Winning Smiles

Winning Smiles
Samohi SAGE Team Wins National Competition in Cincinnati Ohio

7.25.2008

Our Hotel














We thought it might be time to share a little more info about the hotel. The Bolingo Hotel is a Swiss operated hotel in Abjuja located 1 block from the British Embassy and just about 2 blocks from the U.S. Embassy.

We can begin by sharing that a five star Swiss hotel in Nigeria equates to a low level Motel 6 look –a-like in the U.S. Our rooms are pretty tired looking, with walls that look as if they have not been painted for some time. Since it a somewhat older building the electrical upgrades consist of conduits on the surface of the walls with big box outlets. The interesting thing is that each outlet has it’s own on/off switch just like a light switch. The hotel sprinkler system consists for red water hoses on every floor.

As we have shared previously the high speed wireless internet in each room seems to be not. At least a couple of floors do have long Ethernet cables but you have to look around the tops of the walls in the area of the closet to find them. We searched all of our rooms, all of the Holy Angels team rooms and have determined that most rooms and floors do not have service. The lobby is a hotel hotspot but while the wireless signal reads excellent connection, the pipeline is slow during the day and it is impossible to connect. It is usually late in the evening before you can connect.

In addition to the multiple blackouts we experience, all of the lighting throughout the hotel is dim which seems to be typical of everywhere we’ve been including the airport. It’s reflective of the challenges Nigeria faces in its ability to produce and distribute adequate and reliable electrical resources.

Even though all rooms have a king sized bed, apparently it is rare that two people stay in a room. We all had only one towel, (no facecloth or hand towel) one coffee cup with spoon, one glass, etc. We pretty much have to beg for an additional towel. Each day is a new adventure when we come back to our rooms. Sometimes both towels are gone replaced by one new towel. Other days, we have our original towels left in place and no clean ones which is better than other days when we come back and there are no towels at all.

The beds are really hard and the pillows really flat. Some of us love the beds but most of us hate the pillows. Mrs. Strahn fried her hair dryer on the first day when she forgot that when using an international adaptor, you’re not supposed to use the high heat setting. She threw it away and when Mrs. Harrison returned to the room the housekeeping staff (all male) asked if she meant to throw it away and could he have it. When she said yes, he returned a few minutes later to ask for a note stating he had permission to take the dryer.

Yesterday there was an electrical surge during one of the presentations accompanied by a loud bang and the plug on the av cord no longer worked. One of the Nigerian SAGE officials asked for a pair of scissors, cut off the plug, stripped the wires and stuck the bare wires back into the outlet. Worked like a charm!

The dining experience has also been different. The restaurant seems to only serve buffet style for all meals. As we seat ourselves, we are each brought one bottle of water. The whole restaurant area is open for seating but there are not really enough tables for all of us to eat at once. That wouldn’t be a problem because with so many people in line, tables are always opening up but…they never reset the tables as they are emptied. Tables are not reset until after the dining period is closed. The buffet serving dishes are somewhat small and food can run out quickly. The serving dishes are refilled very slowly and sometimes not at all. The students (and many adults) have been a little challenged by the food choices. They tend to be pretty much the same for every meal with only minor variations and most dishes have a very ethnic flair with lots of goat, cow tail soup, and “mixed meat” stew. Even the dishes that are “American” style such as spaghetti are spicy and really do not resemble their American cousins. With so many countries and cultures represented it must be difficult to provide foods that please everyone’s palate. When they put out trays of cold food, pasta salads, rolls, desserts, etc. the trays are wrapped tightly in plastic wrap but no one removes the wrap. There is a small side table with rolls and butter, fresh fruit salad, desserts etc. and it is pretty well emptied by the students before the first 20 people are through the main line.

Mrs. Jones orders cafĂ© au lait from the coffee bar and it’s very good, fresh and hot. When Mrs. Harrison ordered plain coffee from the same place, they poured water into the electric hot pot on the floor, put instant coffee into a thermal carafe and when the water was hot, poured it into the carafe and then very ceremoniously poured the hot instant coffee from the carafe to her cup.

The Olympic sized pool is about the size of a large home pool, the recreation center consists of a ping pong table and a swing set. Understand that this is the third best hotel in Abuja (Hilton is # 1 and Sheraton is #2) which probably makes it the third best in Nigeria though we don’t know much about the hotels in Lagos which is a larger, more vibrant tourist area. The rooms here are supposed to cost $200-250 and night and the Hilton starts at $300 and quickly goes to $700 a night. It is interesting though how quickly you adapt to the eccentricities of the hotel and it almost becomes home even with all the flaws. But we will really be glad to get home to our own beds, towels and pillows. Good night.

