School gets inclusive classroom for special education

July 07, 2023
Executive Director of the Early Childhood Commission, Karlene DeGrasse Deslandes (left), and Senior Operations Manager of Digicel Foundation, Jodi-Ann McFarlane, play with children on the colour-coded mat inside the new inclusive classroom at Bethabara Infant School, Manchester, which was officially opened on July 5.
Executive Director of the Early Childhood Commission, Karlene DeGrasse Deslandes (left), and Senior Operations Manager of Digicel Foundation, Jodi-Ann McFarlane, play with children on the colour-coded mat inside the new inclusive classroom at Bethabara Infant School, Manchester, which was officially opened on July 5.

Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Education and Youth, Maureen Dwyer, has welcomed the retrofitted inclusive classroom at Bethabara Infant School, in Manchester, which was handed over on Wednesday.

"Dwyer, in a message read by Education Officer for Region Five, Janet Shaw Gooden, noted that several special education classes have been established in the region. She said that the classroom will address a demand that is expanding dramatically and for which services are needed in different parts of the island.

"The ministry salutes the effort of the Digicel Foundation and the Early Childhood Commission (ECC). We could not ask for more, and today we are thrilled to be a part of this groundbreaking activity. Special education services for our children is one of our policy directives through the child and youth development initiative. It is our hope that through continued partnerships like this, we will continue to provide for our children in a meaningful way," Dwyer said.

Senior Operations Manager for Digicel Foundation, Jodi-Ann McFarlane, said the entity has a long-standing relationship with the ECC, and with one of the pillars being education, the foundation is deeply invested in seeing that children have access to primary education in Jamaica.

"We are also very invested in special needs education and this project was brought to us by the ECC as their Jamaica 60 Legacy Project to bring inclusive classrooms to Jamaica. So, we did a major investment in this space. We renovated the entire classroom space and created a specialised stimulation sensory space for children who have mild to moderate intellectual and physical disabilities," McFarlane said.

She said they also built a ramp and gave them additional storage, so that they are able to integrate their teaching and learning activities in the space without being too disruptive, and this will give children with different abilities and skills a chance to interact with each other.

Sector planner for the ECC, Paula Shaw, noted that the ECC is working to have four such classrooms islandwide in the first phase but, eventually, the hope is to have one in each parish.

There are facilities in St Ann and in Kingston, and the ECC is in the process of establishing one in St Thomas.

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