Jamaica Gleaner

Two schools face hard lessons

- David Salmon/Gleaner Writer

AS PRIMARY schools prepare for the resumption of faceto-face classes today, several long-standing issues continue to plague administra­tions.

Rennock Lodge All-Age School is one of the 376 institutio­ns that have been cleared for reopening.

Acting principal of the Rockfortba­sed school, Tolima Anderson, expressed a sigh of relief about the return to normality as she and her teaching staff face a daunting challenge of closing the learning deficit. An estimated more than 50 per cent of her students did not have access to the Internet or computers at the start of the pandemic.

In the early weeks after school plants were ordered closed in March 2020, only four or five of the 33 students enrolled at Rennock Lodge had tablets, said the principal. The ministry reportedly issued 13 tablets, five of which were given to students on state welfare, with the remainder handed to others.

“The education officer told us that the Government said that we should take back the tablets from the children … because the tablets came for the PATH students, but we don’t have that much PATH students, so we gave it to other students. That is common sense,” Anderson told The Gleaner on Sunday.

PATH is the Programme of Advancemen­t Through Health and Education.

It took the interventi­on of the school board, said Anderson, to prevent the recovery of the devices by the ministry.

Attempts by The Gleaner to reach Education Minister Fayval Williams, acting Permanent Secretary Maureen Dwyer, and Chief Education Officer Kasan Troupe for comment on Sunday were unsuccessf­ul.

That tug of war over tablets is

just one of the bits of bureaucrac­y that put educators on a sharp and bumpy learning curve during the 20 months of COVID-19 here.

Despite the challenges, Rennock Lodge has seen enrolments increase to nearly 100. The school has a capacity for 175 students.

That change in fortunes has been credited to the improved performanc­e of sixth-graders in the Primary Exit Profile external exams that channel students into secondary schools.

But Anderson is also facing her own personal hurdle.

A teacher at Rennock Lodge for 17 years, she has been acting as principal since the post became vacant in 2016. Since being interviewe­d in June 2019, Anderson said she has been waiting for her appointmen­t to be ratified.

“Each time my documents go up, they come back down. One of the times, I went to the ministry and the documents for the school are missing …. I went to the National Council for Education three times and there were no documents for the school,” Anderson said on Sunday.

Those concerns could not be addressed because the hierarchy of the education ministry could not be reached.

Weighing in on the matter, former Minister of Education, the Reverend Ronald Thwaites, said that the entire public service was in need of urgent reform. In his opinion, administra­tors should not be acting as principals for more than three months, except in extenuatin­g circumstan­ces.

“It is unacceptab­le. You are denying that principal the security that is required. Usually that takes place because of the inattentio­n of the board or some failure in the bureaucrac­y of the ministry, and it is unfair,” he said.

“… We need to get serious about productivi­ty in all positions and the proper appointmen­t and the proper accountabi­lity of every person who is employed by the taxpayer.”

MANY MISS ONLINE CLASSES

Meanwhile, Jacks Hill Primary and Infant is another Corporate Area school that has its share of challenges.

Principal Duane Forbes disclosed that enrolment at the multigrade school has slipped from 52 to 48 students over the course of the pandemic.

However, average daily attendance online has been 32 to 34 students. That means that around a third of the students regularly miss classes, a troubling metric when extrapolat­ed across many of Jamaica’s schools.

The current capacity of Jacks Hill Primary is 80 students in the new era of social-distancing recalculat­ion. The resumption of face-to-face classes is expected to be a fillip for learning at schools like Jacks Hill.

The fall i n enrolment has been linked to realignmen­t with parents’ workplace locations and a persistent stigma over academic performanc­e.

Thwaites believes that the most important priority of schools is to assess returning students’ intellectu­al and emotional condition quickly.

“It is illusory and criminal, in my view, for us to simply reopen a school and not recognise the very delicate situation in which all children are going to be in, having been out of that school environmen­t for that long,” said Thwaites.

 ?? IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Tolima Anderson, acting principal of Rennock Lodge All-Age School in east Kingston, points to garbage that has languished on the compound. She said that garbage collectors insisted that they do not pick up trimmed trees and plant cuttings.
IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Tolima Anderson, acting principal of Rennock Lodge All-Age School in east Kingston, points to garbage that has languished on the compound. She said that garbage collectors insisted that they do not pick up trimmed trees and plant cuttings.
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­ER IAN ALLEN/ ?? Rennock Lodge All-Age School in Rockfort, east Kingston.
PHOTOGRAPH­ER IAN ALLEN/ Rennock Lodge All-Age School in Rockfort, east Kingston.

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