Competition Day!






















Competition day has arrived! This morning the national 2nd place teams competed for the opportunity to participate with the national 1st place teams. Nigeria and the United States team from Buffalo, New York emerged victorious. Both teams look like they are very capable of competing with the other top teams. After lunch we had the drawing to determine the order of team choices for presenting in the first round. For example, whichever team drew #1 had first choice of presenting today or tomorrow and in which time slot. We did not draw #1 but we did draw early enough to be able to choose to present today and to choose the next to the last time slot. We wanted the last slot but it was already taken and next to last is ok too except the #1 Nigerian also chose to compete today in the time slot before us. They are a very, very strong team.

In Abuja alone, there are 57 SAGE teams in addition to the other teams throughout the nation. The #1 Nigerian team is from Abuja and faced very stiff competition to get to this event. The #2 Nigerian team is last year’s SAGE World Cup champion so one can see how they are so consistently strong. The SAGE entrepreneurship curriculum has been adopted in 500 Nigerian schools and has been identified as a significant means to empower the youth of the country as a catalyst for change and in the years ahead to move the country forward to become a major economic player in the global marketplace.

The top two teams from today and the top two teams tomorrow will complete in a final round, head to head at the Hilton Hotel late tomorrow afternoon. After the afternoon’s competition we will have our closing event at the Hilton Hotel including announcement of the winners and the fireworks party afterwards. None of us will know which top four teams will advance to the finals until after we get to the Hilton which means every team must leave here prepared to present a second time.

Two really strong teams presented just before us. South Korea had a very strong professional presentation. They have a business that connects small time inexpensive publishing venture with business advertisers with minimal advertising budgets and connects them to the right targeted youth market for future loyal customers. The Nigerian team has a business to sell CFL light bulbs. Nigeria’s primary stumbling blocks to increasing the standard of living for all Nigerians is clean water, reliable energy, and stopping the Aids epidemic. The presenters referenced what we have already learned first hand by saying that in Nigeria, reliable electricity is a ‘maybe, maybe not’ proposition. We had already one blackout during one of the earlier presentations. The use of incandescent light bulbs further taxes an already overloaded system.

Our presentation today was fraught with challenges from the moment we started. To begin with, due to speaker problems, the sound system was disconnected. Speaking without microphones was not a big issue for us because the room is small and we’ve learned to project our voices but we had counted on the sound system for the music background for several slides and also for the sound in several of our video montages. We have 5 minutes once we enter the room to distribute our annual reports, set up our technology and prepare for the presentation. We must start at the moment they tell us “go” and not before because the judges need the time to look over our annual reports and our media packages. Because Jane enters the room to distribute the annual reports by using the “hawker” and announces the annual report to the judges, (critical to a component introduced later in our presentation) a SAGE college mentor misunderstood and stopped her because he thought she was starting too soon. It was quickly corrected and Jane went on but it was a distracting start. Then the LCD that we had connected our laptop wouldn’t power up. It looked like we weren’t going to be able to start. It finally seemed to see the signal and we were ready to go when it went out again. After a several minute delay, we started again. Then halfway through the presentation, while Jasmine was making an entertaining but defining point, out it when again! When there are technical difficulties the time is paused but we don’t get to “go back”. This time it appeared that the LCD was not going to come back up and there was no backup machine. Fortunately we had brought our own LCD for practicing so Ms. Kemp had to grab the key to Alberto’s room, run upstairs, get the projector, race it back downstairs, bring it into the room and then we had to go through all the steps of connecting it to the hotel system and to our laptop. Luckily Tenzin, Jane, Monica and Alberto are technological wizards and were able to get the job done as efficiently as possible under the circumstances. Unfortunately because of the down time it’s hard to regain the momentum. We were offered the option of starting all over again or picking up where we left off. After some discussion, we decided to leave the decision in the judges’ hands. They unanimously opted to have us start a few slides back from where we left off. Disconcerting but we handled it. What else could we do?


