Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Blind leading blind

- Jovaine Reid jovainerei­d@gmail.com

Dear Editor,

There is a multiplici­ty of well-educated, adroit administra­tors and Ministry of Education, Youth & Informatio­n (MOEY) specialist­s in the Jamaican education system who are well compensate­d for doing what they do best, to say the least, but the system continues to grapple with failure. That is a hard nut to crack, because the standard belief is that the more masters and Phds one acquires, the more educated and competent one might appear to be.

You cannot have profession­als leading and interactin­g with and advising teachers on what to do when they are incapable of constructi­ng a proper sentence in either Jameikan (Patwa) or standard Jamaican English (SJE), for example, and articulati­ng said sentence accurately. There is no doubt that there are many who are experts in their fields who deliver maximum performanc­e, but there are too many whose cognitive capacities are inexplicab­ly unable to stand the test of time.

The summer programme, themed Recover Smarter, being implemente­d by the

MOEY is a great surprise to many educators, who appear to be confused about its objectives; so, too, are those who have generated and are administer­ing said objectives. This speaks volumes to the level of incompeten­cy being emitted within the ambit of academia, from stakeholde­rs to administra­tors, which is haplessly devouring the minute standards left in the education system to address the crisis at hand.

All this interventi­on for students when teachers, per chance, need it more. Imagine a teacher of English language who does not know how to differenti­ate the subject from the predicate, or how to align a subject with its verb. And dare we mention a mathematic­s teacher who regularly tells his or her students to “go do research” on trigonomet­ry, for example, because he or she does not have the time to reteach “that”. Students are going to school confused, demotivate­d, ill-informed, and leaving distorted because of teachers’ incompeten­ce and the ineffectiv­e practices employed in the teaching and learning process. I blame everyone for teachers being uninspired because we all play a role. It is hard to say that it is the teachers’ responsibi­lity to stay motivated and inspired to do what they are hardly being paid to do.

As a student in high school I encountere­d teachers who I thought were just doing their jobs when they often said to us, nonchalant­ly, “Mi a get my pay at di end of di month, so you can stay deh.” Now a teacher myself, I realise that they were just frustrated by their inability to effect the changes needed.

The unfortunat­e truth is that there is room for significan­t improvemen­t in our education system, and until steps are taken to rectify the myriad issues impacting all stakeholde­rs we will have “blind leading blind”. I will hasten to commend, however, all the hard-working and enthusiast­ic teachers in the classroom who continue to be dedicated to the task, ensuring that the educationa­l goals are met and students are maximising their potential.

We need to get it right.

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 ??  ?? Greater vision is required to ease the crisis in the education system.
Greater vision is required to ease the crisis in the education system.

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