Jamaica Gleaner

PEP students being used as ‘guinea pigs’, says Phillips

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LEADER OF the Opposition, Dr Peter Phillips, says that the education system needs to be overhauled to ensure that students at all levels are exposed to the best opportunit­ies to excel.

Speaking at a fundraisin­g event in North Central Clarendon on the weekend, Phillips said from the early childhood through to tertiary levels, every Jamaican child must be provided with full access to a good education.

He said it is clear that the Ministry of Education does not know what it is doing, and this shows up very clearly in relation to the Primary Exit Profile introduced to replace the Grade Six Achievemen­t Test.

“Parents rightly feel that their children are being used as guinea pigs in a programme that has been inadequate­ly prepared, which condemns them to failure from the start,” Phillips said.

“Of the 37,500 students who sat the mock examinatio­ns in June, only 583 (one and a half per cent) were deemed by the examiners to have mastered the subjects to the requiremen­t of PEP.”

Describing the secondary education system as a virtual apartheid that discrimina­tes against the majority, the opposition leader said there is one learning environmen­t for the traditiona­l high schools and those students’ average pass rate is five subjects.

VULNERABLE TO LIFE OF CRIME

But, he noted, “in the nontraditi­onal schools, which the majority attend, it is a totally different learning environmen­t and those students only average two subjects. Worse, thousands of students attend schools for more than four years without passing a single subject and are left totally unprepared for the world of work or for further study. These young Jamaicans are at risk and vulnerable to a life of crime.”

Phillips promised that the next People’s National Party (PNP) Government will establish the same learning environmen­t in all secondary schools islandwide, so that all students will have equitable access to quality education.

Regarding the recent announceme­nt that some 800 new students of the University of the West Indies, Mona campus, were facing deregistra­tion for failing to pay their tuition fees, the opposition leader said the next PNP Government would ensure that tertiary education is affordable.

“Under the next PNP government, we will ensure that the repayment of student loans only begins when the student is employed and it is capped to a percentage of income,” Phillips told his audience.

He said parents at all levels are already burdened with the massive increases in the cost of living, which came with the $31billion tax package last year and can hardly cope with the price of educating their children.

 ??  ?? Opposition Leader Dr Peter Phillips.
Opposition Leader Dr Peter Phillips.

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