Hanan al-Hroub attends a public reception upon her arrival in the West Bank city of Jericho from Jordan on March 16, 2016 ©Abbas Momani (AFP) |
The Palestinian woman who
this week won a US$1 million "World's Best Teacher" award returned
home Wednesday and pledged to use part of her winnings to help students and
educators.
AFP
report continues:
Hanan
al-Hroub, who grew up in a Palestinian refugee camp in Bethlehem and now
teaches at a school near Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, was awarded the
Global Teacher prize at a Nobel-style ceremony in Dubai on Sunday.
She
received congratulations from Pope Francis, who announced the winner in a video
message.
Upon
her arrival back in the West Bank, Hroub, carrying her golden trophy, looked
amazed at the reception she was given in the city of Jericho.
She
said she wants to offer scholarships to encourage students to become teachers.
Hroub
also wants to help finance teaching programmes that adopt her methods.
Describing
her philosophy, she said it was important for students to learn through play.
"Through
planned and educational play, change will come," she said.
She
said behavioural improvement coincides with educational achievement, adding
that when a child is behaving badly, playfulness is the best approach.
"Through
playing, a student is entertained at the same time as learning," she said.
Detailed
in her book "We Play and Learn", Hroub's approach has "led to a
decline in violent behaviour in schools where this is usually a frequent
occurrence," the Varkey Foundation, which organizes the award, said in a
statement on Sunday.
Hroub,
a second-grade teacher in a school in Al-Bireh near Ramallah, is not teaching
in normal circumstances.
Palestinian
teachers regularly complain their students have behavioural problems,
particularly when exposed to violence.
Israel
has occupied the West Bank since 1967.
Hroub
said she had noticed huge differences in children who have seen or been
subjected to violence.
"This
is an obstacle in the classroom and we were able to change their lives at home
and at school."
Palestinian
education minister Sabri Saidam called Hroub a "message of peace".
He
said Hroub's victory was a message to Israel that the "current situation
has to end".
The US$1 million award is
paid in installments and requires the winner to remain a teacher for at least
five years.
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