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Intensive
10-day Summer Camp in Atlanta
100 children taught to rediscover India
In a commendable effort, one hundred middle and high school
children of Atlanta spent ten days at a summer camp to learn
Hindi and all about India’s diverse cultural heritage. Known as
'Startalk Yuva Summer Hindi Camp', it was held at Berkmar High
School in Lilburn, Atlanta from June 19 to 28.
“We worked hard to recruit 100 children for this camp”, said
Manju Tiwari, asst. director of the Startalk program. “We pooled
resources from our local network of volunteers and business
owners to prepare for the camp. All students were fully engaged
in cultural and language learning through a variety of
activities”, she added. The camp was painstakingly organized by
Yuva Hindi Sansthan, a New Jersey based educational and cultural
organization.
In fact, the participants took a virtual trip to rediscover
India – their homeland. They were introduced to India's
geography, diversity, history and culture. The program was aimed
at making the students understand India’s hoary past, her
cultural and linguistic diversity and the importance of Hindi as
a link language. After ten days of vigorous learning of
language, they were able to read and write simple Hindi texts
and communicate in Hindi using formulaic expressions. This was
indeed a laudable accomplishment by the organizers of the camp.
The camp comprised of indoor and outdoor activities designed to
provide the relevant social and cultural contexts for easy
learning. Every morning students practiced yoga under the
guidance of Anamika Dwivedi, a professional yoga instructor. The
participants were served a variety of food typical of different
regions of India. They appropriately squatted on the floor to
eat their food on the day they studied Indian village culture.
To fully inculcate the spirit of India, the participants were
taken on a field trip on the seventh day of the camp. They
visited places of religious, cultural, and commercial
significance. They learned about Indian values at the Swami
Narayan Temple and a comparative study of Mahatma Gandhi and
Martin Luther King, Jr. at the King Memorial. They had
opportunities to interact with shopkeepers and buy things at a
real Indian Bazaar that was imaginatively organized as a part of
the program.
“We aimed at informing our students about India in a deep
immersion of linguistic and cultural environment. A treasure of
authentic material was used to meet our objective. The
participants quickly learned about India, its major cities and
villages with the help of pictures, movie clips, music, dance ,
food and yoga practices. With the deployment of
research-supported principles of second language acquisition, we
were able to generate their interest in language learning and
knowing more about Bharat”, informed Dr. Surendra Gambhir, a
former professor at the University of Pennsylvania, who directed
the program.
Dr. Herman Van Olphen, former professor of Hindi at University
of Texas, Austin was very impressed by the education model
followed at the program. Appreciating the efforts, he said “I am
very pleased to observe that young students are fully engaged in
the curriculum. They have a lot of opportunities to express
themselves in Hindi, through pictures, art work, singing and
role playing.”
About Yuva Hindi Sansthan:
Yuva Hindi Sansthan (YHS), a non-profit educational and cultural
organization incorporated in New Jersey is engaged in
preservation, education and promotion of our heritage language
Hindi in USA. We are a group of teachers, researchers and
community activists who have a long experience in Hindi pedagogy
through the use of technology and multi-intelligence techniques
of language learning. YHS realizes the importance of heritage
languages in the appreciation and understanding of the heritage
culture and wants to do everything possible to promote its
knowledge, retention and usage in diasporic contexts, especially
at a time when the US federal government has publicly announced
the intention of including Hindi in the public (government)
school curriculum all over the country.
For further information, please contact:
Ashok Ojha, President, 4 Melville Road, Edison, NJ 08817,
Tel. 732-339-9099
Dolly Chatterjee, Secretary, 217 Windsor Drive, Swedesboro, NJ
08085, Tel. 856-241-7382
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| 10-July-2010 |
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