According to Suzan Wamala, Chairperson of the Municipal Teachers Association and President of the Mukono Diocese Primary Headteacher’s Association, the initiative will focus on improving the teachers' understanding of the curriculum, effective teaching approaches, and how to better engage learners.
Suzan Wamala, Chairperson of Mukono Municipality Teacher's Association and the Mukono Diocese Primary Headteacher’s Association
In a bid to improve the quality of education in Mukono
Municipality, the Mukono Teachers Association has organised a refresher
training for primary school teachers this month, aimed at enhancing their performance. The training, scheduled for February 21, is a direct response
to concerns raised about the disappointing performance of some schools in the recent
Primary Leaving Examination (PLE).
7, 476 candidates registered to sit PLE in Mukono municipality. Of these, 2, 390 candidates passed in Division 1, 3, 964 (Division 2), 630
(Division 3), 263 (Division 4), 162 were ungraded, and 67 (x). According to Suzan Wamala, Chairperson of the Municipal
Teachers Association and President of the Mukono Diocese Primary Headteacher’s
Association, the initiative will focus on improving the teachers' understanding of
the curriculum, effective teaching approaches, and how to better engage
learners.
“Some of the teachers were not sure what kind of curriculum
they were following. So, by the time they went on, their responses were refuted
because of the curriculum, others because of the question and answering
techniques, which they never employed to their learners. So, we are going to
have training of teachers of P7 in the whole municipality,” Wamala, also, the
headmistress of Mukono Boarding P/S says.
At the same training, emphasis will be put on co-curricular
activities beyond athletics and sports to board games, music, dance and drama,
girl guides, and scouting. “We are now encouraging head teachers at their learning
institutions to improvise and start debates to foster communication
skills, developing them in learners through public speaking, through debates and quizzes,” she adds.
After the training Wamala says they will request school
inspectors to always ask teachers to present their programs of public speaking
and debate. “I want to assure you that this is not an innovation to head teachers, this is part of co-curricular. Because according to our demands
in the answering techniques, the children are failing because of their
communication skills. They cannot recall, they cannot understand, they cannot
apply, simply because they cannot express themselves,” Wamala noted.
Among other issues to tackle is code-switching by teachers
during class time. According to the survey conducted by Mukono teachers’
association regarding student performance, it was found that teachers do
code-switching. "They use two languages as they are doing what? Passing on the
content. And that is why the children are failing because now they cannot
interpret. And the secretary of UNEB dwelt on it, children could not
comprehend, children could not interpret, children could not apply," he said.
The survey indicates that teachers alternate between mainly
Luganda and English and at the end of the day children learn nothing. Other key issues will rotate around schemes of work and lesson
plans. “Every class must have its vision, the objectives and the aims. Every
class must have a target. Every class must have a target.” Wamala says.
To boost academic excellence, the association also intends to
start setting a uniform exam for all schools under the association this term
rather than waiting for only mock exams. Regarding the new term, Wamala advises headteachers to give
priority to the well-being and safety of learners by thoroughly checking pupils
before they join the school community.
"Boarding schools, please use your health workers. We normally
call them the school nurses. Let them check pupils before they are enrolled in
the school. Let us have programs of awareness. Let us have messages in our
schools talking about the prevention of Mpox, Ebola, Cholera, and COVID-19 among
others. So please let us revise the safety measures in our schools," she appealed.
Mukono Resident District Commissioner, Fatumah Ndisaba
Nabitaka has commended the teacher’s refresher initiative, saying the remaining
part is now parents taking back their children to schools.
“So, it is apparent that if you don't take your children on
time, you are doing a disservice to your family, to your country, and your
children. I know money is scarce nowadays, but we should make it a habit of
going to schools and negotiate with the headteachers and the directors to allow
us to pay money in installments,” Ndisaba notes.
She also asked headteachers and directors to be lenient. And
for government schools, avoid increasing fees without the knowledge of parents. “Let's try to work within our means, let's try to speak to the
government so that they can increase the money, but don't ask for other money
that is not negotiated by the committees of the PTA and the school management,”
she explains, adding that increment is a process and has to go through the PTA
meeting, copy the minutes to the DEO, the commissioners of education in the
ministry, then to the PS and the minister, who will allow the increment of the
funds in our government schools.