Daily Observer (Jamaica)

125 more schools to resume face-to-face classes

- BY ALPHEA SAUNDERS Senior staff reporter saundersa@jamaicaobs­erver.com

ONE hundred and twenty-five more schools will be allowed to resume face-to-face classes, Education Minister Fayval Williams announced in Parliament yesterday.

She said the Government took the decision following favourable completion of the pilot reopening of 17 schools across nine parishes in November.

Along with the pilot schools, 22 others out of the selected 125 are now engaged in face-to-face classes, having been approved to start on December 7 and end on December 18, the minister advised the House of Representa­tives yesterday.

The additional schools include 66 secondary, and 59 primary institutio­ns, which are considered low-risk and Covid-19-compliant, Williams said. This leaves the decision to be made on the reopening of 240 public schools.

Another nine schools are expected to be approved to reopen once final COVID-19 inspection­s are completed. The remaining 86 schools would begin on January 4, at the start of the new school term.

Williams said consultati­ons have already taken place with the administra­tors of the selected institutio­ns, and principals have started contact with parents.

“As we move forward and as the ministry continues its physical inspection of schools the number of schools that can resume face-to-face will increase,” she said. “We are not in normal times and schools will continue to use all the approaches to ensure that our students continue to learn during this pandemic,” Williams added.

She said that since October 5, when schools officially reopened using a mixed approach, 174,973 of the student population were engaged online. Another 12,389 were engaged using the audio-visual approach, 12,213 were engaged using the learning kit, while 48,672 were engaged using both print and broadcast media.

“All these numbers increased week by week as more and more students received their tablets,” she said.

Meanwhile, the education minister advised that the ministry has received 1,509 applicatio­ns for the Own Your Own device initiative, which is supposed to provide 36,000 families with grants for laptops and tablets. The deadline for applicatio­ns has been extended to the end of December, amidst issues with Taxpayer Registrati­on and Student Registrati­on Numbers and inputting of data.

Opposition spokespers­on on education and Member of Parliament for St Andrew South Western Angela Brown Burke, meanwhile, reiterated concerns about the significan­t gaps that remain with access to devices and connectivi­ty. She also suggested enabling better flexibilit­y for schools to navigate the three learning approaches, along with physical opening. Brown Burke also said there were gaps in the analysis of the face-to-face pilot.

 ?? (Photo: Karl Mclarty) ?? WILLIAMS...AS the ministry continues its physical inspection of schools the number of schools that can resume faceto-face classes will increase
(Photo: Karl Mclarty) WILLIAMS...AS the ministry continues its physical inspection of schools the number of schools that can resume faceto-face classes will increase

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