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Starting this month, Giovanna Hammet will be working with the House Malta to curate articles about restoration, education in the household, and property management. Google and wikihow are great tools if you want to learn a little bit about, well, almost anything; but, but there’s nothing like having an experienced guide by your side to teach you the ropes.
From fixing furniture and manually doing up old places with her parents, to building her own school run by students, to nursing old jems in Bulgaria and then Malta, Giovanna’s timeline is a wibbly wobbly timey wimey web of experiences that, strung together, give you the best ingredients you could ask for in a teacher.
We’ve already collaborated on an article with Giovanna Hammet once before. If you don’t know what we’re talking about, take a look.
7 Important Considerations before Starting a Rental Renovation
Let’s get to the questions:
Yes, I am straight out of Doctor Who! Teaching was a profession and houses a hobby for many years, now it’s the other way around.
As a child I used to “teach” my dolls; at 18, while at university, I joined a voluntary literacy programme to teach basic skills to illiterate adults, then did an MA in TEFL for, er, fun. I trained as a Montessori teacher when I left the theatre, did a PGCE in secondary teaching later and never looked back. Houses just grew on me and I took opportunities whenever I found them. I had to ignore a lot of naysayers though who were always forecasting doom and gloom but I stayed positive, took risks when necessary and just got on with it.
At the time I was the Principal of a teacher training college in London so I was seeing the, what was considered back then, “cutting edge” of education. I decided to get a house and throw everything I had to turn into a school. Nowhere seemed to provide the kind of education I would have wanted for my own children (this was before I had my own).
If you can’t find it, you make it. I used the skills I had learnt from my parents and learned some new ones. To compress lots of years in two lines, once I had the school running at a level I was pleased with, it was time to move on to something new. I came to Malta and started restoring my own house while holding down a teaching job. After that I just couldn’t stop!
I believe children are driven to learn and most schools seem to get in the way of that because they are adult-led, more about training than education. I wanted to foster the innate desire to learn, not frustrate it by forcing the learning of specifics designed to fit you for a job. At the school, which went up to age 7, children also got to practice different artistic and functional instruments, learned skills such as gardening, basic tool use, furniture maintenance and polishing, and how to make and store food, and manage diet; they had normal language and mathematics classes too, of course, but they learned in an environment that belonged to them and was their responsibility to maintain and nurture.
I believe that child-led learning is much more valuable and lasting. Of course, it’s a setting that’s also harder to create because you have to a) trust the children and b) provide an environment in which they can thrive, but it’s worth it.
The utilitarianism of unchanging timetables, desks in a row and bare walls is a dead duck. Uniformity isn’t the key to growth, diversity is.
The Narnia series for children and the Dispossessed by Ursula le Guin for adults, we all need books that make us think outside the box.
My mother was a teacher and my father was a doctor so academia was always important to them, but I never felt pressured, just loved. My working life began with a theatre in education group, where I had to turn my hand to whatever task was required so there has always been a practical side to my nature. I’d learnt many DIY skills from my parents, who always bought houses in poor condition and then did them up themselves before moving on to their next home. We moved a lot, I went to 17 primary schools! Luckily I was sent to boarding school for my secondary years which provided some stability in my life.
I loved every minute. It was in an area of rural beauty, we were well fed and entertained and learned a great deal of independence. And yes, we did have midnight feasts!
I’m still teaching whenever I get the opportunity, if it’s in you its a thing you can never stop, even if not in a formal educational setting. Breakthroughs with struggling children are always memorable, so I will never forget the 7 year old Swedish child who took 3 years to learn to write, or the 10 year old English child who was able to put his aggression aside and trust me enough to finally learn to read, but all teaching is a great pleasure to me and I recall all students with great fondness.
An old farmhouse in Balzan. It was in a perilous state, with some collapsed roofs, rising damp and no plumbing or electricity, but it did have many charming old features such as beautiful stone carvings, timber beams, ktieb and xorok, traditional tiles and cangatura floors we were able to save. It’s now a beautiful modern home that’s a delight to enter and a pleasure to live in.
“She’s a big softy”
During the communist era the young people moved into the towns and cities to work in the burgeoning industries. After its collapse they didn’t want to return to their old fashioned villages. So now the older generation are dying off and the villages are becoming deserted. We wanted to bring life back to some of these beautiful little places. Villages are self sustaining, all houses have huge gardens, there’s usually a shop or two and a cafe and a local council to supervise it all. We found the local mayor extremely helpful.Outside of the big towns and cities Bulgarian houses are very traditional and built to withstand the weather, which can be bitter in the winter. Bureaucracy doesn’t get in the way of restoring old properties and the costs are much lower.
Malta is the land of my forefathers and I liked its small compact nature, where its possible to ”know of” almost everyone. Bulgaria, on the other hand, is a stunningly beautiful country with a great deal of undeveloped countryside. Their traditional style of living is also very pleasing, they have not lost sight of who they are, or sold their souls for money.
Purple and Green.
At least the abandoned ones leave something for future generations to come back to. Urbanisation is not always a bad thing but we need to learn to restrain ourselves and realise what we really value.
A chatterbox!
My father was Maltese so we visited frequently throughout my life, but we finally moved here to live permanently in 1997 because I wanted a safe place to raise and educate my offspring.
The UK enjoys and suffers all the proclivities of a large industrialised country and Bulgaria is still recovering from its communist past so Malta’s old world charm seemed a perfect alternative.
Joining the Eu has transformed Malta, we are now so much more connected and able to access many products and services that were unavailable or unaffordable before.
The loss of so many trees and architectural beauties to make way for wider roads or excessively large development is destroying the once beautiful landscape that made the country so attractive.
It’s location in Ħal Balzan, has some open space and lots of room to hang artworks, so I thought it’d be a suitable location for for artists and artisans who want to exhibit work somewhere accessible. Anyone who is interested in showcasing their work is welcome to contact me – they shouldn’t worry about costs.
For more information, head to Palazzo Ħamsa Mill’s Facebook page.
Yes! We should all believe in magic.
Our team at House Malta is always on the look-out for spaces, places, and things that are being built up, torn down, modernised, restored, or re-purposed – be it by a big team or a one-man(or woman)-army.
Send us a message on our Facebook page or via email, info@house.mt.
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