SPROUT

SPROUT or Student’s Prout is about teaching Prout to students via NHE schools, public schools and STUVOL programs and through people working with children in non-school settings, such as after school clubs, youth groups, festivals, retreats etc. In July, 2009, at a Prout Convention in Copenhagen, a group of educators offered a Prout activity to the children present utilizing the template for creating curriculum which was developed at the NHE Conference in Australia last April and shared in the last issue of Gurukula Network. Here below is first a review of the template, and then the Prout activity that was offered to the children at the Prout Convention.


A Sprout Activity

By Tara Macphail and Didi Anandarama

The Golden Lotus of the Blue Sea

General Template for NHE Curriculum Planning


Why - The objective of the lesson in terms of NHE Philosophy
Who - Characteristics of the students (age, culture, number of participants)
What - Outline of the activity
How - The method used to achieve the outcomes of the activity (story, game, PowerPoint presentation, dance, song, etc.). A variety of methods can be chosen to address multiple intelligences and different styles of learning.
Where - Where is the activity going to be held? Adjust the content for local use
Resources - List the resources that you require for the activity
When - The time and date of the activity
Facilitators - Who will facilitate the activity and what is their role/s
Evaluation - Evaluation by the participants and also the facilitators


Prout Based Activity


Why - The objective of the activity was to teach the third principle of Prout, “Maximum utilization of individual and collective potentialities”, which refers to using resources for collective welfare.

Who - 4-10 year olds; 6 children from mixed cultural backgrounds and parents

What - The storybook Golden Lotus of the Blue Sea, by Shrii P. R. Sarkar was used to teach the idea of using individual resources (e.g. creative problem solving, intellect etc.) for collective welfare. (This newly published book is available for purchase; please see the section on publications for sale.)

How - Story, game, interactive drama


Starting the Story


Feeding the Poor


Building the Tower

A Hard Task


Crossing the Obstacles


End of the Story

Start by reading the first part of the story. Then explain that the storytellers had a spell put on them by the demon and that they need help to break the spell.


  • 1st challenge - Continue the story by dramatizing it; bring children to the poor peoples’ living quarters and have them interact. Through interaction introduce the first challenge activity which is to find food for the hungry poor people.

This challenge is to help develop the moral principle of service. Present the children with a golden lotus petal for successful completion of the challenge.


  • 2nd challenge - children cross the river with a wheelbarrow helping each other. Present a Golden Lotus petal after completion of each challenge

  • 3rd challenge was an intellectual challenge by building the unity tower as a defense base to fight the demons.

  • 4th challenge was physical, crossing the fire holding hands

  • 5th challenge was cultural, create sound and movement to fight off the demons

  • 6th challenge was to puzzle together the petals which formed a word that broke the spell on the storyteller so she could finish telling the story.

Complete the story.

Where
Shed, outdoor area at the Prout Conference sight

Resources
Golden lotus petals made from paper, wheelbarrow, stones,

When
Thursday afternoon 14:45-15:45 pm

Facilitators
Sprout team

Evaluation
Children were very engaged throughout the whole game. They worked well together as a team and also used their individual talents to solve the challenges. The suspense of hearing the end of the story was also motivating for the children. They experienced achievement of solving the puzzle and helping the poor people and the story teller.

Improvements: We had to adjust to a language that we were not expecting. We needed more detailed information on the languages that needed to be translated before the activity. During the challenge activities, the overall thread of the story could have been implemented more clearly. We also had to adjust the height requirement of the Unity tower as we set it too high. This was done well in the moment, maybe we could have tried the activity before hand to see how easy or difficult it was.

The facilitators realized that the Golden Lotus can be adapted in various ways and various ages as a game.