Central Europe: Project "Compassion" Imprimir E-mail
05.06.05
Graz | Vienna | Hamburg | Pressbaum

Graz: Reflections on my experience in the ?compassion project?
in an old people's home






During the past school year the compassion project gave students of the Sacré Coeur Graz the possibility to prove their social competence and they had the chance to improve their capability to deal with older people. The experience I had became of inestimable value to me. Although the work I was faced with wasn't easy at all, I feel gifted that I was able to help (the "olds" as they are derogatorily called by society) living there, in all kinds of situations of their everyday life. At the very beginning of our project I wasn't quite sure if it is possible for 16- year old to help properly. But my doubts vanished soon.

My main task was to brighten up the rather boring daily routine of the occupants. Very often I did so when I was discussing very interesting topics while I went for a walk with them. We talked about the past, their families, their former occupations or their current situation. It was especially a 90-year old man who impressed me as he was fit mentally and physically, and he was able to remember me for the whole week. He gave me good advice for my future life. He told me that information can turn everything into something good in one's life and that everything exists as long as we believe in it.

A very courteous and friendly staff helped us to successfully complete our work. They taught me many important facts about dealing with older people. I really appreciated that they made me feel needed in the home.

Apart from working all the time, our compassion project also made me reflect about me getting older and how society reacts to old people.

I had the experience of seeing that in old peoples' home persons who are in permanent need of nursing do live right next to really healthy old people. They told me that they simply live in this home because their children don't have enough time for them and they are told that they just give trouble. Now I am asking myself the question: Who can push away an older person from whom you can learn a lot? Apparently a certain commitment in our society to care for people who need nursing doesn't exist any longer. During those days I became conscious that it is morally not acceptable to push away old people into an old people's home without any reason.

Additionally those days shared with the elderly helped me to confront myself with the certain situation of getting old. I hope I'll never have to face the situation that friends and family will turn away simply because I cannot any longer satisfy the norms of society as an old human being.

All in all I can say this time helped me, as I could give back something to society during this week. It was important to me to brighten up a boring and sometimes even sad daily routine, and to have fun playing and talking with them.

After what I had experienced I would of course rejoin such a project as it was perfectly organised. Information about old people is important but how to deal with them is even more important.

 

Johannes Suppan


 

She looks at me with her small, dark eyes
                    What does she see?

         She touches me with her cold, tiny hands
                    What does she feel?

                         She talks to me with her silent, unclear voice
                          What does she say?

She listens to my words carefully, but doesn't give an answer
                    What does she understand?

       She holds my hand firmly and doesn't go away
                    What does she want?

              She has no answers to my questions
                    Neither have I ........................

 

Kirsten Hauser


Like a child

Eating - like a child
Playing games - like a child
Drawing flowers - like a child
Doing craftwork - like a child
Sleeping at 1 p.m. - like a child

But she's not a child - she is 93

Paula Aschauer


One Week

Monday
Hello, nice to meet you, my name is

Tuesday
Good morning, how are you

Wednesday
Hi, everything alright

Thursday
Hey girls, what's up

Friday
I'm gonna miss you                   

                                                          Paula Aschauer


Caught

Caught in your body
Caught by your mind
Caught by your heart
Caught by your dreams
Caught by forgetfulness
Disgust for yourself?

                                                        Elisabeth Biebl


Forgetting

What does forgetting mean?
It means wiping out of one's memory
       But why do we do so?
                  To forget?
But what are we trying to forget?
Mistakes, words, quarrels, pictures, actions
       Are these able to hurt so much?
       Yes , for sure, for example insults
             It is hard to forget?
Yes, because often you can't or don't want to forget
                  But why?
Because you're so shocked, so disappointed, so confused
                  And what happens then?
Afterwards there's no then. It's over. It's done
Someone who can't forget stays hurt, stays disappointed, stays desperate.

 

Elisabeth Biebl


Pain

I want to help them -
But they don't want my help.
I want to play with them-
But they want to be left alone.
I ask: "What do you want to do?"
But they dont answer.
I bring them their food -
But they just ignore me.
Old, alone and sad, they just sit there.