When the presentation is concluded, the judges have time to ask probing questions that are intended to test us beyond the presentation. Just as we started the questioning period, we had another blackout. Thank goodness it was after the presentation and not during our closing “pledges”. They are a powerful conclusion and to have possibly lost the impact due to a power outage would have been more than a team should have to manage. At least during the questioning there was no need to stop again since there was plenty of daylight in the room but it was one more distraction. We are reminded every day that Nigeria is a developing country.


We left our LCD up for the last team of the day which was Tanzania. With no backup projector, they would not have been able to present unless they used ours. Then for some reason, their laptop would not connect to the LCD. Fortunately they had their presentation also stored on a flash drive and Tenzin brought up his laptop and connected it to the LCD and the Tanzanian team was set to go. We can only hope that our “grace under fire”, our backup preparations in case of emergency and our willingness to share our equipment with another team did not go unnoticed by the judges even if it’s not included in the judging criteria and the scoring rubrics.
We’re not sure how we feel about the results of the day. We undoubtedly feel the Nigerian team will move forward and the 2nd team choice could be us or could be South Korea. We’ll find out tomorrow afternoon. If we do move forward, we are assured at least a 4th place finish. The first through fourth rankings will be based entirely on the final presentations. Previous scores do not move forward. We’ll see.


Tonight was definitely “let-down” night as we took a night off from practicing. After dinner we mostly hung out but later in the evening we got our second wind and moved down the lobby to try and connect to the internet and connect to many of you. The internet has been a challenge which is why the blog postings have been delayed and the photographs often come later. During the day the internet connections seem to slow down so much that it is impossible to connect. If we’re on battery power, we use it all up just waiting to connect. It’s not until around 11:00pm that it comes back up. It’s still very slow and loading pictures is sometimes impossible. Work in progress I guess. It’s pretty funny to see us over the lobby trying to find the best hotspots. Tonight Tenzin found the direct Ethernet outlet under the concierge desk and quietly connected. It was still slow but definitely more reliable than the hotspots that really aren’t so hot. 

It’s way past midnight so time for us to wander up to our rooms to sleep and await whatever tomorrow brings for us. It’s great to read your comments on the blog, keep them coming.

7.24.2008

Country Day





















Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Today our day started with the breakfast club, everyone came down at the same time. Will miracles never cease!

Today is the day we visited the Cyprian Ekwensi Centre for Arts and Culture. We boarded government school buses for the ride to the center, located about 10 minutes from the hotel. The building seems to be an old tired building that is struggling to make ends meet while trying to provide a center for the preservation of Nigerian history. The lighting was dim and the cases old, not unlike many struggling small museums in the US. 

After we toured the museum we set up our “country tables”. Each country’s team had a table where products, or foods, or crafts were displayed and shared with all the participants. Each country also dressed according to their culture. After we all had a chance to visit the tables, ask questions and share cultural information we then took our seats for the program. 

The program consisted of each team doing a short presentation about their country and their community including political structure, cultural icons, music, dance, etc. and then doing a short dance or song that was representative of their country or community. A significant point to our presentation was the cultural diversity and the immigrant foundation of the United States. We each made sashes or belts or necklaces with ribbon and strung them individually with all the flags from our countries of heritage, introduced ourselves individually and explained our flags. All of the country presentations were so interesting and the colorful clothing of many of the countries lit up the hall where we were meeting. It was a good thing something was bright because the hall was dim, the stage was huge and deep and it was difficult to see or photograph the dancing. So sorry that we do not have any good pictures to share. As a conclusion, a professional Nigerian dance troupe including drums did an amazing performance. The entire hall came alive. It was exciting, vibrant and wonderful. Everyone cheered them on and we were sorry when it ended. That is saying something about how good they were because until then we were beginning to fade and suffer from sitting in chairs too long. We boarded buses and returned to the hotel for lunch. This was about 3:00pm. We are beginning to understand about Nigerian meal time and we now pack snacks where ever we go.

The last team that is going to arrive came in today which is South Africa. Unfortunately due to a number of Visa and financial problems, several of the original teams confirmed to attend dropped out in the last 2-3 days including the Ukraine and China. Even the New York team was only cleared with their visas the day before their plane departure. We were really lucky because we didn’t have any problems at all and had all our documents in plenty of time.

After lunch our team began practicing before we were to go the judges briefing and to watch the 2nd place national teams compete for the one slot to compete with the first place teams tomorrow. After we were ready to go back downstairs, we found out that tonight’s event is postponed until tomorrow. There doesn’t seem to be a lot of explanation and we are discovering that in Nigeria you just have to go with the flow or you become very frustrated. 

