Where There Is No Doctor 2011
Ways to Share and Exchange Ideas in a Group
As a health worker you will find that the success you have in improving your
people’s health will depend far more on your skills as a teacher than on your
medical or technical knowledge. For only when the whole community is involved
and works together can big problems be overcome.
People do not learn much from what they are told. They learn from what they
think, feel, discuss, see, and do together.
So the good teacher does not sit behind a desk and talk at people. He talks
and works with them. He helps his people to think clearly about their needs and to
find suitable ways to meet them. He looks for every opportunity to share ideas in
an open and friendly way.
Perhaps the most important thing you can do as a health worker is to awaken
your people to their own possibilities. . . to help them gain confidence in
themselves. Sometimes villagers do not change things they do not like because
they do not try. Too often they may think of themselves as ignorant and powerless.
But they are not. Most villagers, including those who cannot read or write, have
remarkable knowledge and skills. They already make great changes in their
surroundings with the tools they use, the land they farm, and the things they build.
They can do many important things that people with a lot of schooling cannot.
If you can help people realize how much they already know and have done
to change their surroundings, they may also realize that they can learn and do
even more. By working together it is within their power to bring about even bigger
changes for their health and well-being.
Then how do you tell people these things?
Often you cannot! But you can help them find out some of these things for
themselves—by bringing them together for discussions. Say little yourself, but start
the discussion by asking certain questions. Simple pictures like the drawing on
the next page of a farm family in Central America may help. You will want to draw
your own picture, with buildings, people, animals, and crops that look as much as
possible like those in your area.
w25