EL-BIREH (Palestine), April 2 — The noise signaled that Hanan Hroub’s second-grade students were not focusing on their assigned task of scrawling math problems on balloons. Instead, they were staring at the latest interloper, a tall German journalist, treading through their classroom to meet their “Miss,” as Palestinians call teachers, who recently won a US$1 million (RM4.02 million) global education prize.

And they were popping those balloons.

Since the prize was announced March 13, Palestinian officials have honored Hroub with festivals and honorary degrees. International reporters have raced to her house and classroom. Some Israelis have denounced her as part of a Palestinian education system they see as inciting violence and noted with dismay that her husband assisted in the killing of six Jewish settlers in the West Bank city of Hebron in 1980.

Amid all that hubbub, Hroub, 43, still faced the essential challenge of every elementary-school teacher: keeping children on task. On the morning of the balloon exercise, she had put four marks underneath a frowning yellow face pasted to the whiteboard. The smiling face next to it had only a single mark.

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“No, Miss! No! We will concentrate, we promise!” piped up a girl named Shurouq. Hroub and her charges discussed why they felt distracted and promised to do better.

Hroub had just returned to school from Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates, where she received the prize from the Varkey Foundation in a ceremony involving Vice President Joe Biden and Prince William, as well as Pope Francis by video.

The foundation said she had been selected from the original 8,000 nominees for teaching methods built around educational games that she created for children traumatized by violence. The award came at an awkward time: Palestinian teachers, including Hroub, had been on strike for weeks, demanding better pay. (The Palestinian Authority acceded to a 10 per cent salary increase hours after the prize was announced.)

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A mother of five children, now ages 18 to 23, Hroub said she developed her play-therapy approach to education for her own children, after Israeli soldiers shot at their family vehicle at a military checkpoint near Bethlehem in 2000. Hroub said that she was not in the car and did not know why the soldiers opened fire but that her husband, Omar, who had spent a decade in Israeli prisons, was wounded.

After the episode, she said, her children often woke up screaming at night and became aggressive. “The teachers at their schools weren’t trained to deal with that, and I feared that I was losing my children,” she recalled.

Over time she realised that her children were at their calmest and happiest while playing. She began scrambling to think of games they could play together. She built a games section in a corner of the house and told the children that was their safe place.

During that time, the violent years of the second intifada, the Israeli authorities imposed curfews on the Bethlehem area where she then lived. When the curfews were lifted, sometimes briefly, “other women raced to buy food,” she said. “I raced to the news agency to buy papers, crayons, markers, whatever I could to make games for my children.”

Having seen how much the games helped her children to cope, Hroub, who grew up in Dheisheh, a cinder-block refugee camp in Bethlehem, decided to become a teacher to expand their reach. She enrolled in college, fulfilling a dream delayed in part by West Bank campuses’ having been closed when she finished high school because of the first Palestinian intifada, and has been at the front of a classroom since 2005. She has refined her methods, frequently taking games from educational websites and tailoring them to the Palestinian experience.

“Everything begins with an idea,” she said. “Then I tried it on my children, then in a classroom. Now, the world knows.”

Hroub said she planned to use the US$1 million prize money to create a foundation promoting the games. While the Palestinian Education Ministry has sent dozens of teachers to observe her classroom, she said the method has not really caught on, something she attributed to a cultural resistance by people who think play is frivolous.

“Every year it’s the same,” she said. “The parents are in shock: Are our kids playing at school? And then they start seeing results.”

Not test score results, emotional results.

She pointed to a big-boned boy who was on the brink of being expelled for bullying. The boy’s father begged Hroub to work with him and she agreed, on the condition that the parents promise never to hit him. The day of the balloon exercise, Hroub reprimanded the boy twice but also showered him with praise when he completed his work. After he snatched a pencil and pushed a girl, she gently sat him next to one of the better-behaved students.

“This boy that you see today is a different child from the one who entered my classroom,” she said.

That brightly painted classroom on the second floor of the tidy Samiha Khalil School is a stark departure from the typical Palestinian classroom of desks in neat rows. For math, the students ran around holding numbers from 1 to 9, getting together in pairs that added to 10, then knocked odd-numbered balls into a rabbit’s mouth to review odds and evens.

At story time, Hroub donned a rainbow-colored wig over her Islamic head scarf and pinched on a red clown nose, reading about a naughty spider named Sha-sha-sha-sha-ban.

She prodded the children toward what she called “peaceful” ways of disagreeing, including with her. One child dissented from her decision to move him after hitting a classmate. “You oppressed me, Miss,” said Laith, 8. They talked it out.

Hroub said she was not political and would welcome her practices being instituted in Israeli classrooms. Yet, one wall of her classroom has an enormous map of the region that does not acknowledge Israel’s existence. As Hroub took the children on an imagined drive through Jerusalem, they “toured” Muslim and Christian sites, but she made no mention of Jewish ones.

Since the prize was announced, some pro-Israel groups have criticized the foundation online because Hroub’s husband — now a legal adviser to the Palestinian Authority — was involved in the 1980 ambush of a group of Israelis trying to revive a Jewish settlement in Hebron. (Some Palestinian news sites have praised him as the “mastermind” of the attack, though a New York Times article at the time described him as having assisted.)

Others complained that any Palestinian teacher was honored. Itamar Marcus, whose Palestinian Media Watch chronicles anti-Israel and anti-Semitic statements in the Arab news media and who has long complained that Palestinian schools educate students to hate, said that even if Hroub was an excellent teacher, the award would be seen by the Palestinian Education Ministry “as a confirmation that what they are doing is OK.”

Marcus complained that 25 Palestinian schools were named after militants who had killed Israelis or Jews and that youth sporting tournaments similarly honored so-called martyrs. He said videos broadcast on Palestinian television showing schoolchildren praising such attacks suggested that they were being taught to do so.

Jamal Dajani, a spokesman for the Palestinian government, dismissed that suggestion. “Palestinian children are constantly subjected to Israeli soldiers and armed settlers waving guns in their faces,” he said. “This is enough cause for incitement.”

Hroub waved away questions on politics. “I’m a teacher. That’s me,” she said. “I can’t change history, what happened before 10 or 20 years.”

Back in class, Hroub ended the balloon-math challenge because it was not going anywhere.

To change the mood, she played a YouTube video of a baby laughing, and the students collapsed into giggles. They threw their balloons in the air, stomped on them and danced. They sang about a Palestinian grandmother and discussed dental hygiene. They quietly settled into some language exercises.

With a grin, Hroub drew a mark under her smiling emoticon on the whiteboard.

“Another, Miss! We deserve another!” a girl called out.

She drew another two strokes, prompting cheers from the children: The happy and sad faces now had the same number. — New York Times