We almost had brief moment of thinking we were going to go out to the Sheraton Hotel for hamburgers or spaghetti or French fries but we had to abandon that plan when the bus was called away to pick up a group at the airport. Oh well, it sounded wonderful but we knew it was going to be expensive so it probably worked out for the better though we are still keeping it in mind for the weekend.

We were also disappointed today to find out that our trip on Saturday to the Yankori National Park has been canceled and replaced with a tour of Abuja attractions. It’s not that we don’t want to see Abuja sites but we were planning on doing that with Benedette’s brother on Sunday. Apparently after “Nigerian discussion” it was determined that it was too far to drive to the park and get there in time to see the wildlife before they retreated into shade to escape the heat. This is apparently not a good time of year also because many of the animals have moved to other locations for the summer season. It was a disappointment but we are excited to learn that our contact at the US Embassy has arranged a special tour/event for us at the embassy on Monday. On Monday we may also be visiting a government school just outside Abuja. This is the same school with a SAGE team that we had communicated with by email and that we met in the lobby of the hotel on our first morning. Both of our teams are trying to find a way to partner on a major project together next year.

After dinner at the hotel, we again started preparations and rehearsal for competition tomorrow. We changed many of our slides and dialogue, rehearsed, and rehearsed and rehearsed and timed and timed and timed ourselves over and over (as soon as our time is up we’re cut off even if we are not done). Alberto and Mrs. Jones were down in the lobby searching for new images to add to our PowerPoint. We need to tweak some of our slides and dialogue to bring in a more international perspective to the work we have done. When we are in the United States competing with other US teams it’s ok to be more local but in an international event we need to be sure our global perspective is clear to all.

We are all beginning to fade with some of us taking cat naps between our speeches or while the slide is tweaked. Pretty amazing to see us all sprawled over the floor and bed seeming to be pretty well conked out but when it’s each person’s turn to do “their thing” up they jump and dive right in. You can really tell we are a team because we really help each other and keep each person motivated. 

Tomorrow is a big day. Goodnight to all.

P.S. Don’t forget that you can “comment” on our blog just by clicking on the comment title. It will open up a comment window where your can read other people’s comments and add your own. You do need to set up an account. It sometimes takes a couple of hours for the comment to show in the system but you can be sure we will see and read them.

7.23.2008

Day 1 SAGE























Tuesday July 22, 2008
Today was our first full day in Abuja and it was definitely an eventful day. Benedette’s uncle Ifeanyi Umeh returned to take Mrs. Strahn, Mrs. Jones and Alberto to exchange money. In Nigeria, it is not the custom to exchange money at a bank or hotel. One has to go to a money changer. There are many money changers alongside the roads but Ifeanyi took them to a building with very tiny rooms and took them around to find the best exchange rates. Most of us had deliberately brought money in small bills, mostly twenty dollar bills. It turns out that to get the best rate we needed to exchange 50 or 100 dollar bills. The smaller bills do not exchange at the same rate and some of the money changers didn’t want them at all. If it hadn’t been Ifeanyi we would not have been very successful. He worked very hard to get us a good rate.

We then started our official SAGE day with a morning conference titled the International Conference on Youth Employment and Social Responsibility. After such a long trip here and not much sleep, the conference seemed long. It was supposed to start at 9:00am but on Nigerian time, we didn’t start until 11:30. We also met a Nigerian SAGE team teacher and student we had been corresponding with about sharing products on each others websites. Jasmine and Tenzin sat in the lobby with the advisor and student and looked at each other’s websites and talked about how we market and sell products through our websites.

We had lunch and about 3:00pm we boarded buses to travel to a village on the outskirts of Abuja. The village name was Esu Ushafa and the village is very proud that American President Bill Clinton visited when he was in Nigeria. President Clinton visited the chief of the village and when we also went to visit the chief’s “palace” to meet him he talked to the group through a translator and said how proud he was the American president had been to his village and now American students had now also come to visit. He brought out the signed photograph for all of us to see and then asked to have a photograph taken with the American students. All of our Santa Monica group and also the team from Holy Angels High School in New York had our picture taken with the chief and Curt DeBerg the founder of SAGE. In the background of the photograph you can see his residence name Esu Palace Ushafa. We walked down two of the village streets and it certainly provided a myriad of new experiences. We ended at the pottery center where there were several artisans demonstrating how they make the pottery. Former President Clinton also visited the center and they were very proud to show us his signature in their guest book.

