The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Ghanaian tot named after Scots teacher

- ROSS GARDINER

Aschool teacher from Perthshire and her African counterpar­t have named their daughter and granddaugh­ters after one another after forming a firm friendship through a school partnershi­p scheme.

Keri Reid and Juliet Osafo met when their schools, Muthill Primary School and the Juliet Johnson School in Tafo, linked up in 2006 through a UK a id - funded government initiative called Connecting Classrooms.

They have become such close friends that Keri, 46, named her 10 - year- old daughter Grace Juliet after her Ghanaian chum.

And now Keri cannot wait for coronaviru­s travel restrictio­ns to be lifted so she can meet Juliet’ s granddaugh­ter, who was named Kendra Keri in her honour.

Keri said: “Ever since I was a little girl, I’d always wanted to work with children in Africa, but I never in my wildest dreams ever imagined someone there would actually name their child after me.

“Connecting Classrooms has become more than just a partnershi­p between our schools in Scotland and Ghana – it feels like we are now family.”

Juliet was in Scotland in March, alongside two other Ghanaian teachers, as part of the Connecting Classrooms work.

C ovid -19 travel restrictio­ns mean Keri might have to wait a bit longer to meet the tot named after her, but she and her pupils at Muthill have con t inued to communicat­e with teachers and children at Julie t Johnson School.

The classes recently came together to learn about a Fair Trade cocoa plantation next door to the African school.

She said: “Coronaviru­s has not stopped our kids from communicat­ing constantly through the WhatsApp group. There’s always lots of little film clips and photograph­s.

“They were able to film bits of it and send the footage to us. That brings learning to life and makes it real.

“Connecting Classrooms is a powerful way of uniting communitie­s and bringing people together to discuss common problems.”

Connecting Classrooms through Global Learning is a £37 million programme funded by the Foreign, Commonwea lth and Developmen­t Office and the British Council.

Keri was made an MBE last year for her work bringing the communitie­s in Perthshire and Ghana together.

She said: “I told the Queen I was going out to Ghana the following week and that the medal belonged to the people there as much as me.”

It feels like we are now family

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 ??  ?? FRIENDSHIP: Ghanaian teacher Juliet Osafo and Keri Reid, and Juliet with Kendra Keri.
FRIENDSHIP: Ghanaian teacher Juliet Osafo and Keri Reid, and Juliet with Kendra Keri.

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