Saturday, September 20, 2014
By RASHAD ROLLE
Tribune Staff Reporter
rrolle@tribunemedia.net
ANGRY Central Andros residents are not sending their children to school in protest against the Ministry of Education’s decision to transfer a mathematics teacher from Central Andros High School to North Andros High School.
Students in the area have not attended school for the past two days and many of their parents have protested in front of the school, hoisting posters featuring statements like “No Miss Dean, No School” and “No Computer teacher in this day and age?”
Minister of Education Jerome Fitzgerald is expected to travel to the island to meet with the Parent Teacher Association (PTA) on Monday, though some parents questioned why he hadn’t made an attempt to meet with them sooner.
Angry about having their children’s educational needs “ignored” for years, the parents see the recent transferring of a maths teacher as the last straw. But they are also complaining about the condition of the school and the alleged absence of specific teachers.
“We are lacking in every area of the school,” one parent said. “There is no woodwork teacher, no science teacher. There’s no computer teacher.”
Another parent said: “Because the classes are so deteriorated and so dilapidated, we have a serious problem with frogs and snakes and my son is one of them. He’s not afraid of frogs and snakes and he tells me every other two weeks ‘mommy I had to take a snake out of somebody’s class’.”
The school’s PTA president expressed his displeasure at the ministry’s decision to transfer the maths teacher, Ms Dean. “My kid came to me one morning and she was horrified,” he said. “She said ‘daddy they taking away my maths teacher’. I could see the pain in her eyes because guess what, my kid was backwards a little bit in math and since this teacher came to Andros, the whole school turn around. Now you want to take away from my kids?”
Another parent said: “There’s no way our kids can be prepared for the BJC and the BGCSE.”
According to Bahamas Union of Teachers (BUT) President Belinda Wilson, only two of the school’s 210 students attended school yesterday.
Education Director Lionel Sands told The Big T the parents are misinformed about why a maths teacher was transferred, admitting that the ministry has nearly exhausted its efforts to convince them to end their protest and send their children back to school.
He said he is concerned that the students are falling behind in their studies while the protest continues.
“One of their math teachers was transferred,” he said. “Normally what the Ministry of Education does is provide a math teacher in a high school for every 120 students to enable the teacher to be given a full schedule for each week that the teacher is required to teach. In Central Andros High there are 200 students, meaning the ratio would be less than what the ministry requires for teachers to be fully engaged.
“At North Andros High there are 400 students and two teachers so the ministry redeployed one teacher to North Andros since that high school was understaffed in math. The challenge is that prior to school opening there were three teachers at North Andros High. One resigned on the 25th of August. We did not have enough time to make the usual arrangements so an internal adjustment was made.
“That’s the situation. For those extra 200 students in North Andros High without a teacher, we transferred one and it didn’t impact Central High the way the parents are making it out. The number of students at the school was a little larger before but now the numbers have dwindled so we make adjustments based on the staff.”
Mr Sands said despite explaining the issue, parents are not accepting the ministry’s explanations because they believe the action was taken intentionally to limit the school’s resources. “They feel this way because of prior teacher shortage in certain areas like carpentry and music, areas where all schools in the Bahamas faces challenges because although we have the money to hire teachers, no one is coming forward to teach in those fields,” he said.
“We will not change our position,” he added.
Ms Wilson told The Big T that despite the protest, teachers showed up ready to teach during the past two days.
Comments
NoNoNo says...
Sad just sad.<img src="http://s04.flagcounter.com/mini/kfoW/bg…" style="display:none">
Posted 20 September 2014, 5:20 p.m. Suggest removal
observer2 says...
Now that stem cell, web shops and VAT legislation is completed; education, healthcare and law enforcement can be given some priority.
Posted 21 September 2014, 9:32 a.m. Suggest removal
duppyVAT says...
Headquarters is not sensitive to Family Island communities. This is a classic case.
The director gives orders, the superintendent passes on the message and the line staff jump. Who gives a DAMN about the parents and students?
Posted 21 September 2014, 10:39 a.m. Suggest removal
Moreroot says...
WE ARE NOT MISINFORMED!!! Parents will continue to protest until a favorable response is received. We are frustrated at always receiving the short end of the stick when it comes to our children's education. The Ministry needs to find a different approach to this issue. The current system is messed up enough. The transfer of this teacher is not only detrimental to the students but you are asking a teacher who has already began the school year ( 2nd year at this school ) , developed a relation with her students ( 5 grades - BJC and BGCSE students ) to now uproot herself and family ( sensitive issue please research ) and move to another school. Students in different streams will now have to be combined. Those who will need more one on one hands on approach will now have to get it the first time or DOG eat your lunch. On the issue of teacher shortage in the field of science, no teacher in a pertinent area such as computer ( this is the Electronic age ), and no teachers in vocational areas, what are our students who are not book savvy going to do? There is very little choice here... Agriculture and Craft? The young men of this nation are headed in the wrong direction as is. We are suppose to be helping the situation not adding to it. How are some of our students going to be able to survive when they graduate and have to compete against the students in Nassau or other island who are equipped or in some cases overly equipped to meet the demands needed to receive quality college education or finding a good job? Can you imagine going to COB and hearing students say - well i studied Latin, Chemistry, Physics etc in high school when you had the privilege ( or not so privileged ) of maybe Spanish in grade 8? FIND A SOLUTION!!! Bring the Brits back, rehire retired teachers if need be, start a teacher cadet program in ALL SCHOOLS. JUST SIMPLY GET IT RIGHT OR CENTRAL ANDROSIANS WILL CONTINUE TO MARCH. B.P Primary is next. P.S: On another thought we had 3 students who competed in Carifta this year...not my beloved comrades in the North. We had students who competed in the IAAF's Relays this year ( high school sessions ). They were kicked out of their hotel room on the last day... could not compete ( LOC get it right the next time ). We need our very own Ministry of Sports School Rep in Central Andros!
Posted 21 September 2014, 11:39 a.m. Suggest removal
duppyVAT says...
Andros, we feel your pain. Your PLP government has failed you AGAIN
Posted 22 September 2014, 8:01 p.m. Suggest removal
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