Jamaica Gleaner

CRISIS in the Corporate Area

- Corey Robinson Staff Reporter corey.robinson@gleanerjm.com

ACALL for more guidance counsellor­s and increased support from parents topped the list of concerns at the Holy Family Primary School in central Kingston last week, as administra­tors prepared for the start of the new academic year in one of the island’s most volatile communitie­s. In June, a student at the school, 11year-old Taysha Hughes, was gunned down when thugs sprayed bullets at a group of people on Fleet Street metres from the school, and despite the merriment of the summer holidays, teachers there are convinced that some of the children are still haunted by that incident.

“The children, who are our main priority, have been adversely affected. The guidance department has a hard task dealing with the students who suffered from this trauma, and we are still grappling with that,” said Christophe­r Wright, principal of the Holy Family Primary School.

“Guidance counsellor­s are woefully lacking. We have two. Some will say that is enough, but really, it is not. I couldn’t put a number to a figure that would be sufficient,” added Wright.

He told our news team that some students overtly speak of their fear of the volatile communitie­s in which they live, while others covertly express themselves, acting out with deviant behaviour.

“They have short attention span, they are quarrelsom­e sometimes, they use a lot of curse words at teachers and some of them cannot stay in their seats,” said Marcia Richards, one of the guidance counsellor­s.

Richards was one of the teachers gathered in Wright’s office making plans for the upcoming school year when our news team visited last Wednesday.

CALLS FOR TRANSFERS

The situation was similar at the Maverley Primary and Junior High School when our news team visited.

The northwest St Andrew community has been under the gun in recent weeks, with at least five persons murdered, several left nursing gunshot wounds and houses firebombed.

“The violence has adversely affected us. We have noticed that some persons have called asking for transfers ... some persons have relocated because of the conflict,” said Dona-Marie Sewell, vice-principal at the school.

“Thankfully, it doesn’t spill over on to the compound. Students are affected because they live in the area where the violence is, but still children come to school. We have never had to close the school because of the violence,” added Sewell.

She said while the school’s staff is getting ready for the new school year they remain concerned about the level of violence.

In the east Kingston community of Rockfort, criminals have been on a murderous spree all summer, and administra­tors at schools in the area are bracing for the fallout.

Last week, Jacqueline Lewis, principal of Rennock Lodge All-Age, and Lexford Johnson, principal of Norman Gardens Primary and Junior High schools, met with their staffs and members of their safety and security teams to discuss strategies for the new school year.

Many of the students of the two schools are from the areas where the violence has been at its worst, with some parents already moving out of the community.

They have short attention span, they are quarrelsom­e sometimes, they use a lot of curse words at teachers and some of them cannot stay in their seats.

 ?? FILE ?? Eleven-year-old Kiandra Williams, a student of the Holy Family Primary School, mourns her classmate Taysha Hughes, who was murdered by gunmen last June.
FILE Eleven-year-old Kiandra Williams, a student of the Holy Family Primary School, mourns her classmate Taysha Hughes, who was murdered by gunmen last June.
 ?? PHOTOS BY LIONEL ROOKWOOD ?? Teachers from Maverley Primary School help to paint and clean the walls of the institutio­n in the community which has been rocked by gang violence in the past two months.
PHOTOS BY LIONEL ROOKWOOD Teachers from Maverley Primary School help to paint and clean the walls of the institutio­n in the community which has been rocked by gang violence in the past two months.
 ??  ?? LEFT: Christophe­r Wright (left), principal of the Holy Family Primary School, speaks with teachers during a planning meeting last week.
LEFT: Christophe­r Wright (left), principal of the Holy Family Primary School, speaks with teachers during a planning meeting last week.

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