But I just think: Everyone is different -
And everyone wants to be treated differently.

                                                                                                            Marion Valentinitsch


By the time I will be old

Will I be able to tell something of importance,
               by the time I will be old?
       Something that is really important?
       Will I then have created something,
       that will live on after I have died?
        Will people listen to my words.
       Telling them about glorious victories,
                     and painful  defeats,
       that I am proudly able to call my own?
Will my telephone still be ringing so frequently?
       Will I still have so many commitments?
   Will there still exist someone who needs me,
or will the memories have aready followed their own path?
   Will I be lonely and wallow in old emotions?
Will I then be able to realize that I had everything in my life,
      but nothing of that is at my side now?
            Will I have fear to leave
            Without noticing anyone,

     Or will there still exist something that remembers me?

                                                                                                                   Johannes Suppan


Alone

no relatives visit you anymore
         your friends are dead
         nearly everyone is gone
         your children are away 

              you are just left
becaue nobody wants to care
your husband or wife is dead
   and now you are alone

there are only people your age
someone comes and visits them
      you sit there watching
        and you are alone

    you wonder where they are
    your family - your children
you are waiting in front of the door
    but nobody comes

   does anybody notice?
     does anybody care?
        where is help?
   Where is your family

Istrud Rinner


Being old

being old and alone
and always doing the same
being old and ill
and depressed?
only being together with people
the same age?
not seeing one's relatives
and being left?
having clear thoughts
and seeing the illness of the others
or having problems to remember?
needing help for everything
and feeling imprisoned.

 

Istrud Rinner

Vienna: Compassion 2005






I spent two weeks at "Bundesinsititut für Gehörlosenbildung" ,a school for the deaf, and I found it quite interesting. What impressed me most was how helpful the carers were. They did not only help the deaf pupils, but also those with no handicaps. I was also impressed by the fact that pupils help each other. Working together is very important to them, whereas in our school, every pupil is only trying to get good marks himself, and nobody cares how the others cope with school.

Samarth


I worked in the kindergarten. I was accepted quickly by the kids and after five minutes they treated me as if I had always been there. I was very surprised that they managed to fall asleep when I had to sit with them during their afternoon nap although for them I was a total stranger. But they trusted me completely.
At the end of those two weeks I started to respect children more than ever, because they never pretend.
It was hard for me to leave because I had really started loving them.

Elsa


I really had a lot of fun in "Sacré Coeur" kindergarten. On the first day I really was nervous and shy. As I did not have any experience with children, I did not know how to treat them and how to talk to them. But this project is an unbelievable experience that will guide me through my whole life. Two weeks cannot change a person, but they can open a door to another world. And it is incredible that so many people live in both worlds.

Nathalie


Working at "Caritas Socialis", an old people's home, was a great experience. I liked it very much. At first it was difficult to speak to the patients, but after a few days I was able to play games and go for a walk with them. Some of the old people could not answer when I talked to them, but often they just smiled. The nurses helped us to cope with every situation. I was really impressed by this institution.

Anju


At first it was a bit funny to work in a hospital with all those sick people, especially in my ward, because there were a lot of old people who were not able to take a shower or go to the toilet on their own. After some time I liked the job more and the people were very nice. All in all, it was a great experience and I would not want to miss it.

Sabrina


I was at the outpatient department of a hospital, where I saw many interesting things. Unfortunately, I did not have much contact with the patients. I learned a lot about the everyday routine of a hospital. The project was a very valuable experience for me.

Manh


I was very impressed to see how the people in the institution "Jugend am Werk" (a day care centre for the disabled) treated each other. I learned a lot about ceramics and about everyday life there. All that I can say is that it was a valuable experience and I am happy that I was able to get to know disabled people so well.

Nicole


The project "compassion" was a very interesting experience. I worked at "Caritas Socialis" (an old people's home). The first day was the most difficult because I did not know what to talk about to the old people. But after some days I knew the people who liked to talk. I was very impressed when two old ladies told me about their past, even though I was a stranger.
All in all, I really liked working there. I now have more respect for old people and I understand them better.

