Monday, November 2, 2020

A teacher who lifts our spirits

 Jamaica Observer column published 26 October 2020

by Jean Lowrie-Chin


Taneka McKoy Phipps

We know the old saying, “If it bleeds, it leads” but look at the outpouring of love and support for Taneka McKoy Phipps, who first came to attention via a UNICEF Jamaica video on social media. The dedicated teacher said she noticed children playing in the street in her Kingston community though they would have been in school in normal times. She figured that their parents may not have had connectivity and decided that she would create  ‘community blackboards’ on various walls. Every weekday morning, she and assistants write up lessons on the walls. 

                                        Children copying work from a community blackboard

(screen grabs from UNICEF Jamaica video)

The video shows parents taking photos of the wall, and children copying the lessons in their exercise books. Mainstream media picked up the video, featuring Mrs McKoy Phipps, resulting in significant offers of assistance to the dedicated teacher.  There was a similar response to Keron King, Principal of the Little Bay Primary School who rode around on his bike to deliver worksheets to his students as they prepared for GSAT.

We have extraordinary teachers in this country, some who take up the role of parenting in cases when they discover incidents of child abuse. We hear many of those stories from successful Jamaicans who remember that one teacher who believed in them when even their family members were talking them down.

Several of our brilliant teachers have been doing the same abroad and I am proud that my  Convent of Mercy ‘Alpha’ classmate Dr Denise Aloma (formerly Wehby) was recently honoured by the South Florida Business Journal with the “Power Leader In Education” Award. A teacher of nearly 50 years, Denise taught at her Alma Mater before moving to South Florida where she served as teacher, Vice Principal and Principal since 2014 of the St Thomas Aquinas High School in Fort Lauderdale.  

Here and abroad, we hear stressed out parents recognising the effort and care required to instruct children as they struggle with Covid induced virtual learning. We are also realising how poverty can keep our children in a cycle of desperation. We welcome the Government’s plan to install broadband islandwide, and the free-to-air programming offered by our television stations. There is also that age-old invention called the book – let us get our children reading more and become the best allies of their teachers. That alliance should include monitoring our children so they do not Google their way through homework. Remember, there is no quick fix to developing critical thinking and that is central to their future success.

Heritage Week Celebration

We met a brilliant Jamaican via a virtual session last week – Mrs Ann-Marie Howard-Brown, Senior Archaeologist and Curator at the Jamaica National Heritage Trust (JNHT). She was Guest Speaker at a National Heritage Week Celebration organised by IGT for students at their After-School Advantage Programme centres at various homes islandwide.

Mrs Howard-Brown introduced us to the well-ordered society of Jamaica’s first inhabitants, the Tainos, whose history here was traced back to 650 AD. She noted that with their structure of government and their inventions, these were civilised people and therefore it was not Columbus who ‘civilised’ us. Indeed, she dubbed Christopher Columbus ‘Jamaica’s first tourist’.

We learned that they used the Lignum Vitae for medicinal purposes, and to create large canoes accommodating up to 50 persons that sailed to various Caribbean islands – cruises of olden days. ‘Tainos were biochemists’ she averred, as she described how they extracted the poisonous juices from the bitter cassava with well-designed devices, producing an edible staple.

Debbie Green, IGT Jamaica General Manager commented on Mrs Howard-Brown’s riveting style. Indeed, she held us with her passion for the subject and her sense of humour. We have a national treasure there at JNHT.

Outbreaks and Care Homes

Just when we felt there was a levelling of Covid Cases, we got the grim news that there was an outbreak of the disease at the Golden Age Home in Kingston and at the Mustard Seed Community’s Jerusalem Home in St. Catherine. Both residents and staff were affected and there are complaints of the carelessness of some Jamaicans who have come from abroad and are not observing health protocols. Imagine, they are stooping as low as bribing officials at our airports to not install the monitoring app on their phones.

Further, since last June, long before Covid, the CCRP seniors advocacy organisation has been calling for closer inspection of our care homes.  There was a report of gross neglect at a home in Portmore and when we investigated, we discovered that there were only two inspectors assigned by the Ministry of Health and Wellness to oversee care homes in the entire island.

In last week’s press briefing, Health Minister Dr Christopher Tufton said he would be recruiting more health inspectors, but in the meanwhile, may we suggest that the very competent staffers at the National Council for Senior Citizens (NCSC) be authorised to make comprehensive tours of these homes. The NCSC has offices in every parish and they do visit homes but are prevented to go beyond certain areas by the operators of these homes. Until the Ministry can have adequate personnel in place, we are asking that they prepare inspection guidelines for the NCSC and grant them full access to care homes.

Rains bring tragedy and damage

The recent heavy rains resulted in a landslide at Shooters Hill in St Thomas, taking the lives of Romeo Leachman, and his 15-year-old daughter Sanique, a promising fourth former at Queen’s High School. 

Those of us who have been involved in construction projects know the various agencies from which we must get approvals before we can start. Why then are the authorities allowing so many houses to be built in some of the most dangerous locations? Our over 200 parish councillors should be tasked with touring their communities and reporting on dangerous start-ups. Then there is the issue of the extensive damage to our roadways, including some recently built. This begs the question as to how well they were constructed in the first place.

As usual, we saw piles of plastic bottles in the garbage washed up on streets and in gullies. Do Jamaicans know that our tap water is safe? If you believe something may be wrong after a weather incident, just a few drops of bleach can make it perfectly drinkable. I remember an American embassy staffer Joshua Polacheck noting that he never bought bottled water here, as Jamaica has great tasting tap water. We should stock up on bottled water for emergencies but in normal times, just refill your reusable bottles and give the gullies a break.

lowriechin@aim.com

www.lowrie-chin.blogspot.com

 

Photo captions


Children copying work from a community blackboard

(screen grabs from UNICEF Jamaica video)

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