This
past Saturday I had the delightful opportunity
of participating in an Open Space with
roughly 110 Haitian High school students
and 10 teachers and school administrative
staff.
The
theme, translated from Haitian Creole
to English, was, "What can we do
to ensure that there is authentic harmony
between girls/women and boys/men?"
We
were at The Louverture Cleary School which
is a private boarding school for kids
who have been assessed as being academically
gifted and who come from desperately poor
neighborhoods and households.
I
have been doing two to three Open Space
meetings with teachers and administrative
staff each year for the last several years.
This was our first Open Space with students.
What excites me most is that two young
teachers-both in their mid twenties-who
have participated in previous open space
meetings, initiated, organized and facilitated
the event.
It
emerged from the school's custom of doing
an annual two day program for female students
celebrating international day for women.
This year, the female students joined
together and said to the teacher responsible
for the program something like this: "If
the purpose of our celebrating International
Day of Women is to move forward in realizing
a society that honors the rightful role
of women, than the boys have to be a part
of the program, because they are a big
part of the problem."
Madame Louis, their teacher, worked with
the students to come up with a two-day
program involving all students from 9-12
grade-girls and boys-calling it: Celebrate
People. They designated Saturday morning,
the second day, from 8:00 am to 12:00
noon as being a time in Open Space. I
only learned about all this after the
theme had been created. The two teachers
responsible for the program, one a Haitian
women and the other a United States-ian
man, with encouragement from school's
leadership, wanted to facilitate. They
simply contacted me to get some pre-meeting
coaching and help with setting up the
space.
The
meeting was done outdoors in their school's
courtyard, protected by trees from the
hot tropical sun.
There
were two different sessions, more than
20 subjects posted, notes from the majority
of small group discussions turned in,
a talking stick type exercise from 11:35
to 12:05, and nothing but positive comments
about the morning in Open Space.
On
April 10, the entire school-200 students
and 30 teachers and staff are invited
by school's leadership to attend a full
day in open space on a theme something
like: "What needs to be a part of
our apprenticeship to ensure that we will
be prepared, when we graduate, to help
our country move forward?"

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