“YOUR daughter is home,” proclaimed calypso legend McCartha Linda “Calypso Rose” Sandy-Lewis as she was among eight local icons honoured by...
Vous n'êtes pas connecté
THE EDITOR: More than 100 years ago, Mohun Biswas, VS Naipaul's finest creation, learned, as we all recall, that "ought oughts are ought, ought twos are ought." He learned some other things too while attending the Canadian Mission School with the teacher, Lal, who "believed in thoroughness." English poetry was memorised and there was geography. Most of us can easily visualise that school. If, however, Naipaul's words somehow fail you, do not despair. Just such a school survives today and functions (possibly as it did so many years ago for Mr Biswas and Lal). In the hills above Scarborough survives the Patience Hill Government Primary School. Mohun Biswas and Lal might walk out of it this afternoon. It is 2024 for everyone – not just the people dressing up as grown-ups, receiving pay cheques from a government. But the darling children attending the PHGPS do so without the benefit of any interior walls. It is, in result, a one-room school house. Abraham Lincoln could attend it alongside Mr Biswas if we only have A Wrinkle In Time. Tobago House of Assembly (THA) Secretary for Education Zorisha Hackett may be agreeing in executive meetings with Farley Augustine and Trevor James that THA money will be best spent on the Store Bay beach facilities. We don't know. She will be failing the children and families who depend on her for a modern education, though, if she does not ensure that scarce funds go first toward correcting the deficiencies of the PHGPS. Children spending six hours a day, five days a week there in the present circumstances might just as well spend their time in the Scarborough market as the levels of peace and learning are comparable. While Hackett is organising the renovations at the PHGPS, the Patience Hill community (where two of Tobago's 21 murders have taken place this year), she can simultaneously correct the erroneous view held by many teachers in Tobago that it is acceptable for them to be absent each week from their classes. No suggestions about how she might correct this wrong, but she needs to take some action. The very first week of school saw the absenteeism spread like sewage, with classes of unsupervised children every day and in every academic topic. If Hackett were in contact with the PTAs of the schools in Tobago she would undoubtedly hear their complaints about teacher absenteeism. Invite them to your office, Hackett, listen to them and make this world a better place for the children and their disappointed families. You can do that. A BLADE Mason Hall The post A school for Mr Biswas appeared first on Trinidad and Tobago Newsday.
“YOUR daughter is home,” proclaimed calypso legend McCartha Linda “Calypso Rose” Sandy-Lewis as she was among eight local icons honoured by...
Nature has always been a source of inspiration for Mennonite children’s author Aimee Reid. Several years ago, she took her dog for a walk while...
This column seeks to bring light to the troubling problem of school violence, delinquency and licks (corporal punishment). Two issues which need to...
A DAILY STREAM of reports, images and videos of crime often shared on various social media platforms is affecting the way of life of people in...
ECONOMIST Dr Marlene Attz said a Donald Trump presidency will likely have mixed effects on Trinidad and Tobago's economy – several positive and...
IN a school hall filled with 200 pupils, about half of them indicated they wished to leave Trinidad and Tobago to study, and of these only one said...
“The undisciplined are slaves to moods, appetites and passions” – Stephen Covey ALL SOCIETAL institutions, both formal and informal, are...
Less than four months after publishing her first book of poetry, artist and poet Sarah Beckett is publishing her second, I Wrote My Heart Across an...
THE ISSUE of school violence has been with us for a long time. Even as we try to grapple once again with this issue, TTUTA as its contribution to...
Figures from the Ministry of Children and Education show that in the 2023-2024 school year, 21.6 percent of students had more than 10 percent absence,...