The Ministry of Education and Youth has allocated $15 million to the Inner City Programme for the new academic year.
In a JIS news release Deputy Chief Education Officer at the Ministry, Jasper Lawrence, said that the money would be spent to provide in-service training for guidance counsellors, teachers and principals and to assist in providing any additional resources that these selected schools might need.
"Training for principals and teachers and guidance counsellors takes the form of workshops and clinical sessions, where they look at challenges that they have been experiencing and work out strategies to deal with these problems," he explained.
more training
Mr. Lawrence noted that training for guidance counsellors was even more essential as, "the challenges in the inner city are numerous.
They have to deal with the problems of violence in the community; and they have to deal with violence and anti-social behaviour in the schools".
"At these workshops, the counsellors meet with other colleagues so that they can share their experiences and this is, in a way, some form of therapy as they themselves are sometimes traumatised by inner-city experiences," he added.
Mr. Lawrence pointed out that the programme was established in 2002 out of a need to improve the academic performance of students in inner-city schools.
"Before the programme, a survey was done and some of the problems identified were that attendance was below average in many of these schools, some of them did not have a vibrant Parent Teachers Association (PTA), and the performance of their students, as measured by GSAT and grade four literacy tests, was less than satisfactory," he explained.