SUBSCRIBE NOW

SIGHT

Be informed. Be challenged. Be inspired.

Postcards: Guatemala teacher pedals classroom to students in pandemic

Guatemala cycling teacher1

MOISES CASTILLO, of Associated Press, reports from Guatemala on how teacher Gerardo Ixcoy has taken his classroom on the road during the coronavirus pandemic…

Santa Cruz del Quiche, Guatemala
AP

When the novel coronavirus closed Guatemala’s schools in mid-March, teacher Gerardo Ixcoy invested his savings in a secondhand, adult tricycle.

But this is not just transportation. It’s also a mobile classroom, with plastic sheets to protect against virus transmission, a whiteboard and a small solar panel that powers an audio player he uses for some lessons. 

Guatemala cycling teacher1

Gerardo Ixcoy teaches 12-year-old student Paola Ximena Conoz about fractions from his mobile classroom, parked just outside the door to her home in Santa Cruz del Quiche, Guatemala, on Wednesday, 15th July. Each day the 27-year-old sets out pedaling among the cornfields of Santa Cruz del Quiche to give individual instruction to his sixth-grade students. PICTURE: AP Photo/Moises Castillo.

Each day, the 27-year-old pedals among the cornfields of Santa Cruz del Quiché to give individual instruction to his sixth-grade students.

On a recent day, 12-year-old Paola Ximena Conoz wiped her glasses as she waited for Ixcoy to set up just outside the door to her home. They greeted each other warmly – though without contact. Ixcoy deployed the mop that measures the distance between him and his students. 

Standing behind the plexiglass window of his tricycle, he produced a pizza box. 

The day’s lesson: fractions.

Ixcoy is known universally as ‘Lalito 10’, a childhood nickname that stuck. He tries to visit each of his students twice a week. 

Guatemala cycling teacher2

Standing just inside the doorway of his home in a black button down shirt tucked into navy blue trousers, 11-year-old Oscar Rojas greets his teacher Gerardo Ixcoy, known universally as “Lalito 10”, in Santa Cruz del Quiche, Guatemala, on Wednesday, 15th July. “Teacher Lalito only comes for a little while to teach me, but I learn a lot.” PICTURE: AP Photo/Moises Castillo.

The classroom-on-a-trike was born of necessity. Ixcoy quickly realised there were challenges to remote learning in this farming community in Guatemala’s western highlands. 

“I tried to get the kids their work sheets sending instructions via WhatsApp, but they didn’t respond,” Ixcoy said. “The parents told me that they didn’t have money to buy data packages (for their phones) and others couldn’t help their children understand the instructions.” Illiteracy in the area is about 42 per cent. And in the entire department or province, only about 13 per cent of homes have internet.

“The cellphones they have at home are very basic,” Ixcoy said. “They can’t download apps like Zoom that would allow you to give a virtual class.”

Paola’s 36-year-old father, Victor Conoz, traveled regularly to Belize to sell produce. Due to the pandemic, he hadn’t worked in four months. 

“The situation is really complicated,” he said. “You’re not going to believe me, but some days we didn’t have food and buying data for the cellphone was impossible for me.”

Guatemala cycling teacher3

Teacher Gerardo Ixcoy pedals his adult tricycle converted into a mobile classroom past cornfields, in Santa Cruz del Quiche, Guatemala, on Wednesday, 15th July, 2020. When the novel coronavirus closed Guatemala’s schools in mid-March, the 27-year-old invested his savings in the classroom-on-a-trike in order to give individual instruction to his sixth-grade students. PICTURE: AP Photo/Moises Castillo.

For the kids, the classes break up the monotony of weeks in quarantine. Eleven-year-old Oscar Rojas waited anxiously in the doorway of his home in a black button-down shirt tucked into navy blue trousers. He lined up his notebooks and pencils and slipped on a face mask. 

The pandemic has really altered Oscar’s routine, “because now I’m not receiving normal classes,” he said. “Teacher Lalito only comes for a little while to teach me, but I learn a lot.”

In the afternoon, Ixcoy pedals for home to beat the curfew. He and his wife Yessika and their three-year-old son Dylan walk to a small plot of land they rented to grow corn as another source of income. They also planted a vegetable garden beside their home.

The families he serves often struggle to stave off hunger.

“One day the mother of a student told me they didn’t have food,” Ixcoy said. “When class ended and I began to ride away on my tricycle she calls me and with a look of gratefulness says, ‘Teacher, they gave me some food, I want to share half with you.’” 

“I arrived home crying,” he recalled.

 

Donate



sight plus logo

Sight+ is a new benefits program we’ve launched to reward people who have supported us with annual donations of $26 or more. To find out more about Sight+ and how you can support the work of Sight, head to our Sight+ page.

Musings

TAKE PART IN THE SIGHT READER SURVEY!

We’re interested to find out more about you, our readers, as we improve and expand our coverage and so we’re asking all of our readers to take this survey (it’ll only take a couple of minutes).

To take part in the survey, simply follow this link…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

For security, use of Google's reCAPTCHA service is required which is subject to the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.