After we returned to the hotel, some of us had dinner in the dining room but many of us were tired, went to our rooms, had cup of noodles or other snacks and rested up before we all got together to start working on our projects for Country Day tomorrow. We had 3 more blackouts and one lasted for about 5 minutes but usually it is only for a few seconds before the auxiliary power kicks in. Sonam and Tenzin also played a few games of ping pong. For Country Day we are making belts and sashes of red, white and blue ribbon with the American flag and the flags of each of our individual heritages on them as part of our demonstration and presentation tomorrow. Monica and Mrs. Jones worked on the new PowerPoint presentation for tomorrow’s event and the rest of us practiced our presentation for the competition. It is now 1:10am in the morning and we are due downstairs tomorrow morning at 8:00am for breakfast.

This is an amazing experience and a view of another world and another way of living. We will definitely more truly appreciate many things that we have taken for granted but be assured we are safe, well fed and relishing our adventures. Goodnight one and all.

7.18.2008

We're Here!








We've arrived!!! We made it to Abuja!!! It was a long set of 3 flights; we flew Northwest Air to Minneapolis, then Northwest again to Amsterdam and then finally KLM to Abuja. It was more than 38 hours from when we arrived at LAX for departure and then arrived at the front desk of the hotel. We held up well but are really glad that portion of the trip is over. In the airport in Amsterdam, we discovered the SAGE team from Singapore was also on our flight. Since we were going to miss the opening reception in Abuja, we felt like we were experiencing our own get acquainted event at the airport. When we arrived at the hotel, Benette's uncle and his wife, Ifeanyi and Leticia Umeh were already here waiting for us with bottles of water and phones that he had rented on our behalf. This morning he came back and took Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Strahn and Alberto to have some of our American dollars changed into Nigerian naira. The weather is warm and muggy but so far not too bad. It's been overcast so that has helped keep the temperature down.

Unfortunately it turns out that on our floor of the hotel we do not have internet connection so posting to the blog will have to be from the hotel lobby.

We are waiting for our first event to start. This morning we are hearing speakers on "Facing the Challenge of Global Youth" , "Youth Entrepreneurship, Education and Social Responsiblity ", and "Youth Entrepreneurship Development: The Missing Link between Policy and Action". We have discovered that Nigerians are a little more relaxed about time than Americans. Events that are schedule to start at 9:00am, really mean "about then" or a little later or a little later or maybe 2 hours later.

We will be posting more pictures as soon as Mrs. Harrison learns how to get the pictures out of her camera, onto the laptop in the right format for uploading to the blog. Stay tuned.

7.16.2008

Kiwanis Club Donation


Well the trip is getting closer and closer. While we still haven't quite raised money enough to cover our costs for the trip, today we got a big boost from the Santa Monica Kiwanis Club. Four of us along with Ms. Kemp, Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Harrison, went to the Kiwanis meeting. They made us feel really welcome and we had a delicious lunch. And oh yes, we were honored to have Dr. Sally Chou, the Chief Academic Officer for our school district also join us at lunch and she brought with her Dr. Tim Cuneo, our new Interim Superintendent for our school district. He has just arrived and we might have been the first students he has met. Hope he liked us. After lunch we did a shortened version of the presentation we will do in Abuja. It was a little hard because we had to talk really fast and since we weren't all able to attend, we had to fill it the speaking parts of our other teammates. They must have really liked us though because after we made our presentation, they presented us with a very, very generous donation check. THANK YOU SANTA MONICA KIWANIS CLUB!!!! So many people have been so supportive and generous with all kinds of donations. We will definitely be personally thanking all of you.

7.11.2008

Final Countdown, Nine More Days to Go


Well we're on final countdown, only nine more days until we begin our journey to Abuja.

So much still to do to get ready before we begin our journey to Abuja Nigeria. This Sunday should be really fun. We'll be eat lunch at a Nigerian restaurant named Veronica's Kitchen in Inglewood. Benedette Umeh works with ROP at Los Angeles County Office of Education and will act as our hostess as she explains the menu and customs for eating in Nigeria. She is from Nigeria and just traveled to Abuja with her family about two years ago. It will give us a chance to ask questions before we go. Right now it looks like there will be 12 of us eating so there will be lots of conversation and laughing as we sample new cuisine. Pictures will be posted soon!