Saturday, June 26, 2010

Kindergarten graduation

Felicidades Ryan and Vielka!!
Last Thursday we celebrated Ryan and Vielka's graduation from Kindergarten! We are so proud of you guys! Great job!

Receiving the certificate from Teacher Dee


Vielka and mom enjoying Monkey Bread (their favorite treat!)


WHAT!?! I'm in 1st grade?!

Rainforest Group


Two years ago, this is how it all started. It is crazy to think about. I met Bill VanDyk when he was staying at the Villa Pelicano in Manuel Antonio. He was on his anual student Rainforest trip, and because Nicki and Logan Dykgraaf were on the trip, they stayed a few nights in Manuel Antonio...

Last year I had the chance to go on the trip with the group, and this year, the whole school was blessed by their visit. They came and spent time reading with our kids, learning songs in spanish, and praying for our school and kids. It was great to have them and see them catch the heart and vision of what we are trying to do.

Thank you for loving our kids and taking the time to connect with them! They will not forget you!


In the classroom... Singing songs in Spanish and showing off their English singing skills as well!
Bill... promising Nathan a Judy Bloom book :) He will hold you to it!



Above, Kai and below, Emily with thier reading partners!



Carnival!


For a end of the year celebration and fundraiser, we threw a small kids carnival for our kids! There were games, water fights, hotdogs, and lots of prizes! We had a great day (an answer to prayers!) and a lot of fun! Thanks to everyone who helped us pull it off!




Diego by one of the favorite booths- the Pie Booth! Random people were "arrested" and had shaving cream "pies" thrown at their face... I, of course, did not escape...


After getting pied...


The girls ganging up on one of the mothers



Diego played sheriff... which included this spectacular stash and arresting innocent people (like myself) to get pied. I think I got him back though... I told the kids that every time they hit him with a water balloon I would give them each a ticket to spend on the games... thats how the water fight started... it was epic!

Below were some of the games we put together for the carnival!


The Duck Pond:
A carnival classic... each of the rubber ducks in the pond had a number on the bottom. Each number had a prize. The game kind of failed because the ducks kept tipping over, so the kids would look to see which prize they wanted and then would go look for that duck. But they had fun! Shortly after this picture was taken Ethan decided that he wanted to go swimming with the ducks too... and dove in!


The Dinosaur Dig
This game was for the younger kids... inside the sand box we kid about 50 small dinosaur eggs that had baby dinos inside. The kids dug in the sand to try to find them! Thanks to Diego for providing the "Jurassic Plant" and Janelle for her Paper Mache insight into making Dino Bones for decoration!






Paratrooper Drop:
For this game the kids went upstairs and picked out a toy paratrooper. They dropped it from the balcony and tried to get it into the red tub on the ground!
Look out below!!!

Fish Pond:
Here the kids threw a fishing pole over the board.
Someone behind the board would hook a fish that held a prize for the kid... the kids spent a lot of time in class making the fish to decorate it!










Face painting!
Johnny, of of the dads, offered to do the face painting and it was great!! The kids had everything from iguanas to stars to blow fish painted on their faces!






Sucker Tree:
Pick a sucker! if there is a color on the other side you win another!
This was a favorite...












Baseball Pitch:
Throw a strike! Johnny outlined this for us- it turned out great!











Bean Bag Turtle Toss...












Balloon Pop!
Throw a dart to pop a balloon... Also a crowd favorite













Can Knock Down





















A few pictures of us getting ready....

the kids wanted to help... so they decided to paint rocks for the carnival with sidewalk chalk... great job guys!
Janelle working on the sucker tree... one of the many long work nights preparing...

Janelle Visits

Thanks Janelle!

Janelle Sievert, resource room and curriculum director at Zeeland Christian, came down to spend a week helping us organize our curriculum, train teachers, and do year end assessments. It was a joy to have her! Our kids fell in love with her at once! It was a huge blessing to have someone helping us organize and "finish well"... Can't wait to have you back Janelle!

The kids made a thank you book for Janelle with all their handprints :)


Group Hug!!


Wednesday, June 2, 2010

India


Friday Culture Day:India




Last week, for our culture day, we talked about the people and culture in India. Aleasha, who traveled to India through YWAM (Youth With A Mission) shared a little bit about the people, the language, the traditions, and the poverty she experienced while she was there. The kids had the chance to taste Chai- a typical hot tea drink that many Indians drink on a daily basis.



Ryan and Valeria looking at a picture of a student in India


A couple of weeks later, we were also blessed to have newly-weds Chad & Leanna Grindstaff visit us while on their honeymoon to share about their recent mission trip to India and their hopes to return there long-term.

Every Friday we take about 20 min. to talk about a different country. Because Quepos is filled with ex-pats, we often get guest speakers to come in and share about their home country and culture. I myself love the presentations, but love even more watching our students. They are fascinated by the pictures. They ask smart questions. They are engaged! They ask when we will learn Japanese, or share their desires to visit France to see the Eiffle Tower.

Students huddled around the computer to see pictures (a projector is on our wish list!)

Watching the students brings tears to my eyes. They look forward to Fridays. They know it is a day we talk about God's people all around the world. They locate all the countries we have talked about on the map, and they speak endearingly about the information they remember. They try to eat with chopsticks. They ask about the languages and clothing. They taste new foods and talk about how different isn't bad.

Christopher and Emily praying for children in India

Then at the end of each lesson, we go around the room and each student prays. They pray for the orphans in China. For the poverty in India. They thank God for Anacondas and piranas and they pray that they won't hurt anyone.

And they pray that all the kids in each country will know Jesus as their friend.

It is a little part of God's kingdom, and I am so humbled to see it in our students.

It is my continual prayer that these students will have an open heart for people around the world, able to embody the great commission-living a life that reflects the belief that their God gave his son for each and every person on earth and praying that people around the world would know the fullness of HIS love.

GO and make disciples of ALL nations...

Tropical Storm Hits Quepos

Last night a tropical storm swept through Quepos and hit most of the Central Pacific coast last night leaving most neighborhoods without power and closing many roads due to fallen trees and light posts. Because Quepos is below sea level, it is especially prone to flooding. Many homes were under water after hours of heavy rains.



Please pray for our community as they are predicting a storm of equal intensity to pass through in the next 48 hours. Homes have been ruined and we are just starting to dry out- pray that the rain holds off allowing the community to pick up again before it is hit again.









Power lines are down throughout the city. The road to Manuel Antonio beach is completely blocked by fallen trees and the whole mountain is without electricity.









Another fallen light post.









Fallen signs.





At the school, we are thankful that all we had was minimal flooding (even though water rose to about a foot outside of our doors!). We are in one of the few neighborhoods that still has power.



Below, you can see how high the water was in our school room (remember, we are in a new building and we still had this much water! imagine the homes that are older and have less protection)









Below, almost clean- just getting the last layer of water out of the classroom.







Below our library and reading corner out in the sun to dry. Disappointed that we may have lost quite a few books, but realize that this is minimal loss compared to many families and individuals in our community.







Thank you to my Costa Rican family and community here who has called and stopped by, concerned and checking in on me. We hope that we will be back in classes tomorrow if there is not another storm. Many of our students were without electricity and unable to leave their homes due to road blockages. Pray that everything gets cleared up safely and that no one was hurt!