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new_kourou_elementary_school

Races | Education | Buildings & Organizations

NEW KOUROU ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

Overview

The New Kourou Elementary School is a primary institution within the Federal Confederation, established in 2632 as part of post-war educational reforms. It operates within the principles of Communardism (equality, sustainability, shared resources). Curriculum frameworks are issued by the GAIA System and approved by the Federal Council; classroom delivery is adapted by teachers to local conditions.

Architectural Significance

  • Construction Materials: Salvaged ship alloys, timber frames, mycelium-brick infill; reused poly-glass for clerestories.
  • Floors: 2 (ground + upper); detached library pavilion opening onto the yard.
  • Design Aesthetic: Durable, child-scaled, low-energy; covered breezeways link blocks; classrooms spill onto outdoor learning patios.
  • Lighting (No Electric High-Bays): Clerestories and light wells tuned for ambient twilight; after-hours, hooded oil lamps and baseboard Luminofera dualis runs.
  • Ventilation / Acoustic Control (Passive): Wind scoops, stack vents, cork baffles, and soft flooring; no powered HVAC.

Building Structure

Ground Floor

  • Reception & Office: Visitor ledger, pupil attendance board, supply cupboard.
  • Classrooms (Grades 1–3): Chalkboards, slate sets, manipulative cupboards; door-through access to play yard.
  • Arts & Crafts Studio: Paint, fiber, and wood corners; wash-basins with FWRS pictograms.
  • Play Yard & Garden: Rope gym, track loop, teaching beds (soil, compost, seed shed).

Upper Floor

  • Classrooms (Grades 4–6): Map rails, specimen shelves, reading corners.
  • Intro Science Room: Balances, lenses, simple assay kits; safety bench.
  • Multi-Purpose Hall: Assemblies, parent nights, indoor exercise.

Detached / Shared

  • Library Pavilion: Story circle, beginner stacks, take-home readers; adjacent to yard.
  • Cafeteria Nook: Meals delivered by the Federal Kitchen; long tables, enamelware.
  • Restrooms: AuroraSan stalls on each level; low sinks and coat pegs.

Perimeter & Grounds

  • Perimeter Fence: 3 m alloy mesh with single monitored pedestrian gate.
  • Stormwater & Beds: Swales irrigate garden plots; tool locker with sign-out board.

Look and Feel

Chalk scratch and recitation hum under timber trusses; paper charts and hand-drawn alphabets line the corridors. Luminofera bands lay an even glow across slate tops and book bins; bells and hand-clappers mark the blocks. Everything is labeled, shared, and sturdy — cubbies from crate wood, benches from pallet planks — primary school built for the twilight with patience and care.

Curriculum

Foundational skills, community habits, and place-based learning (GAIA framework; teacher-adapted):

  • Mathematics: Numeracy, measures, practical problem-solving.
  • Reading & Writing: ExoEnglish literacy; copy-books → readers → short reports.
  • Native Language & Culture: Honga dialect basics; stories and respectful practices.
  • Introduction to Science: Local ecology, weather, materials; garden and compost.
  • Social Studies: ExoHuman society, the Peace Treaty, living well with Native Tribes.
  • Arts & Crafts: Drawing, fiber, music circle; festival banners.
  • Physical Education: Games, balance/coordination, teamwork.
  • Values Thread: Peace, equality, sustainability woven through all subjects.

Roles and Responsibilities

Staff (≈15)

  • Principal (1): Governance, safety, family liaison, curriculum compliance.
  • Multidisciplinary Teachers (9): Homeroom instruction across subjects; garden and craft blocks.
  • Librarian (1): Lending, story hour, reader progression.
  • Administrative Staff (2): Records, timetables, supply and meal coordination.
  • First-Aid Attendant (1): Minor care; referral to the Medical Station of New Kourou when needed.
  • Janitor (1): Cleanliness, minor repairs, lamp & Luminofera upkeep.

Public Access, Operating Hours and Rhythm

  • School Day: 08:00–15:00 (assembly at 07:55).
  • Meal: 12:30 — served by the Federal Kitchen (family-style tables).
  • After-School Clubs / Homework Circle: 15:15–16:30 (reading, garden, crafts).
  • Operating Days: Mon–Sat (half-day Sat for clubs/community).

Services / Operations

Core school operations and destinations:

Program / Unit What Enters Primary Handling Outputs Mandated Destination / Use
Early Grades (1–2) New pupils Phonics, number sense, routines Foundational literacy & numeracy Progression to Grades 3–4
Upper Grades (3–6) Intermediate pupils Project lessons, reports, mapwork Core competencies & portfolios Transition to Junior High
Language & Culture Stories, elders, readers ExoEnglish, Honga basics; respectful exchange Word lists, dialogues Community events; home practice
Science & Garden Seeds, soil, compost Plot care, observations, journals Garden produce; lab notebooks Cafeteria tastings; school displays
Library & Readers Beginner→chapter books Lending cycles; story hour Reading fluency Home & classroom reading
Meals & Nutrition Federal Kitchen trays Family-style service; clean-up teams Fed pupils; table manners Daily school lunch
Clubs & Care Volunteers, pupils Reading circle, crafts, games Skills practice; safe time End-of-term showcases
Family Outreach Parents/guardians Conferences, workshops Home-school plans Household support & attendance

Security Measures

  • Perimeter: 3 m fence enclosing grounds; single staffed gate with visitor ledger and badges.
  • Release Protocols: End-of-day line-up, guardian sign-out
  • Deputy Pass-Throughs: Scheduled patrols along the Educational Ring; incident logbook at reception.

Player Interaction Possibilities

Legal interactions:

  • Receive a GAIA assignment as a pupil (ages 6–11), classroom aide, reading mentor, garden helper, library aide, recess/playground monitor, or maintenance helper.
  • Parent/guardian pick-up and sign-out, attend conferences, or volunteer in classroom/cafeteria service.
  • Host a show-and-tell or skills demo (crafts, safe tools, mapmaking).

Illegal interactions:

  • Forge visitor badges or sign-out ledgers to gain unauthorized access.
  • Smuggle contraband via mis-labeled Federal Kitchen crates.
  • Sabotage the analog siren or fence latch to create a diversion.
  • Plant or steal items in the library pavilion to frame a rival.

Tactical Advice for Dungeon Masters

  • Adventure Hook — The Teacher Vanished at the Gate: Moments after the final bell, a beloved teacher fails to sign the release ledger. His whistle and satchel lie by the service gate; scuff marks and a child’s shaky account point to a canvas-covered cart and rough voices bearing the Jane Mendoza Gang name. In private, the Federal Sheriff reveals the hidden reason for urgency: the teacher once served in an elite Guarding Troopers reconnaissance unit during the Great War. Why take him now-old cache maps, cipher keys, forced fabrication? Deputized off the books, the PCs must sweep the grounds for planted notes, and follow cart tracks through perpetual twilight to find him before the gang extracts what he knows.
new_kourou_elementary_school.txt · Last modified: 2025/09/16 07:02 by admin

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