Claudia


During the two weeks of "compassion" I worked at the hospital "Rudolfstiftung", to be precise in the infant ward. I was so fascinated by the newborn babies that I made up my mind to study medicine. Now I am trying really hard to get a summer job there.

Elisabeth


I worked at the hospital "Krankenhaus der Barmherzigen Schwestern" during the project. In my ward there were many old people. I learned about the organisation of a hospital and about the duties of the employees there.

Andreas


During the project I worked for an institution called "Die Gruft", which takes care of homeless people. I was together with a girl from class 7B, and we did not have a lot to do there.
It was very interesting to talk to people who had lost their homes, friends and all their money. Now I can understand the reasons why people sometimes end up in such a situation.

Alexander


I worked for "Sacré Coeur" kindergarten. I enjoyed it because I like children very much. I had to play with the children and to cook for them. I went ice-skating twice. I think I had a good relationship with my colleagues. Everybody thinks looking after children is an easy job with nothing much to do, but it was really exhausting.

Gabor


I think this project was a very good idea. I met many new people and I was able to spend two weeks in a hospital and to see what it is like to work there. In my opinion, it is a very hard job. You are running from one room to another all day and there is always something going on.
I also had a chance to witness how people get well again. And I met a doctor who told me a lot about the patients and their diseases.
Every day there were new patients coming to the ward. Those two weeks were very impressive to me and I learned many new things although the days there were very hard.

Agnes


I worked for "Canisibus", a charity which prepares meals for the poor. My work started at 4 p.m. with cleaning, cooking and preparing for the evening. At around 7 p.m. our coach set off to four different destinations. There we gave out soup to people who cannot afford even the bare necessities of life. I was somehow shocked and surprised by the real gratitude of these people who do not even own what each of us takes for granted.

Hardy

English | Français


Hamburg: How I learned to appreciate simple things in life


Martina Ulrichs, student of the Sophie Barat Schule, Hamburg, spent three weeks in a school for handicapped children for her work experience. This is how she describes her experience:

When we had to make our choice, where to spend our three weeks of work experience, my first choice was this school because I never had the possibility in life to work with handicapped people. And, to be honest, I did not know a lot about them, apart from my awkward feeling whenever a handicapped person entered the bus.

After another girl and I had an interview with the headmaster and visited the school facilities, I started to doubt if I would be able to work there, although everybody was very friendly towards us.

However, my first day of school was surprisingly positive. The children were between 10-14 years old. There were two educators and one young men doing community service taking care of 10 children.

When I entered the classroom I was confronted with amicable curiosity and bombarded with questions about me and my stay. There was no day when I did not have to answer these questions. After a few days I felt at ease and after a week I was part of the community (an own mug in the kitchen included!).

My main task was ?to be simply there?, hence, to play with the children and be an additional person to contact. After a very short time I got attached to the children. I even lost my fear towards those, who lived in there own little world, like, for example the children with autism, who sometimes tend to hit. I learned the dimensions of a simple smile or a stroke as well as how tiring it can be to be cuddled by four girls at the same time during break.

I also realised the importance of the school, which I was not aware of before starting to work there. For most of the children it substitutes the daily domestic life. They learn things parents should teach them, like, for example, going shopping, using public transport, having a meal together. Most of the children come from poor social circumstances and partly have difficulties to be accepted at home. Some parents are even ashamed of their children. The teachers told me, that Lena (name changed) was ?allowed? to eat in her room, whenever guest were around.

Many parents live from welfare, have alcohol problems or are as well handicapped or have poor knowledge of German. The latter was actually a serious problem. It is already difficult enough trying to explain something to a mentally handicapped child; language barriers do not facilitate it. Of course there are also parents who do support and protect there children, which should be normal but in this case is a real blessing.

