December 2018
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As the society reels from its violent wounds, there seems no immediate way to staunch the torrents of blood. Many of the perpetrators of violent acts are barely out of their teens and several citizens have succumbed to the temptation to dismiss that generation as lost, but not everyone is so pessimistic about the present or the future. Commenting on the mental state of the society in our last issue, psychiatrist Professor Gerard Hutchinson contended that more should be done to help these young people. “I think a lot of them could be reached if we had systems and structures in place to reach them, it is not that they don’t care but they have been taught or conditioned not to care. Once they’re taken out of that environment, they become concerned again about the things that most people in society are.” Mentorship at many levels was an important aspect of reaching them, he said. “People recognise that the younger people in whichever context, professional, school, religious, need that kind of guidance. The key thing there is stability, as many people have said, single parent homes are not a new phenomenon, he said, noting that single parent homes in the fifties and sixties didn’t produce children who could be branded as “bad” on the same scale. The School of Education’s Head of Department, Early Childhood Education, Dr Carol Logie, shares that outlook, believing that the earlier a child is surrounded by a nurturing, warm environment, the more likely they will feel valued and build a sense of belonging to the society. Both UWI experts also agree that the high degree of instability at every level has contributed significantly to a practically dysfunctional society, but do not feel that all is lost for a recovery project. This issue, we feature the School of Education’s Family Development and Children’s Research Centre (FDCRC), where Dr Logie is administrative director, and its distinctive approach to early childhood education, which stresses a “loving” environment that empowers children to develop critical thinking and responsible behaviours as they learn from very early how to take charge of their lives. One of the areas appearing to withstand the rigours of a shrinking economic pie is early childhood education. In the recent national budget presentation, the Minister of Finance announced that the 50 Early Childhood Care Centres (ECCE) promised in the last fiscal year would be completed in this new one, and that an additional 50 would be started. The focus on early childhood education has been so politically marked that one could easily imagine that its foundation stones had been laid only when the first ECCE came to pass a couple years ago. It goes way back actually, 21 years ago this month, to the pioneering days of 1988, when the School of Education of The UWI opened up its first “learning lab”, formally known as the UWI Laboratory Pre-school, at the current site at St John’s Road in St Augustine. Back then, the School of Education (SoE) enlisted the help of two Fulbright scholars from the US to design an educational system for the region that recognised that the first seven years in a child’s life were crucial in terms ofdevelopment. The current administrative director of what has since been renamed the Family Development and Children’s Research Centre (FDCRC), Dr Carol Logie, was a fundamental part of this daring new initiative in earlychildhood education and she speaks with a creator’s pride of its evolution. To explore new ways of learning, new ways of teaching had to emerge. No tertiary level programmes existed regionally, so the SoE busied itself with designing and introducing first the Certificate in Early Childhood Care and Development and then the Bachelor of Education (B.Ed.). In 1996, when the B.Ed. was introduced, there were nine students, today, with the degree offering two separate specialties—Primary and ECCE—student enrolment is at 120. “We’ve been able to tie what we’ve been doing with the growth and development in the region,” said Dr Logie, as she explained how they could expand to the post-graduate level and offer masters and doctoral degrees as well as post graduate diplomas in education. The FDCRC, as part of the SoE, is more than a school for young children, it is actually a training centre for students of education, many of whom will actually be employed at the State-run ECCE centres. Within an environment carefully designed to appeal to all of the sense, teachers and students interact in a marvellous routine that enables both parties to learn from each other. The notion of learning communities forms the theoretical foundation of the Centre, based on psychologist Lev Vygotsky’s theory of social interaction’s role in the development of cognition. The Centre encourages everyone—parents, teachers, students, family members— who moves within the orbit of the child to see their relationships as opportunities for two-way learning at every level. Theoretically, people become each other’s students. Dr Logie, who has been working at various levels in the area of early childhood education, has a broad and uniquely detailed knowledge of its complexities and its relationship to national development. In conversation, she connects every strand of thought to development, and it is as clear that she has had to make the case several times as it is that she firmly believes in the link. People don’t quite see that link, she says, don’t realise that the state of Trinidad and Tobago, which everyone complains about, and the behaviour of the youth which they lament, are connected to their own misbehaviours. The children are looking at the adults, and we have to look at the state of parenting, the values you carry, she said. “It’s not about whether you’re single or not,” it’s about the values you communicate.
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