Online classes for unvaccinated students of Forms Four, Five and Six have been terminated at the Barrackpore West Secondary School, triggering protests by parents on Tuesday.
Vice president of the school’s PTA Nadia Aligour said in a memo dated October 12, principal Edward Beharry indicated that online classes will no longer be conducted and any vaccinated child who does not report for physical classes will be marked as absent.
Saying parents did not know the basis of this decision, Aligour called on the Education Ministry to intervene so that students will not suffer. She also appealed to the Trinidad and Tobago Unified Teachers Association (TTUTA) to work to resolve the matter.
“We had a PTA meeting on Friday and the principal said there will be live streaming for the kids but some students are not receiving any work. My child is in Form 4 business. They did not give us a reason why they are discontinuing online,” she said.
Aligour added, “The Ministry of Education said vaccinated students should be out in school. The principal says there will be live streaming rather than online classes. What will be the stance of our children? How would they facilitate our children who are at home?”
She said about 80 vaccinated students came out on Monday and last week there were about 40 students present.
“This school has over 700 children so most of the children are unvaccinated and are at a disadvantage,” Aligour said.
She said online classes have been working before and teachers were coping.
“To TTUTA, I would like them to come up with some plan in place to facilitate the kids. They are suffering. I know it is challenging for the teachers but our children need their education,” she said.
Meanwhile, parent Edward Moodie said live streaming did not make any sense as the internet connectivity was poor.
“You have breached the constitutional rights of our children and breached the United Nations Charter on education. It is a failure. The internet providers you are making so much money. Every child, poor, rich or in between had to get data for phone. Did you do a price reduction?” Moodie asked.
He added, “Have you looked at rural schools like these and boosted up the signal. You all are so commercial and hungry for money.
The internet is poor and horrible. Internet is dropping and education has failed right now.”
Another parent Missy Arneaud said, “I would like my son to have an education. The teachers have been working with our children. They are excellent. Mr Beharry has done a lot through the COVID to help children. However, because the ministry has said only vaccinated children can attend school so it makes it difficult for the unvaccinated ones. Even though the Minister said she has not stopped online classes, it is a problem for the teachers.”
When asked whether principals could take a decision to stop online classes, Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly said “The Ministry guidelines do not specify that the teaching has to be synchronous online sessions which I believe is the issue.”
She said, “Discussions were held with stakeholders last week, at which the challenges of the current situation were discussed. While some schools are quite settled, others have had great difficulty dealing with the hybrid system.”
The Minister added, “Recommendations were made, and the decisions taken in the interest of the safety and educational continuity of all the nation’s children will soon be communicated to the public.”