Schools Alliance ‘Concerned’ About Reform

June 29, 2023

The Eastern Schools Alliance said they “remain concerned about the ongoing primary school consolidation process.”

A spokesperson said, “We, as concerned parents, do not oppose reform of the school system. We agree that the system needs to be improved to achieve equitable educational outcomes for all of Bermuda’s children. We simply want to ensure that any reform plans are rooted in research on student outcomes and tailored to the situation in all communities across this island.

“The feedback that we have gathered from concerned parents has been consistent – the primary school consolidation process needs to stop, and true collaboration needs to take place. Reforms are inherently disruptive, and we are not willing to disrupt the education of 38% of Bermuda’s primary and middle school children unless and until we are sure that the stated goals of equitable education reform will actually be achieved.

“We are specifically concerned with the consolidation process, and as such, the transition to signature schools, phasing out of middle schools, development of the educational authority, and parish school pilot programs at Francis Patton Primary and Purvis Primary can all proceed with no disruption. This additional time will allow the ministry to replace the current unacceptable consolidation plans with a collaborative approach that will achieve community support.

“In his statement in the House of Assembly on May 5th, the Minister laid out all the avenues that the Ministry has engaged with the community on reform. While there have been many meetings in many forms where the Ministry has communicated plans, there have been very few opportunities for the concerned parents, grandparents and community members to get answers, and the majority of the decisions made by the ministry were not made in consultation with the community. As examples:

  • The Parish Primary School Location Strategy Team worked in secret and solicited no public input or input from the schools
  • The rubric developed to score schools was developed with no public input or consultation
  • There has been no evidence that the location team’s scores are even mathematically possible
  • A lot of money has been spent on consultants including Innovations Unit, Stantec and KPMG to decide to transition to one primary school per parish, which did not include collaboration with the public There has still been no research shared on how the proposed educational structure achieves the stated goals of an equitable education system
  • There has been no communication of a budget, public disclosures, RFPs, or project plans to support the extensive changes that the ministry has proposed or the construction that will be required
  • Since the initial public meeting describing the plan to relocate all St. George’s primary school students to Whitney, which received immediate pushback, there has been no further consultation with the parents of any of the eastern schools

“The Eastern Schools Alliance is a collaborative group representing parents from East End Primary, St. David’s Primary, and St. George’s Prep. Our group will continue to advocate for the concerns of the St. George’s Parish community and all of Bermuda’s children. We encourage interested stakeholders across the island to reach out to ourschoolsbermuda@gmail.com to get involved in a nationwide working group.”

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Comments (6)

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  1. watching says:

    Don’t get it twisted.
    The East End Alliance is more about political bickering than education reform.
    Everyone wants education reform, but no one wants their school impacted. No one wants to adapt to anything. But then they will say nothing was done.
    The Government just needs to proceed.

  2. watching says:

    This education reform – the closure of some primary schools, phasing out of middle schools, implementation of signature schools was in the government’s platform and has never been hidden from anyone. Now, because some people aren’t happy that their particular school is being impacted, we hear questions of consultation etc.
    It is NOT financially feasible to maintain all of the pimary schools. One only had less than 5 graduates. Does this make sense?
    Take out the emotions, take out the politics…study the data.

    • Joe Bloggs says:

      Dare I ask why there are so few students these days?

      • DownDeRoad says:

        No confidence in public schools, people leaving the country, and a declining birthrate.

        • Joe Bloggs says:

          Stick with “people leaving the country”.

          Take a look at the Bermuda Digest of Statistics for the years 2006 to 2010. The PLP Government drove jobs and people away from Bermuda even before the financial crisis of 2008. That just made matters even worse. By 2012 the PLP Government was borrowing to pay interest on the debt it incurred. In 2012 the Bermuda Government did not even bring in enough money to pay the interest on its debt, much less pay down on that debt!

    • clarity says:

      The closure of primary schools was not included in the PLP’s 2020 election platform, only that they would be “rebuilt and refurbished”.

      Comments such as yours seek to minimise and dismiss people’s legitimate concerns on education reform.

      Any sensible person acknowledges the demographic and fiscal need to close schools. To imply that opposition to plans is simply based on frustration with school closure decisions is rhetorical at best and simply unhelpful.

      The public discourse on reform needs to improve, and your comment(s) are a good example of why.