An experience which personally broke my heart and which will stay in my mind forever, was what the parents of Tobias (name changed) did to him. Tobias lives in a children?s home. He is an extremely lively 10-year-old boy, which is suffering from a very light mental handicap, which basically influences his concentration. The doctors cannot explicitly define the handicap, as it is the case with most of the children. His father used to forbid his children everything which pleased them and threw them out of the house occasionally. Finally the ministry for youth interfered. Now, only three of nine children live still at home. Since he lives in the children?s home Tobias seems to be happier. However, the fear in his eyes whenever he sees his father is striking. What shocked me most was that no one of Tobias? siblings was born handicapped. The extreme psychological pressure and wrong up-bringing caused the mental handicap. The ?social? part of my work was not the handicaps but the individual destinies. In my little perfect world I never had to experience sexual abuse or lack of acceptance within the family.

Each and every handicapped child itself was such an interesting personality that one could have been entertained with them all the time. One no longer saw a person with a disability but a person who would not be the same without this disability. No one loves you more unconditionally than a handicapped child. It is tragic, that this unconditional love is not always given back in return. Through this work experience I learned to appreciate my parenthood and not to take it for granted. Moreover, I learned to appreciate the simple things in life.

My fears in the beginning were completely without any reason.


Hamburg: Appris à me réjouir des plus simples choses


Le projet éducatif de la Sopie-Barat-Schule Hamburg implique un stage social obligatoire, à effec­tuer dans un hôpital, un foyer pour personnes âgées, un centre pour personnes handicapées ou une autre institution du secteur social. Martina Ulrichs a fait son stage social de trois semaines dans une école pour enfants handicapés en 2001. Voici son témoignage:

Lorsque nous avions à choisir une place pour le stage social, j'ai choisi cette place-là en première option, car jusque-là, je n'avais jamais eu l'occasion de travailler avec des handicapés. Et pour être sincère, je ne savais presque rien sur eux, sauf que je me sentais toujours un peu maladroite, quand un handicapé montait dans le bus, parce que je ne savais pas comment me comporter.

Après l'entretien avec le directeur et la visite de l'école, j'ai eu des doutes si je réussirais, bien qu'on fût très gentil avec une autre stagiaire et moi.

Ma première journée à l'école s'est passée agréablement, malgré mes attentes. Les enfants avaient de 10 à 14 ans. Dans la classe, il y avait encore deux éducatrices et un jeune qui faisait son service social (note du traducteur: en Allemagne, les jeunes objecteurs de conscience passent, en général, un service social).

Quand je suis entrée dans la classe, j'ai été tout de suite reçue avec une curiosité amicale, et bombardée de questions de savoir qui j'étais et combien de temps je resterais avec eux ? pas un jour sans que les enfants me demandent ceci. Après quelques jours, je m'étais acclimatée et après une semaine, je faisais partie de la classe (avec ma propre tasse dans la cuisine de classe !).

Ma tâche principale était d'être là tout simplement, de jouer avec les enfants et d'être disponible pour les demandes des enfants. Après un très bref délai, j'avais fait une place dans mon c?ur à tous les enfants. Même avec ceux qui, comme les autistes, vivent dans leur propre monde et se débattent parfois, je n'avais plus peur après quelque temps. J'ai appris quelle énorme dimension peut avoir une caresse ou un sourire, mais aussi quel effort cela demande d'être embrassée par quatre filles à la fois, pendant la récréation.

J'ai compris aussi l'importance de cette école, que je n'imaginais pas avant. C'est qu'elle remplace pour beaucoup d'enfants la vie familiale normale, et ils apprennent des choses que devraient leur enseigner leurs parents, tels que faire des courses, prendre le bus, manger en groupe. La plupart des enfants sont issus de conditions sociales modestes, et parfois, ils ne sont pas acceptés à la maison ou les parents ont honte de leur enfant. Ainsi une éducatrice m'a raconté que Lena (nom changé), une handicapée mentale, avait « le droit » de dîner dans sa chambre, quand il y avait une visite.

Beaucoup de parents d'élèves touchent le R.M.I., ont des problèmes d'alcool, sont parfois aussi handicapés ou parlent difficilement l'allemand. Ceci est en effet un problème, car il est déjà difficile d'expliquer quelque chose à un handicapé mental, sans parler des difficultés linguistiques. Bien sûr, il y a aussi des parents qui protègent leurs enfants et les aiment de tout c?ur ? ce qui devrait être normal, mais ce qui parait alors comme une bénédiction.

