'GSAT unfair!' - Non-traditional high schools feel cheated; most students can barely read or write
Published: Sunday | June 21, 2009
Athaliah Reynolds, Staff Reporter
EDUCATORS AT non-traditional high schools across the island are facing an uphill battle because of the poor quality of students awarded places at their schools.
They argue that the method used to place students who sit the Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) is putting them under tremendous strain.
Under the present system, the better-performing students are creamed off and sent to the traditional high schools, while the non-traditional high schools are left with students who struggle at the primary level.
Principals and teachers say they are constantly playing 'catch up', as the majority of the students they get are barely able to read or write, forcing them to spend much of their time conducting remedial classes.
They also get many of the students who are struggling with social and disciplinary problems or learning disabilities, which were not picked up at the primary level.
Traditionally, schools such as Campion College, Immaculate Conception, Munro College and Westwood High School for Girls receive the students with the top GSAT scores, while students with lower marks are sent to the recently upgraded high schools.
When The Sunday Gleaner checked with administrators of many non-traditional high schools last week, they said while they are willing to stand up to the challenges, the education ministry is putting them "behind the eight ball".
"Apart from giving us the weakest of the batch, the Ministry of Education is not providing us with the necessary facilities and equipment to effectively prepare these students for life after secondary school," the administrators said.
Grades below 30 per cent
A senior teacher at Spanish Town High School in St Catherine told The Sunday Gleaner that over the years, the majority of the students sent to the institution had GSAT grades below 30 per cent.
"We are given a bucket without a bottom," the teacher said. "You are being expected to make bread out of stone, which makes it unfair for the vast demands that are being made and the high expectations, especially when you take into consideration our limited resources," the veteran educator further stated.
"To get these students to a level where they are able to obtain high-quality passes at the CSEC level by the time they get to grade 11 is an enormous challenge," the teacher said.
But that is not a challenge that these teachers in the non-traditional high schools are afraid to face.
Hopeton Henry, former president of the Jamaica Teachers' Association and principal of Seaforth High School, said many of the non-traditional high schools had implemented remedial programmes to help students.
"It is a lot of work because we have to do a lot of value added," he told The Sunday Gleaner.
The concerns of the administrators of the non-traditional high schools are shared by Education Minister Andrew Holness who has admitted that "GSAT has only served to create and reinforce the two-Jamaica syndrome".
athaliah.reynolds@gleanerjm.com
Published: Sunday | June 21, 2009
Athaliah Reynolds, Staff Reporter
EDUCATORS AT non-traditional high schools across the island are facing an uphill battle because of the poor quality of students awarded places at their schools.
They argue that the method used to place students who sit the Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) is putting them under tremendous strain.
Under the present system, the better-performing students are creamed off and sent to the traditional high schools, while the non-traditional high schools are left with students who struggle at the primary level.
Principals and teachers say they are constantly playing 'catch up', as the majority of the students they get are barely able to read or write, forcing them to spend much of their time conducting remedial classes.
They also get many of the students who are struggling with social and disciplinary problems or learning disabilities, which were not picked up at the primary level.
Traditionally, schools such as Campion College, Immaculate Conception, Munro College and Westwood High School for Girls receive the students with the top GSAT scores, while students with lower marks are sent to the recently upgraded high schools.
When The Sunday Gleaner checked with administrators of many non-traditional high schools last week, they said while they are willing to stand up to the challenges, the education ministry is putting them "behind the eight ball".
"Apart from giving us the weakest of the batch, the Ministry of Education is not providing us with the necessary facilities and equipment to effectively prepare these students for life after secondary school," the administrators said.
Grades below 30 per cent
A senior teacher at Spanish Town High School in St Catherine told The Sunday Gleaner that over the years, the majority of the students sent to the institution had GSAT grades below 30 per cent.
"We are given a bucket without a bottom," the teacher said. "You are being expected to make bread out of stone, which makes it unfair for the vast demands that are being made and the high expectations, especially when you take into consideration our limited resources," the veteran educator further stated.
"To get these students to a level where they are able to obtain high-quality passes at the CSEC level by the time they get to grade 11 is an enormous challenge," the teacher said.
But that is not a challenge that these teachers in the non-traditional high schools are afraid to face.
Hopeton Henry, former president of the Jamaica Teachers' Association and principal of Seaforth High School, said many of the non-traditional high schools had implemented remedial programmes to help students.
"It is a lot of work because we have to do a lot of value added," he told The Sunday Gleaner.
The concerns of the administrators of the non-traditional high schools are shared by Education Minister Andrew Holness who has admitted that "GSAT has only served to create and reinforce the two-Jamaica syndrome".
athaliah.reynolds@gleanerjm.com
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