Jamaica Gleaner

T&T teachers planning to ‘rest and reflect’

Educators to protest Trinidad gov’t’s refusal to pay for marking SBAs

- Christophe­r Thomas/ Gleaner Writer

WHILE JAMAICA’S teachers have entered into a four-year wage agreement with the Government, their Trinidadia­n counterpar­ts will have their own industrial action in September on account of their government’s refusal to pay teachers for marking school-based assessment­s (SBA).

Lynsley Doodhai, president of the Trinidad and Tobago Unified Teachers’ Associatio­n (TTUTA), outlined the teachers’ position while bringing greetings at the Jamaica Teachers’ Associatio­n’s (JTA) 54th annual conference, which ended in Montego Bay, St James, on Wednesday.

“Last week, the Ministry of Education in Trinidad and Tobago signalled that the Government is of the opinion that teachers have to mark SBAs because it is part of their job function. Right now, we are preparing to take the matter to court so we can get an interpreta­tion on that particular issue,”said Doodhai.

“Also, school reopens in Trinidad on Monday, September 3, but come Friday, September 7, we are calling on all our teachers to ‘rest and reflect’,” said Doodhai. “That means, we’ll ask them to stay away from classes to ‘rest and reflect’ on the government’s refusal to negotiate salaries for our teachers and to acknowledg­e that marking of SBAs is a duty that falls outside the job function of a teacher.”

In March, hundreds of Jamaica’s teachers staged an islandwide sick-out. Subsequent to their action, a new wage and fringebene­fit agreement was signed between the Government and the teachers, ending the stand-off.

In her outgoing presidenti­al address, Georgia Waugh Richards, the immediate past president of the JTA, said Jamaican teachers would be compensate­d for marking SBAs.

“We’re proud to say that plans are afoot and will be rolled out, and the teachers of Jamaica will be paid for marking SBAs. Indeed, the Jamaican teacher is a step ahead of our Caribbean counterpar­ts, and for that we are grateful,” said Waugh Richards.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica