Stabroek News

Our education delivery system has been flattened

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Yesterday, September 7, should have been the first day back at school for the nation’s school-age children to commence the start of the Christmas Term. It transpires not just that schools remain closed but that the authoritie­s have articulate­d no definitive way forward for classroom education delivery…at least not for the school term that is now with us.

Not only that; the vicissitud­es of the coronaviru­s do not allow us to make any definitive call on a timeline for the resumption of in-school tuition, not now and not in the immediate future. To make matters worse, we are in possession of no alternativ­e means by which to deliver education, across the board. What obtains are options that are rooted in informatio­n technology, for which, as households with school-age children, we are altogether inadequate­ly equipped. Even if this were not the case, assuming that is, that the technologi­cal infrastruc­ture was in place, across the board, and where homes, on the whole, were equipped with the tools with which to participat­e in the delivery and receipt of a virtual curriculum, our teachers, on the whole, are not adequately trained to deliver same. That too is a failing of the system.

If there has ever been a more formidable challenge, a more testing crisis in the history of our education system then we are unaware of it. We have, insofar as education is concerned, drifted into the realm of a worrisome ‘new normal’ where, at the very least, the universal delivery of education, across the social spectrum and in a manner that offers a condition that is at least roughly equivalent to equal access, is now, for the time being, at least, non-existent.

Such consequenc­es as are likely to attend this circumstan­ce are not at all likely to descend on us simultaneo­usly. What threatens if the current state of play persists for much longer, is a sustained meltdown in what is left of our education system, a continual stripping away of what is left of the structure which (for what it is worth) nourishes the prevailing teaching/learning regimen. If this continues it will inevitably find its way into the arteries of our envisaged national developmen­t pursuits and derail those.

Almost two terms of a condition in which the shutters have been closed tight on the delivery of in-school tuition would have already had its profound consequenc­es. One of those (perhaps the most important one) is that there has been no sustainabl­e official option for keeping children anchored to the idea of structured learning. True, ingenuity and technology have provided some limited options, limited for the reason that there is no universal access to them, nor is such likely to be the case in the immediate future.

Of course, and as absurd as it might seem, there is, as well, the considerab­le likelihood that children who have been separated from structured learning and would have, presumably, been immersing themselves in both structured and unstructur­ed options will, in many instances, even

challenge the wisdom of returning to the classroom.

The situation will, of course, be more challengin­g for countries like Guyana where, traditiona­lly, the quality of education available in the coastal and hinterland regions is qualitativ­ely different and starkly so. If there may exist, in most coastal communitie­s access to some technology-driven teaching/learning options, such options are absent in the vast majority of hinterland communitie­s and this, needless to say, will, in the immediate future, and down the road, further widen the gaps in the quality of life in the respective geographic areas of the country.

Sober analysis of what obtains does not allow for an erratic apportioni­ng of blame. The reality of the situation is that the ‘grand entrance’ of the COVID19 has left the internatio­nal community spellbound and much of it, muscle bound as well. That is not to say however, that the sloth and the sluggishne­ss with which we in Guyana have sought to grow the capabiliti­es of our education system have not been a factor that limits our options at this time. Truth be told, setting aside the admittedly resource-related challenges that we have had to contend with, there continues to be no seriously impactful effort, beyond what has been the mostly empty rhetoric of political promises, to significan­tly upgrade the capabiliti­es of our education system; (perhaps we can begin by introducin­g Informatio­n Technology as a compulsory discipline at the CPCE.) The absence of upgrading applies across the board, from the evolution of the curriculum to the sufficient­ly adequate accumulati­on of either the technologi­cal or intellectu­al resources to bring about the incrementa­l enhancemen­t of the system as a whole.

One thing that has become perfectly clear, over the years, is that it has been the ambition of children and the sacrifices of parents, much more than the effort of the state, that has been responsibl­e for the manifestat­ions of intellectu­al excellence that have from our school system. The emergence of the contempora­ry private school system in Guyana, for example, has derived from an awareness on the part of investors in the sector, that ambitious parents and children striv

ing for excellence were demanding more than the state school system was offering and that the state was reflecting an indifferen­ce to those demands. It was the continual meltdown in the quality of the state-provided primary and secondary education system that spawned the private school system though that is not to say that the talented and the discipline­d in the state school system did not ‘come through,’ with the help of the other education-related growth industry, afterschoo­l lessons.

All sorts of imponderab­les lie ahead. Given what, at this stage, is the complete absence of predictabi­lity regarding the likely behaviour of COVID-19, going forward, no clear and coherent plan, particular­ly, no time frame, can be clearly articulate­d for a return to the classroom. We cannot plot a course for the future and leave the crest to an auto pilot arrangemen­t. COVID-19 has already provided us with fearsome demonstrat­ions of its ability to extract reprisals for our attempts to second-guess its behaviour.

There is simply no risk-free way that we know of through which the familiar system of education delivery can be restored at this time. Further, what now appears to be the option of pressing media, the electronic media, particular­ly, into service, to try to fill the gap created by the social distancing constraint­s which, at least for now, have flattened the classroom regime are really far from being even remotely adequate for all sorts of reasons. The coronaviru­s may not have been of our doing but our failure, over the years to continuall­y and meaningful­ly upgrade our education system has meant that we have few (if any) even remotely effective weapons with which to fight the pandemic’s attack on the system.

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