Jamaica Gleaner

Top-notch high school opens on the north coast

- Janet Silvera/Senior Gleaner Writer janet.silvera@gleanerjm.com

TOP GRADE Six Achievemen­t Test (GSAT) student Girdhar Chuganey gave up his space at Campion College, and Guatemalan­s Carlos and Maria Taracena enrolled their children even before seeing Jamaica’s newest educationa­l institutio­n, the Fairfield Internatio­nal Academy (FIA).

Chuganey, a graduate of Mt Alvernia Preparator­y and the recipient of a government scholarshi­p, and the Taracenas, whose father is a vicepresid­ent of a business process outsourcin­g company, joined 17 other students, some from as far as Ocho Rios and Negril, to make history yesterday morning when FIA officially opened its doors at a temporary location in Reading, Montego Bay.

Within two years, the school expects to have a permanent home in Fairfield, St James, on lands donated by land barons Mark and Paula Kerr Jarrett.

“Campion is too far away from my family. I wanted to stay with them. And this is an internatio­nal school that allows me to catapult into studying overseas,” 11-year-old Chuganey told The Gleaner.

Currently, FIA accommodat­e students between grades six to nine, and once the school builds out grades 10 to 12, it will be possible for children to graduate with a United States high school diploma, an Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate (IB) Diploma, or both.

Overall, the plan is to provide enough classrooms and teachers to bring “a growing interest in developing a new model of education, not what to learn, but how to learn,” stated FIA board chair Lisa Lake.

Some 350 students can be accommodat­ed on completion of constructi­on, which will take about two years.

“We now have 20 students at this facility and have space for 20 more,” added Lake, noting that at no time will any of the classes have more than 20 students.

FIA was born out of the great need for secondary institutio­ns on the north coast as most of Jamaica’s top secondary schools are located in Kingston, often resulting in young children and parents having to make significan­t family and financial sacrifices in pursuit of prime education.

“Montego Bay is internatio­nal. People are coming from everywhere and leaving to go everywhere in the world. This type of growth requires infrastruc­ture to support it, not just highways and hospitals, but schools,” argued Lake.

Most importantl­y, Lake is of the opinion that parents on Jamaica’s north coast who desire this global model of education for their children should be able to access it here without splitting up and sacrificin­g family life.

The school offers mathematic­s, science, social studies, language arts, Spanish, art, physical education, and music. In addition, there are courses in technology occurring in homerooms along with talented and gifted options within each course.

According to Shirley Davis, the head of school, students are led by a cadre of national and internatio­nal educators who are masters in their individual fields.

More than 70 per cent of the teachers at the school have earned their master’s degree and teach in the content area of their expertise.

 ??  ?? Fairfield Internatio­nal Academy (FIA) officially opens. From left: Top Grade Six Achievemen­t Test student Girdhar Chuganey and schoolmate Shya Ramchandan­i cut the ribbon with teacher Gregory Daley; chairman of the school board, Lisa Lake; and principal Shirley Davis at the opening of FIA at its temporary location in Reading, St James. Photo by Janet Silvera
Fairfield Internatio­nal Academy (FIA) officially opens. From left: Top Grade Six Achievemen­t Test student Girdhar Chuganey and schoolmate Shya Ramchandan­i cut the ribbon with teacher Gregory Daley; chairman of the school board, Lisa Lake; and principal Shirley Davis at the opening of FIA at its temporary location in Reading, St James. Photo by Janet Silvera

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica