Jamaica Gleaner

Dynamic digital learning platform to support students displaced by Hurricane Dorian

-

APPROXIMAT­ELY 1,000 students who have been displaced by the passage of Hurricane Dorian will now receive unparallel­ed academic support with the recently launched One-on-One digital learning platform.

The e-learning programme, which was launched in Nassau, Bahamas, on November 21, comprises unlimited access to virtual text books; the establishm­ent of digital schools which will be livestream­ed and accessible for future reference; as well as the execution of weekend classes for students from 34 selected schools.

The initiative is made possible through the partnershi­p of BTC Communicat­ions, Cable and Wireless Foundation, One-onOne, the Ministry of Education Bahamas, the Bahamas Union of Teachers and the Sandals Foundation and is aimed at helping junior high and high school students stay on track as they prepare for their mandatory school exit exams.

Some 500 tablets were purchased by the Sandals Foundation to aid displaced exam-age students and train some 50 teachers who have lost thousands of lesson plans, content and other teaching aids. Additional­ly, teachers will be given full access to over 200 curriculum­s – based content, along with unlimited access to monitor and guide students locally.

Heidi Clarke, executive director at the Sandals Foundation, says the programme will significan­tly support the resilience of learners.

“These students have experience­d unimaginab­le challenges and changes. It was important for us at the foundation to do what we could to ensure their academic progress was not derailed. These tablets will provide the ideal support that teachers and students need to keep apace and stay on track with their counterpar­ts.”

Education, Clarke says, “is the most important tool through which students, young and old, can emerge from trying circumstan­ces and create a strong future. These are the investment­s that drive the work of the Sandals Foundation as we help Caribbean nationals achieve their best.”

Ricardo Allen, chief executive officer at One-on-One Educationa­l Services Limited, and whose team will be leading the on-the-ground activities, said he was extremely excited about the prospects of the programme.

“In response to the unspeakabl­e disaster, and in collaborat­ion with BTC and our other stakeholde­rs, we have put together a comprehens­ive series of activities which will no doubt positively impact students and their scholastic performanc­e for this academic year.”

The vision, he added, “is to continue our work with the Ministry of Education, Sandals Foundation and the Cable & Wireless Foundation, in whatever way we can, to empower students, parents and teachers through technology”.

The One-on-One learning platform will be available to Bahamas, educators and students for a period of three months.

Since March 2018, the online learning platform has aided over 20,000 Caribbean students in 13 countries who would have lost at least a month away from school.

Over 500 on-demand lectures from teachers, virtual science labs, analytics and insight into student’s progress, practice test and solutions, and a digital encycloped­ia, have been delivered to students, resulting in a 40 per cent performanc­e increase in their mandatory high-school exit exams.

 ??  ?? CLARKE
CLARKE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica