, Hjal- lastefnan ehf., which special- izes in pre- and primary school management and runs three pre- schools and one primary school on a semi-private basis. In 1997 Margrét received the award of the Minister of Equal Rights for her work on the Hjalli Pedagogy and since then the issue of sin- gle-sex classes as a way towards equal rights has inspired a lot of discussion within the Icelandic school system. The name Hjalli In Icelandic, hjalli means “rock” and is the name of the school. Hjalli has also come to symbolize the ideology on which the Hjalli model is built. All the hindrances in a person’s daily way towards achieving a life of peace, joy, and respect are the rocks one must overstep to continue the trip. Analyzing the nature of the rocks and the process of climb- ing them will lead to solutions because finding the answers is never hard when one has the right questions. Therefore, the new model got the name “Hjal- li” as a symbol of overcoming difficulties in life. Some basic elements of the Hjalli model But what makes the Hjalli model different from traditional Icelandic preschools? Margrét Pála Ólafsdóttir explains: “For some years it has been a fashion- able belief in Iceland that every- body should get the same type of work and that same demands should be made on everybody. The goal was to bring everybody as close as possible to the ‘av- erage’ and too little regard was paid to children on both sides of the norm. “Often the pedagogical frame of the school is so narrow that a lot of children do not gain any benefit from what it has to offer. Hjalli’s solution to this is recognition of diversity. The Hjalli model is designed for all children and, therefore, we wel- come variations and different needs. “Each child is unique and different from all the others with his or her special qualities and special needs. It is the school’s duty to give children a good ex- perience. ‘Problem children’ do not exist; it is just a phrase that schools often use to put the re- sponsibility for failure onto the children. We demand a result, not one that presses children into the mould of the average but to see them happy, proud, and practicing positive thinking every day.” The majority of the day, all the children in the preschools work in single-sex departments and smaller groups to support both girls and boys on their own terms. Once a day the groups mix, in order to teach coop- eration beetween girls and boys based on respect. “Gender segregation is a simple and effective way of giv- ing both genders their rightful share of attention, teaching, en- couragement, and space. Single- sex classes that involve the same tasks and the same surroundings for the girls’ department and the boys’ department prevent mo- nopolization so that both girls and boys get opportunities to practice the full range of human qualities, and therefore single- sex classes make it easy to give both girls and boys a heavy dose of experience they have been de- nied by virtue of their biological sex. “Lastly, segregation gives the teachers the possibility to use the ‘right method for the right gender’ and in this way to give both genders the methods and reactions they need and de- serve. In this way we can give our full energy and attention to encouraging the girls to become more active and assertive and to teaching the boys to become more sensitive and non-aggres- sive.” This charismatic spokes- person for gender equality in schools also has other worries for the well-being of young chil- dren. “Children’s surroundings today are steeped in consumer- ism. Instead of communication and creation, the children get huge stacks of mass-produced toys — small copies of the adults’ world that the specialists of the markets consider desir- able. These toys are very limited because there is nothing left for the imagination. Children learn to consume through television and video and, in doing so, learn to perpetuate the traditional gen- der roles showed to them and about their own inabilities to create. “One of Hjalli’s goals is to train children in initiative and in- dependence, including freedom from the chains of consumerism. Every day at the Hjalli schools, we make a point of being able to take care of our own things; the teachers and the children make the clay and chalk we need, we write and draw our own books and write our own plays to show to the other children. We take care of the garden and repair broken things. We are self-sup- porting people!” No normal toys are used in the Hjalli schools. Instead, the children use unstructured, open- ended material, such as wooden blocks, sand and water and the are even allowed to use the ta- bles and chairs to play with. Even though the Hjalli mod- el itself has stayed basically the same since its beginning, the schools are always trying out new approaches and new solutions in order to attain good education for young children. This has led the way to many innovations in the Icelandic schools system. One of these is English teaching for preschool children, which has gained immense popularity. “We have been lucky enough to have wonderful English teachers from the U.S. that have come in with the English lessons once a week for each group.” Hulda Hauksdóttir works at Hjallastefnan, and Lilja S. Sigurðardóttir is Instructions Representative with the school. For more information on Hjalli schools and Hjallastefnan ehf., visit www.hjalli.is. 12 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • Friday 15 September 2006 A rather unusual preschool The Hjalli method gains recognition in Iceland First Lutheran Church 580 Victor Street Winnipeg R3G 1R2 204-772-7444 www.mts.net/~flcwin Worship with us Sundays 10:30 a.m. Pastor Michael Kurtz ARBORG PHARMACY Store Hours: Mon. - Sat. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Fri. 9 a.m. - 8 p.m. Sun. noon - 4 p.m.Pharmacist: V. T. Eyolfson Box 640, Arborg, MB R0C 0A0 Ph: 204-376-5153 SHARED WISDOM • SHARED COMMITMENT • SHARED VALUES With over 40 years of experience Inland ensures that customers receive quality products and services for all types of construction and development projects. Aggregates Phone: (204) 224-4255 Fax: (204) 224-3431 Concrete Pipe Products Phone: (204) 339-9213 Fax: (204) 334-7957 Cements and Flyash Phone: 1-800-252-9304 Fax: (204) 334-5900 “Working Together to Build Our Communities” ARGYLE Transfer Ltd. Specializing in livestock transportation Wally & Linda Finnbogason Stonewall, MB Wally 467-8822 Mobile 981-1666 Daryl 322-5743 Mobile 981-5460 (780) 986-4711 BUSINESS/PAGER (780)986-6662 FAX dell@haidarealty.com www.haidarealty.com DEL SVEINSSON Realtor HAIDA REALTY 5919 - 50th Street Leduc, AB T9E 6S7 An Independently Owned and Operated Member Broker of Coldwell Bankers Affiliates of Canada PHOTO COURTESY OF HULDA HAUKSDÓTTIR in the Hjalli method, children use unstructured, open-ended material, such as wooden blocks, sand and water and the are even allowed to use the tables and chairs to play with.

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