Ce qui m'a personnellement fendu le c?ur et m'a donné certainement une expérience pour toute ma vie, c'est l'histoire de Tobias (nom changé), qu? une éducatrice m?a racontée, un garçon qui n'a pas de parents ni famille. Tobias vit dans un foyer, c'est un enfant très heureux de vivre qui a un léger handicap mental, affectant surtout sa concen-tra-tion. Les médecins n'arrivent pas à définir exacte-ment son handicap, comme pour beaucoup d'enfants. Le père de Tobias avait toujours interdit aux enfants tout ce qui leur plaisait, et souvent il les avait mis à la porte. Alors l'office de protection de la jeunesse est intervenu. Trois enfants sur neuf sont seulement restés à la maison. Tobias va mieux depuis qu'il vit au foyer, mais chaque fois qu'il voit son père, la peur se manifeste dans son visage. Ce qui m'a touchée le plus, c'est le fait qu'aucun des frères de Tobias est né handicapé. C'est seulement par la mauvaise éducation et la pression psychique extrême qu'ils sont devenus handicapés mentaux. Ce sont ces histoires de vies qui m'ont bouleversée. Pour moi, le social dans ce stage, ce n'était pas le handicap, mais les différents destins. Dans mon petit monde sain, je n'avais jamais à faire avec abus sexuel ou rejet dans la famille.

Chaque handicapé était une si intéressante personnalité qu'on aurait pu consacrer tout son temps à celle-ci. Du coup, on ne voyait plus une personne handicapée, mais une personne qui ne serait pas elle-même sans son handicap. Aucune personne non handicapée t'accepte et t'aime sans condition ni préjugé et si chaleureusement tel un enfant handicapé. Il est très triste que ceci ne soit pas toujours réciproque. Dans ce stage, j'ai appris à estimer ma vie et ma famille et à ne pas les considérer comme quelque chose qui va de soi. Et j'ai appris à me réjouir des plus simples choses.

Les inhibitions que j'avais eues au début étaient complètement sans raison.

Pressbaum: What is Social Learning?


Learning means acquiring skills and modifying behaviour.

Social learning means to acquire:
self-competence, social competence and knowledge competence - preferably in an interrelated manner.  This is the goal of Social Learning.

The teachers of a school have set the same goals and methods for their team as those for their class.  Parallel to the curriculum, the ?I? of every individual and the ?WE? of the group are taken into consideration.
The conditions (time, place, previous experience, social factors) define the limits of active learning differently in each group.

We, as integration teachers, want to highlight several areas that we consider important:

  • Personality formation
  • Handling feelings
  • Handling conflicts

 
Personality Formation
The children should recognize personal traits which define a person?s individuality, such as likes, dislikes, hopes, strengths, weaknesses, talents, and the social environment, among other things.
Additionally, the school children should be conscious of the internal and external conditions and events.

Handling Feelings
The children should learn to describe feelings and grasp the connection between thoughts, feelings and actions.
Furthermore, they should accurately notice the signs of somebody else?s feelings, react appropriately and find out what is behind a certain feeling (for example, what is the underlying reason for the anger).
Also learning to express and control feelings adequately is another important aspect.

Handling conflicts
It is important for children to understand that conflicts are quite natural and can be used productively. The children should learn to argue fairly, to develop and practice various strategies of conflict resolution, and to negotiate in such a way that both parties are winners (the so-called ?win-win? approach).  Learning to compromise and to solve problems are further essential aspects for children.

In order to illustrate the topic ?Social Learning? more clearly, let us introduce an example taken from our practical experience:

The ?Together? Hour
The ?Together? hour comprises all the above mentioned main issues of social learning and can be applied at every grade level.
The children sit together in a circle and discuss a previously set topic (for example: friendship, dealing with integration children, coping with aggression, ?)
In conversation with one another, the children learn to verbalize feelings and to develop solution strategies.
Years of experience have shown us that school children, step-by-step with the help of ?Together? hours, have acquired social competence.

Report on three integration classes of the elementary school Sacre Coeur Pressbaum, Lower Austria.

Última modificación ( 17.10.05 )
 

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