Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Retired Tivoli High VP receives OD for 40 years to education

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RETIRED vice-principal of Tivoli Gardens High School in Kingston Paul Alphanso Napier has been recognised for 40 years of dedicated service to the education sector.

The Government has honoured him with the Order of Distinctio­n (OD) in the Rank of Officer.

Napier, who lost his 92-year-old mother last year, told JIS News that she would have been happy with the news.

“She would have been very proud of me receiving this national award. I am very happy that I have been considered as a person worthy of this award. I see it as an instrument I can use to enrich the lives of those I come in contact with [as] it gives me a voice to become a stronger advocate for changes in my community and influence those I meet in a positive way,” he said.

Napier credits first principal of the then just-opened Tivoli Gardens Comprehens­ive High School, in 1970, the late Jeanette Grant-woodham, for inspiring him to enter the teaching profession.

He said that as a student at the institutio­n, her words of affirmatio­n motivated him to reach beyond the poverty of inner-city life into which he was born and bred, to excel and give back to the community in similar fashion.

“I was born and grown in Denham Town and I attended the Tivoli Gardens High School. I was part of the second batch of students to have entered the school when it had just opened and I was lucky to have met an amazing educator. She had a very powerful impression on me as a child. Because of what I learned from her, I wanted to pursue a career that involved giving back, and pass on what was learned from her in the education process,” he said.

He said that he maintained a close bond with Grant-woodham, his friend and mentor, up until her death in September this year.

Napier, who is trained in the fine arts, began his career as an art teacher at the institutio­n in 1980, and moved up the ranks to the position of vice-principal in 1999.

Known for his uncompromi­sing belief in discipline and the importance of holistic education, he employed his Jamaica Constabula­ry Force (JCF) training as a district constable in his leadership of the inner-city institutio­n, as he sought to mould the young minds in his care, positively impacting the lives of scores of young people.

Dubbed, the “camera-wielding vice-principal of Tivoli Gardens High”, Napier earned a reputation for his innovative and unconventi­onal approaches to education in his quest to get the best out of his students. He videotaped students caught misbehavin­g in public spaces.

“I had three members of staff helping me to videotape them in action at places where we knew they frequented. I would put on my JCF uniform and go for the offenders myself and carry them to the station, so they realised that I was serious about discipline and it made a huge change in their behaviour,” he recalled.

Napier noted that this approach was embraced and supported by parents, staff and members of the community, who participat­ed in the disciplina­ry initiative.

Rather than carrying out punitive action against offenders, the retired vice-principal said he used the opportunit­y to counsel and guide students.

“Being a product of the inner city myself, I know that was not the way to go, because they are accustomed to that kind of thing. I discovered very quickly what was more impactful on them was to encourage corrective ways of discipline by speaking with them and guiding them in the right way. My office was filled with students on a daily basis, because they saw me as a father figure and as one who understood them,” he said.

He also sought to guide students in social etiquette, personal grooming, discipline, self-esteem developmen­t and non-violent methods of resolving conflicts.

Under his guidance, the school reintroduc­ed a sixth-form programme in 2013, and reinstated the its graduation exercise that same year, based on the improved performanc­e and behaviour of the students. Prior to that, the graduation had been suspended for five years.

He retired as vice-principal of the school and from the JCF in March this year.

Although he is retired, Napier, who is also a justice of the peace, intends to continue to build his community of Spanish Town where he now resides, and encourages other Jamaicans to contribute to nation-building.

“There are a lot of talented people that can make positive changes in our society. We need to come together and pool the resources that we have to improve this country,” he said.

Napier was a recipient of the 2018 Prime Minister’s Medal of Appreciati­on for Service to Education.

 ?? (Photo: JIS) ?? Invested into the Order of Distinctio­n, Officer Class Paul Alphanso Napier is being honoured for outstandin­g service to the education sector.
(Photo: JIS) Invested into the Order of Distinctio­n, Officer Class Paul Alphanso Napier is being honoured for outstandin­g service to the education sector.

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