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Editorial
A salute to teachers in a troubled system
Monday, September 06, 2010
EDUCATION Minister Mr Andrew Holness tells us that 1,000 fewer students are sitting the Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) each year.
What is truly depressing is that the education ministry doesn't know why. They are unclear as to whether the reduced number is the result of the declining birth rate, an increasing incidence of children staying away from school, or possibly a combination of both.
We are told in yesterday's Sunday Observer that 48,200 students sat the exam this past March. In 2009, the candidates numbered 49,700 and in 2008 the number stood at 48,733. The 2007 figure was 51,000 while that for 2006 was 51,204.
It is testimony to the inherent problems of underdeveloped societies such as Jamaica that after several years of such an important trend, the experts remain in the dark.
Given that level of ignorance, the education minister should perhaps think twice about the statement attributed to him last week that parents who neglect to send their children to school should be arrested and charged.
There is obviously a need for more focused research and enquiry into issues of education such as school attendance and the GSAT. The additional data can only help as the society struggles to resolve illiteracy, for example.
It is all well and good for the minister to point to welfare relief such as the PATH programme in insisting that parents have no excuse for keeping their children from school. But the harsh truth is that such relief simply does not stretch far enough. The anecdotal evidence is that for those in the poorest circumstances, schooling can easily become of very low priority.
For the poorest, the need for everyone, including children, to hustle by whatever means -- even anti-social and criminal -- in order to feed, clothe and shelter family members can conceivably become of far greater importance. Such are the realities with which many Jamaicans live -- a fact about which the minister as member of parliament for a few of our more depressed urban 'corners' would be well aware.
Of course, entrenched poverty is also a reality for many of those who faithfully insist that their children attend school, day in, day out. It is something that our best and most proactive teachers bear in mind as they creatively raise funds and resources, sometimes in hostile circumstances, for breakfast programmes and other assistance for children most in need.
As school resumes today with hundreds of thousands of children coming out after the long Summer break, this newspaper finds it useful to remind Jamaicans of the tremendous role our teachers play, not just as educators but as social workers.
We know there are bad teachers — misfits in the system. But for the most part our chronically underpaid teachers are selfless, wholehearted professionals committed to the education and welfare of their young charges even in our most crime-infested and depressed communities.
For them, praise can never be too strong.
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9/10/2010
minister holness likes to play the blame game...usually he lambasts teachers and parents and then the students. Maybe he should shine some light on the ministry that he heads.
9/7/2010
An unscientific response to why the number of students sitting gsat changes could be that the number of registered births per year varies. If the number is lessening it could be a good thing for jamaica for what should be obvious reasons. Perhaps family life education, taught in schools for some time now, is contributing to the trend. We need to examine the trend of birth rate starting about 1995. In some instances some students might not have been promoted due to their inability to read.
9/7/2010
What the editor does not say is that we have precious few scholars and experts on education in Jamaica. Apparently, it's enough to complain about the problems in the system and allow everyone's opinion to count as fact. Nobody needs to study the issue, or apply any specialized skills or knowledge to figuring out the problem because "everybody already knows." There are many other "underdeveloped"
societies that would never accept hearsay as truth. So we need a new excuse for Jamaica.
9/6/2010
We have ongoing voter registration. We have the Ananda Alert system and police records of missing/murdered children. We have a new computerized Registrar's Department. We should really be able to determine why 1000 fewer children are sitting the exam. Are we having fewer children? Is our live-birth number what it used to be?
Subtract murdered/missing/abused children. Factor in the school registration number. For God's sake, use the technology of the day! Any good UWI/Utech researcher can do it.
9/6/2010
I think the real Editor must be back. First coherent and palatable editorial in a long time.
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