Jamaica Gleaner

Renewed calls for abolition of shift system in schools

- Okoye Henry Gleaner Writer

SCHOOL ADMINISTRA­TORS in western Jamaica have renewed calls for the complete abolition of the double-shift system in order to lift student performanc­e in academics and extra-curricular activities.

Principal of the St James High School, Joseph Williams, and his counterpar­t, Salome Foster, vice-principal of the Savanna-la-Mar Primary School in Westmorela­nd, are touting “a sooner-rather-than-later approach” for their respective schools to get rid of what they say is the counterpro­ductive shift system, for the benefit of both students and teachers.

Williams, whose school remains the only institutio­n on the two-shift system in St James, told Western Focus that the full-day system would provide an unhurried and relaxed learning environmen­t for students and would afford teachers greater opportunit­ies to identify, assess, and deal with the potential learning problems of their students.

LESS TIME TO PREPARE

“The students we get from GSAT are those who get in the lower percentage, but they sit the same exams with 50 per cent of the time to prepare as those who go to schools whole day,” Williams said. “They have the greatest disadvanta­ge ... . If a student’s performanc­e is low, the teachers who are willing to do extra classes cannot because no classroom is available, and not everybody is willing to come on a Saturday or Sunday to have classes. Even those who have their athletic prowess, we don’t have any time so they can go out and practise after school because they have to make way for the other kids on the next shift.”

Foster echoed similar sentiments, pointing out the dangers some morning shift students face when leaving their volatile communitie­s before daybreak to reach school by 7:30 a.m.

“They then only get roughly four and a half hours to cram schoolwork, lesson time, and extra-curricular activities,” she said.

SCHOOL OVERCROWDE­D

The Savanna-la-Mar Primary School was reportedly built to accommodat­e 750 students. However, the administra­tor said that the institutio­n currently has 1,400 students on roll. Schools such as St James High have had to try to mitigate overcrowdi­ng by cutting back on intake numbers.

“We used to get up to 600 students per year, some 400 from GSAT (Grade Six Achievemen­t Test), and the rest from GNAT (Grade Nine Achievemen­t Test), and those seeking transfer to the school, but we don’t have the space for GNAT again. We take less than 400 students from GSAT up to last year, and then those seeking transfer here, we try and help out some,” Williams explained.

State minister in the Ministry of Education, Youth and Informatio­n Floyd Green says that over the next three years, the schools in the west that will be targeted include Petersfiel­d High and Grange Hill Primary in Westmorela­nd as well as the Black River and Lacovia High schools in St Elizabeth.

“We plan to continue taking schools off the shift system because that is one of the goals of our administra­tion,” he said.

 ??  ?? A 2011 photo of students of the St James High School.
A 2011 photo of students of the St James High School.

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