New York Daily News

Kids think he’s super Costumed Bolivian teacher raises spirits in tough times

- BY CARLOS VALDEZ

Sometimes, Jorge Manolo Villarroel is Spiderman. Sometimes, he’s the Flash, or the Green Lantern.

But he’s always a teacher — one who lives out his childhood dreams by dressing up as superheroe­s for the lockeddown students who attend his virtual classes.

His classes have become so popular that siblings fight for the laptop screen to learn from this costumed teacher. They, in turn, often offer him tech help.

“They arrive to the virtual classes before me and the first surprise is to guess which superhero will appear on the screen,” said Villarroel.

At 33, Villarroel speaks with the passion of a child. His modest room is filled with the masks and costumes of his characters, along with images of Christ, several Roman Catholic saints, revolution­ary Che Guevara and his parents.

Villarroel, who lives in a poorer neighborho­od of the Bolivian capital La Paz, teaches art at the San Ignacio Catholic School in a wealthier area. His students range from 9 to 14 years old.

“Hey teacher! You have to anchor the image ... Go to the screen of your cellphone and look for a small one,” a student told Villarroel; the teacher, dressed as the Flash, explained to his youngest students how to put together a mosaic of geometric figures using colored leaves.

“For years, they have entered our adult world, now it’s time for us to open up to their world, which is chat,” he said. “When they speak they can be limited, but in chat they expand, they become the teachers and show me applicatio­ns.”

The class begins with a Zumba-style warm up — Villarroel is also a Zumba instructor — followed by a prayer and then superhero music, to set the proper atmosphere.

Forty-five students follow the online classes. Villarroel himself makes the costumes he wears. “I had to improvise since with the quarantine I couldn’t get out.”

At times, with his glasses, he looks as much like a disc jockey in front of a computer as a superhero. His tiny dog Coquito sleeps obliviousl­y on his lap.

“Education stagnated in traditiona­l molds. After the pandemic everything will change, including education,” he said.

Many schools, especially private ones like Villarroel’s, have been teaching online since March.

But in Bolivia, the poorest country in South America, the internet is slow, expensive and available only in large cities and towns. In many poor rural areas, electricit­y is only just arriving and television still relatively new. Some complain that virtual classes are only available to those who have the money to buy a computer or cellphone, worsening the country’s already large spread between the rich and poor.

“Even in my private school there are children who do not have a good cellphone,” Villarroel acknowledg­ed. “But we are in a time of change.”

 ?? AP ?? Art teacher Jorge Manolo Villarroel, wearing a Captain America costume, teaches an online class from his home in La Paz, Bolivia. He started wearing home-made superhero costumes since conducting online teaching during coronaviru­s pandemic. His classes have become so popular that siblings fight for computer time to learn from him.
AP Art teacher Jorge Manolo Villarroel, wearing a Captain America costume, teaches an online class from his home in La Paz, Bolivia. He started wearing home-made superhero costumes since conducting online teaching during coronaviru­s pandemic. His classes have become so popular that siblings fight for computer time to learn from him.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States