In support of Thwaites' motion
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Dear Editor,
I wish to publicly support the private member's bill raised in the Parliament recently by Member of Parliament Ronald Thwaites, calling for certain amendments to the Education Act and its related regulations and code. I trust that the motion will be debated in Parliament soon and the appropriate corrective measures adopted.
Effectively, Mr Thwaites is calling for an end to the current practice, which sees students being promoted from one grade to the next without regard for their mastery of each grade. Such a practice, I firmly believe, has contributed largely to the continued high level of illiteracy or semi-literacy that affects too many of our people, leading to increasingly greater challenges to our economic and social systems.
It was pleasing to read, as reported elsewhere in the Jamaican press, that first-time government MP, Mr Gregory Mair, was supportive of Mr Thwaites' motion. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said of another Jamaica Labour Party first-time MP, Mr Tarn Peralto, who was reported as considering the motion "foolishness".
I am not sure on what basis Mr Peralto adopted this view. I hope that Mr Peralto did not take such a view merely because the motion was coming from an Opposition People's National Party member. For such a sad practice must be retired in the public interest, and parliamentarians, regardless of which side of the House they sit, must support measures based on whether they are good for Jamaica and not based on which party raises the motion.
Kevin KO Sangster
New Jersey, USA
sangstek@msn.com
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Dear Editor,
I wish to publicly support the private member's bill raised in the Parliament recently by Member of Parliament Ronald Thwaites, calling for certain amendments to the Education Act and its related regulations and code. I trust that the motion will be debated in Parliament soon and the appropriate corrective measures adopted.
Effectively, Mr Thwaites is calling for an end to the current practice, which sees students being promoted from one grade to the next without regard for their mastery of each grade. Such a practice, I firmly believe, has contributed largely to the continued high level of illiteracy or semi-literacy that affects too many of our people, leading to increasingly greater challenges to our economic and social systems.
It was pleasing to read, as reported elsewhere in the Jamaican press, that first-time government MP, Mr Gregory Mair, was supportive of Mr Thwaites' motion. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said of another Jamaica Labour Party first-time MP, Mr Tarn Peralto, who was reported as considering the motion "foolishness".
I am not sure on what basis Mr Peralto adopted this view. I hope that Mr Peralto did not take such a view merely because the motion was coming from an Opposition People's National Party member. For such a sad practice must be retired in the public interest, and parliamentarians, regardless of which side of the House they sit, must support measures based on whether they are good for Jamaica and not based on which party raises the motion.
Kevin KO Sangster
New Jersey, USA
sangstek@msn.com
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